Almost two decades after the Vietnam War, most Americans remain convinced that U.S. prisoners are still being held captive in Southeast Asia, and many even accuse the government of concealing their existence. But as H. Bruce Franklin demonstrates in his startling investigation, there is no plausible basis for the belief in live POWs. Through scrupulous research, he shows for the first time how this illusion was fabricated and then converted into a powerful myth. Franklin reveals that in 1969 the Nixon administration, aided by militant pro-war forces, manufactured the POW/MIA issue to deflect attention from American atrocities in Vietnam, to undermine the burgeoning anti-war movement, and to stymie the Paris peace talks, resulting in the prolongation of the Vietnam War for another four years. Successive administrations, in an effort to mobilize public support for their continued economic and political warfare against Vietnam, asserted the possibility of live POWs at great emotional cost to both family members of the missing and countless Americans distressed about the fate of those supposedly left behind in Indochina. Born of political expediency, the POW/MIA issue was transformed in the 1980s into a potent myth. American culture was transfigured as movies and novels designed to reimage the Vietnam War turned the imagined post-war POWs into crucial symbols of betrayed American manhood and honor. Finally the myth began to turn against its creators when many Americans became convinced that the government itself was conspiring to betray the missing men. As he traces the evolution of the POW/MIA myth, Franklin not only exposes it as an elaborate hoax at the highest levels of government, butalso explains why the myth has penetrated to the heart of American life. By confronting the "true tragedy of the missing in Vietnam", Franklin helps us to understand how to heal the terrible psychological and spiritual wounds of the Vietnam War.
... 45 ; and Operation Pegasus , 51 ; and credibility gap , 67 ; and troop request , 70-3 , 77 ; and Ambassador Bunker , 128 ; farewell of , 149 Weyand , Lieutenant General Frederick C. , 8 Wheeler , General Earle G. , 10 , 29-30 ...
Later he describes the unrelenting B - 52 attacks that the PRG headquarters is subjected to : “ The first few times I experienced a B - 52 attack it seemed , as I strained to press myself into the bunker floor , that I had been caught ...
I remained on the ground and belly-crawled toward the big triage bunker. Several seconds of silence followed. I broke into a crouched run toward the bunker. Jim came flying out of the hooch and ran panting and cursing right behind me.
CIA historian Thomas Ahern related that agency analysts were besieged by a “ welter of raw reports , some of them alleging an arms traffic that did not exist for a full ...
This book offers an original interpretation of the effect of legislative-executive relations on the war in Indochina and proposes a number of methods that might be used to build widespread support for American foreign policy.
Offering what is sure to be a controversial perspective on America's most painful war, the author proposes that Vietnam should have been fought, but with different tactics.
New York: Semiotext(e), 1983. ———. Ecstasy of Communication. ... Bergerud, Eric. Red Thunder, Tropic Lightning: The World of a Combat Division ... Black and Red 1 (September 1968): inside front cover. “Black GI Power Grows in Germany.
Rear Admiral William J. Holland , USN ( Ret . ) Ms. Christine G. Hughes Captain William Spencer Johnson IV , USN ( Ret . ) Dr. J. P. London The Honorable Robin B. Pirie Jr. Mr. Fred H. Rainbow Admiral J. Paul Reason , USN ( Ret . ) ...
The Vietnam war continues to be the focus of intense controversy. While most people—liberals, conservatives, Democrats, Republicans, historians, pundits, and citizens alike—agree that the United States did not win the...
"During the Vietnamese war, the United States sought to undermine Hanoi's subversion of the Saigon regime by sending Vietnamese operatives behind enemy line. A secret to most Americans, this covert...