Author: Buzzanco, Robert Title: Masters of War : Military Dissent and Politics in the Vietnam Era
Description: Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1996. orig.cloth. 24x16cm, xiv,386 pp. In a chipped dustwrapper.. Minor rubbing. A scratch to rear cover. VG. dustwrapper. ¶ Contents: Prologue to tragedy: US military opposition to intervention in Vietnam, 1950-1954; Preparing for and avoiding war: military affairs and politics in Vietnam and the United States, 1955-1960; Pinning down the president: JFK, the military, and political manoeuvering over Vietnam, January-October 1961; The best and worst of times: the US war against Vietnam, October 1961-November 1963; 'Seeing things through Vietnam': LBJ, the military, and the growing U.S. commitment to Vietnam, November 1963 - December 1964; Hope for the best, expect the worst: US ground troops enter the war in Vietnam, January-July 1965; War on three fronts: US forces vs. the VC, Westmoreland vs. the marine, and the military leaders vs. the White House, July 1965-December 1966; 'The platform of false prophets is crowded': public hope and private despair in Vietnam, 1967; The myth of the Tet: military failure and the politics of war; Conclusion: bringing it all back home ["Throughout the last decade, defenders of the US role in Vietnam have argued that America's defeat was not the result of an illegitimate intervention or military shortcomings but rather a failure of will because national leaders, principally Lyndon B. Johnson, forced the troops to 'fight with one hand tied behind their backs.' In this volume, Robert Buzzanco disproves this theory by demonstrating that political leaders, not the military brass, pressed for war; that American policymakers always understood the problems and peril of war in Indochina..." - Publisher's description]
Keywords: American Military History, Vietnam War, United States, Political Politics, Armed Forces, , , ,
Price: US$ 65.00 Seller: Expatriate Bookshop of Denmark
- Book number: BOOKS014396I