PatriotsPreface
Part One: Introductions
Commanders
Bernard Trainor: It turned out the major of Danang was a double
agent
Dang Vu Hiep: With all those choppers they seemed terribly
strong
War Heroes
Roger Donlon: We were babes in arms in every way
Tran Thi Gung: I was stuck in a tunnel for seven
days
Paying the Price
Ta Quang Thinh: They carried me the whole way back to the
North
George Watkins: That sand was probably the only thing that
saved me
Phan Xuan Sinh: Ail my ancestors are buried here
Where is Vietnam?
Jo Collins: I just thought I was going to Europe
Deirdre English: How can my country be at war and I don't
know about it?
Part Two: Beginnings (1945-64)
History Is Not Made with IFS
Henry Prunier: These were not ragtag farmers
Yo Nguyen Giap: The most atrocious conflict in human
history
Deliver Us From Evil
Daniel Redmond: The doctor who won the war in Indochina
Rufus Phillips: Tell 'em I'm not French before they lynch
me
Ngo Vinh Long: If they're making maps, they're preparing for
war
Kick the Tires and Light the Fires
Richard Olsen: It was like 'Terry and the Pirates'
Malcolm Browne: You could smell the burning flech
Le Leiu Browne: There was one coup after another
Paul Hare: My cock lost the fight
The Emporor Has No Clothes
Paul Kattenburg: What's good for Peru is good for
Vietnam
Evelyn Colbert: Dissent which contradicted the public
optimism was ignored
Chester Cooper: Boy, you speak just like an
American
Sergei Khruchchev: The Vietnamese had their own
ideas
Paradise Island
John Singlaub: We sent them all back with a generous gift
package
Luyen Nguyen: She divorces her second husband and waited for
me
Part Three: Escalations
Trails to War
Vu Thi Vinh: The Truong Son jungle gave us life
Nguyen Thi Kim Chuy: We came home hairless with ghostly white
eyes
Helen Tennant
Hegelhimer: I was their wife, their sister, their
girlfriend
You Want Me to Start World War III?
James Thompson: This was crazy and deceitful policy
making
Seth Tillman: We could stop this war tommorrow
Charles Cooper (I): He used the f-word more freely than a
marine in boot camp
Walt Whitman Rostow: Take the North Vietnamese of Vinh
hostage
Central Highlands
Dennis Deal: Man, if we're up against this, it's gonna be a
long-ass year
Ward Just: It approached the vicinity of the
spiritual
Le Cao Dai: Sometimes I operated all night while the staff
took turns pedaling the bicycle
From Civil Rights to Antiwar
Julian Bond: They said I was guilty of treason and
sedition
General Baker Jr.: When the call is made to free the
Mississippi Delta...I'll be the first one in line
The Ultimate Protest
Anne Morrison Welsh: It was like an arrow was shot from Norman's
heart
Free-Fire Zone
Jim Soular: A goddamn chopper was worth three times more than
David
Triage
James Lafferty: No draft board ever failed to meet its
quotas
David M. Smith: The knife man
Sylvia Lutz Holland: We saved their lives, but what
life?
Chi Nguyen: Being wounded was not considered the worst thing
that could happen
Morale Boosters
Bobbie Keith: I got a butterfly right on the butt. So that's my war
story
James Brown: After they got the funk they went back and
reloaded
Quach Van Phong: An artist ca be as important in war as a
soldier
Nancy Smoyer: I can't believe the Donut Dollies got us to do
that
Vu Hy Thieu: Nothing was more essential than our
sandals
Joe McDonald: I was president of my high school marching
band
Air War
Jopnathan Schell: I had my notebook right there in the
plane
Harlan S.
Pinkerton Jr.: Good luck and good hunting
Luu Huy Chao: Before I trained as a pilot I had never been in
an airplane
Nguyen Quang Sang: That was the first time I ever saw an
American
Fred Branfman: What would it be like to hide in a cave all
for five years?
Prisoners of War (I)
Porter Halyburton: I don't see how you've got a worse place than
this
Troung My Hoa: They tried to make us say, 'Down with
President Ho!'
