Friday, October 12, 2018

Hue 1968: A Turning Point of the American War in Vietnam (Mark Bowden, 2017)

(608 pages (including notes))

We've thought very highly of Ken Burns's (fairly) recent Vietnam War series on PBS; this book had some of the same feeling, but focused on a single battle (though with plenty of helpful surrounding detail).  I liked it a great deal.

Hue as an important historical city in Vietnam - I had no idea - pretty far north in South Vietnam.  A citadel and "old city" portion, heavily fortified.  Cultural/historical significance, meaning US couldn't bomb it.

North Vietnamese Army and Viet Cong meticulously plan to attack Hue as a featured element of Tet offensive - they realize they cannot hold it indefinitely, but believe they can make a real statement here.  And they definitely did.  Took over the citadel - thick walls, limited number of gates, defensive towers, moats - bigtime problems given that razing wasn't an option.

US planners and higher-ups tended to discount Tet in general, and discounted the situation in Hue in particular.  Meaning regular guys are sent into ridiculously dangerous situations due to higher-ups not comprehending, at least in the early going.  Author provides intimate descriptions of what can only be called raw courage - just amazing what these guys were doing - many of them truly "regular" draft fodder - many not particularly fired up to be there, but doing their jobs. 

Some of that reminded of this book - so much courage seems to be bound up with the guys close by.

North Vietnam with zero air power, limited firepower of any kind - necessitating quite a bit of courage and persistence - yet also incredible cruelty, ideological purification messes, etc.

Amazing degree of press access and honesty (and bravery - these folks were in the middle of things) - post-Vietnam I believe the military keeps much tighter control over the reporting, greatly sanitized.

Recommended.

No comments:

Post a Comment