A Death in November: America in Vietnam, 1963

Cover
Penguin Publishing Group, 1987 - 373 Seiten
The time: January-November 1963. The place: Saigon. The circumstances: the subversion from inside and out of a fledgling nation, and the promotion, by some of the Kennedy administration's arrogant and uncomprehending high officials, of a group of Vietnamese generals' treachery. The result: the assassination of South Vietnamese President Ngo Dinh Diem and his brother Ngo Dinh Nhu in a military coup just three weeks before the assassination of President Kennedy. Hammer's riveting in-depth chronicle of that crucial year demonstrates how this military coup transformed the Vietnam war into an American war. Having often visited the embattled nation of South Vietnam in this period and having interviewed key characters in the drama, she also draws on previously classified documents and other sources, including many unpublished ones. Portraying the Vietnamese protagonists in a Vietnamese context, Hammer cuts away layer after layer of double-talk to expose the incomprehension and mistrust between Americans and Vietnamese that destroyed Diem's independent government. A Death in November reveals how the coup, which led to the United States' open control of the war effort, set in motion an ever-widening tragedy.

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Inhalt

The Presidents Birthday
7
The Eager Americans
27
Why Cant a Puppet Act Like a Puppet?
42
Urheberrecht

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Autoren-Profil (1987)

Ellen Hammer, 1921 - 2001 Ellen Hammer was born in 1921 and received a bachelor's degree from barnard College in 1941. She worked for several years as a research assistant for the Council on Foreign Relations in Manhattan. Soon after she received her doctorate in Public Law and Government from Columbia where she specialized in international relations. She is best known for her book "The Struggle for Indochina", which discussed the struggle of that region for independence from France. Hammer was known as an authority on French Colonial rule in Indochina. She also became interested in the on going problems in Vietnam. When the war ended so terribly, Hammer moved to France and vowed to have nothing more to do with the subject. Hammer died on January 28, 2001, in New York City of lymphoma. She was 79 years old.

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