The Vietnam War: Opposing ViewpointsGreenhaven Press, 1998 - 284 من الصفحات Presidents, antiwar activists, & soldiers are among those who debate the causes & consequences of America's involvement in Vietnam in this collection of documents. |
من داخل الكتاب
النتائج 1-3 من 17
الصفحة 131
... Tet Offensive of 1968 , the largest military campaign of the war . Tet is the lunar new year , the most celebrated holiday in Viet- nam . On January 31 , 1968 , the beginning of the Tet period , North Vietnamese and Vietcong forces ...
... Tet Offensive of 1968 , the largest military campaign of the war . Tet is the lunar new year , the most celebrated holiday in Viet- nam . On January 31 , 1968 , the beginning of the Tet period , North Vietnamese and Vietcong forces ...
الصفحة 236
... Tet Offensive of 1968 , now widely considered to be the turning point of the war . As 1968 began , the U.S. Army and the Army of the Republic of Vietnam ( ARVN ) were reporting increasing suc- cess in the Vietnamese countryside and the ...
... Tet Offensive of 1968 , now widely considered to be the turning point of the war . As 1968 began , the U.S. Army and the Army of the Republic of Vietnam ( ARVN ) were reporting increasing suc- cess in the Vietnamese countryside and the ...
الصفحة 237
... Tet episode was a U.S. defeat and poisoned Amer- ican public support for Vietnam , Podhoretz asserts . He contends that this mishandling of the Tet Offensive effectively established the television networks and major newspapers and ...
... Tet episode was a U.S. defeat and poisoned Amer- ican public support for Vietnam , Podhoretz asserts . He contends that this mishandling of the Tet Offensive effectively established the television networks and major newspapers and ...
طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
action aggression Ameri American military American soldiers American troops amnesty antiwar movement April areas argues armed forces attacks Bao Dai believe bombing Cambodia China colonial combat commitment Communism Communist conflict Cong Congress critics decision defeat defense Democratic Diem's draft card economic effort elections enemy escalation Excerpted fighting following viewpoint foreign France freedom French Geneva George Moss guerrilla Hanoi Ho Chi Minh independence Indochina involvement in Vietnam John Johnson journalists Kennedy Kissinger Laos leaders leadership lives Lyndon major ment million Minh moral namese negotiations Ngo Dinh Diem Nixon North officers peace political President Press prisoners public opinion regime resistance Saigon Senate South Viet South Vietnam South Vietnamese forces Southeast Asia Soviet strategic television Tet Offensive tion U.S. Army U.S. military U.S. troops United victory Vietcong Vietminh Vietnam War Vietnamese Vietnamese Army Washington Westmoreland William Winthrop withdrawal World War II York