Randy Kehler: Friction against the wheel
Cameras, Books, and Guns
Philip Jones Griffiths (I): Go see what they did to those people
with your money
Larry Heinemann: We had this idea that we were king of the
fucking hill
Doung Thanh Phong: We didn't need a darkroom
Joan Holden: The counterculture was visible
everywhere
Oliver Stone: He lived to kill. He was like a real
Arab
Nguyen Duy: Whoever won, the people always lost
Yusef Komunyakaa: Soul Brothers, what you dying
for?
H.D.S. Greenway: We would write something ans the magazine
would ignore it if it wasn't upbeat
Antiwar Escalations
Todd Gitlin: A rather grandoise sense that we were the stars and
spear-carriers of history
Tom Englehardt: It was like Vietnam had somehow come all the
way into our living rooms
Vivian Rothstein: What? Meet separately with
women?
They Slept At Our House
Paul Warnke: We fought for a separate South Vietnam, but there
wasn't any South
Part Four: The Turning Point (1968-70)
Tet
Tran Van Tan: He asked me for directions to the police
sensations
Barry Zorthian: Then-boom!-Tet comes along
Philip Jones Griffiths (II): You're not safe in those
cities
Nguyen Qui Duc: I was living a double life
Bob Gabriel: We buried our own men right there
Tuan Van Ban: Attack! Attack! Attack!
Memorial Day 1968
Clark Dougan: He Was Only 19-Did You Know Him?
From Johnson to Nixon
John Gilligan: Our only shot was to help Humphrey break away from
Johnson
Peter Kuznick: Political conversion was the greatest
ahprodisiac
J. Shaeffer: The Palace Guard
Samuel Huntington: You had to be pretty stupid to stay out in
the countryside
Douglas Kinnard: While we had the power, it turned out they
had the will
A Three-Square-Mile Piece of the United States
Tom O'Hara: It was like being in a minimum-security
prison
Familes At War
John Douglas Marshal: You will not be welcome here
again
Huynh Phuong Dong: Recieving a letter was a mixed
blessing
Richard Houser: They told me I needed to choose between my
country and my brother
Nathan Houser: A sign this country has grown up will be when
there is a memorial erected to the war resisters
Suzie Scott: This nice young man from the FBI was
here
Lam Van Lich: I was away from home for twenty-nine
years
My Lai
Larry Colburn: They were butchering people
Michael Bernhardt: The portable fire-free zone
You Look Like a Gook
Vincent Okamoto: Damn, I'm a Gook
Wayne Smith: I was thinking God they didn't have air
support
Charley Trujillo: It sure as hell wasn't 'English only' in
Vietnam
An Acute Lack of Forgetfulness
Gloria Emerson: Before the war, I was Miss Mary Poppins
Nguyen Ngoc Luong: To get their ID cards, the girls had to go
to bed with the police
From Cambodia to Kent State
Anthony Lake: Quitting wasn't heroic
A.J. Langguth: I think they pictured it as a kind of huge
bamboo Pentagon
Tom Grace: As much as we hated the war on April 29, we hated
it more on April 30
Part Five: Endings (1970-75)
The End of the Tunnel
Alexander M. Haig Jr.: Even the tough guys...caved in
Morton Halerin: Kissenger did not trust anybody
fully
Judith Coburn: Vietnamization wasn't working any better than
Americanization
We Really Believes...
Beverly Gologorsky: God forbid my boss finds out I'm
here
Nguyen Ngoc Bich: Why should my son die for your
country?
Chalmers Johnson: The campus was turning into a celebration
of Maoism
Steve Sherlock: Steve Sherlock, bronze star with a
V.
Watergate
Daniel Ellsberg: We're eating our young
Egil "Bud" Krogh: Let's circle the wagons
The World Was Coming to An End
Frank Maguire: The whole attitude was, stand back little brother,
I'll take care of it
Charles Cooper (II): All this area was Indian
country
Everybody Thought We'd Won the War
Charles Hill: Reporters just kept writing as if it were
Tet
Paris
Daniel Davidson: I wouldn't buy a used car from that
man
Nguyen Thi Binh: The longest peace talks in
history
Nguyen Khac Huynh: It wasn't a mistake, it was an
inexplicable crime
Prisoners of War (II)
Jay Scarborough: I read Anthony Adverse about four
times
Tran Ngoc Chau: The curriculum was designed to detoxicate
us
John McCain: Americans like conspiracies
Patty and Earl Hopper Sr.: What mushroom do they think we
were hatched under last week?
Gloria Coppin: The government wanted to control the POW/MIA
movement
Copllapse
Frank Snepp: There was classified confetti all over the
trees
Troung Tran: We could either lose or tie, but not
win
The Merriment was Short-Lived
Le Minh Khue: The letters remain, but the senders are gone
forever
Part Six: Legacies (1975- )
Missing In Action
Tran Van Ban: We saw so many parents crying for their lost
children
Tom Corey: Why do you hate the Vietnamese?
War-Zone Childhoods
Tran Luong: I never got there in time to capture an American
pilot
Bong Macdoran: It's not worth my energy to lay blame on
anybody
Luong Ung: People just disappeared and you didn't say
anything
Silences
Toshio Whelchel: i didn't her to worry, so I lied
R. Huynh: Your real self was only for you
Jayne Stancavage: I just want to know what
happened
Souvenirs
Hoang Van Thiet: They bought Zippos as a kind of birth
certificate
Taps
Leroy V. Quintana: Old geezers...playing taps on a tape
recorder
William Westmoreland: I was leading an unpopular
war
Thai Dao: The first time I ever encountered the Vietnam War
was in Hollywood movies
Tim O'Brien: You can't talk with people you
demonize
Huu Ngoc: We no longer hate the Americans
Wayne Karlin: The roof that hasn't been built
Duong Tuong: Because love is stronger than enmity
Acknowledgments
Index
Christian G. Appy is a professor of history at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, and the author of two previous books on the Vietnam War. His oral history of the war, Patriots, was a main selection of Book of the Month Club and won the Massachusetts Book Award for nonfiction. His most recent book is American Reckoning: The Vietnam War and Our National Identity. He lives in Amherst.
Intense and absorbing... If you buy only one book on the Vietnam
War, this is the one you want. (Chicago Tribune)
A gem of a book, as informative and compulsively readable as it is
timely. (The Washington Post Book World)
Intense and absorbing... If you buy only one book on the Vietnam
War, this is the one you want. (Chicago Tribune)
A gem of a book, as informative and compulsively readable as it is
timely. (The Washington Post Book World)
When Appy (Working-Class War) says "all sides" he is not exaggerating. It's difficult to think of any group of people who were involved in the many and varied aspects of the American war in Vietnam not represented in these oral history pages. Appy's testifiers include war hawks; peace activists; former Vietcong guerrilla fighters, Vietnamese Communists, Vietnamese anti-Communists; American veterans of many stripes, from privates to generals, medics to infantrymen; POW/MIA activists; poets, novelists, journalists; entertainers; and former government officials from all sides. Appy amply fulfills his goal of presenting a "vast range of war-related memories" in this massive, valuable book. He spent five years traveling around the country and in Vietnam, interviewing 350 people, and included about half of their stories. Oral histories often suffer from loose organization or from voices that pop up confusingly again and again. Appy takes a different approach. Each person appears only once, and Appy gives the participants plenty of room to tell their stories. He also provides on-the-mark, often insightful introductions to each entry, along with brief but to-the-point chapter introductions to set the historical context. The book contains the remembrances of some well-known people, including Gen. William Westmoreland, Gen. Alexander Haig, Gen. Vo Nguyen Giap, Walt Whitman Rostow, Julian Bond, Ward Just, Oliver Stone, poet Yusef Kumunyakaa and writer-activists Todd Gitlin and Jonathan Schell. There are others known mostly to Vietnam cognoscenti (Chester Cooper, Le Minh Kue, Rufus Phillips, Wayne Karlin and Nguyen Qui Duc), as well as many of the voices of just plain folks who experienced the war in myriad ways. It all adds up to a solid contribution to the primary source background of the longest and most controversial overseas war in American history. (May 26) Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.
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