Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 232
Trim: 6⅜ x 9½
978-0-7425-6697-2 • Hardback • September 2009 • $108.00 • (£83.00)
978-0-7425-6698-9 • Paperback • December 2011 • $42.00 • (£35.00)
978-0-7425-6699-6 • eBook • August 2009 • $39.50 • (£30.00)
Colonel Herbert Y. Schandler (Ret) was George C. Marshall Professor of Grand Strategy at National Defense University.
Chapter 1: The Illusion of Military Victory
Chapter 2: The Enemy
Chapter 3: The American Commitment
Chapter 4: The Road to War
Chapter 5: America Enters the War
Chapter 6: The Air War: The Futile Effort to Break Hanoi's Will
Chapter 7: The Ground War
Chapter 8: The Tet Offensive
Chapter 9: The American Economy: Guns and Butter?
Chapter 10: The Nixon Presidency
Conclusion
Epilogue
As Herb Schandler convincingly argues, there are situations in the world that the United States cannot resolve militarily. The Vietnam War was the South's to lose and never America's to win. Read this compelling book and weep for those who tried.
— Volney Warner, General, US Army (Retired)
Schandler . . . views the Vietnam War through the eyes of the North Vietnamese, a perspective sadly lacking during that disastrous conflict. . . . While helping Americans understand what went wrong in Vietnam, Schandler's message is even more important in helping recalibrate the chance for our success in the current guerrilla wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
— Historywire
What makes this work unique is that the author offers insight into North Vietnamese perceptions of war by including discussions and interviews with former officials. . . . Recommended.
— Choice Reviews
A scholarly and well-written book that provides a unique perspective not only on America in Vietnam, but also on what the other side was thinking. . . . Highly recommended.
— Parameters
Relying extensively on sources in the former North Vietnam, Schandler illustrates how North Vietnamese perceptions of the struggle were never understood by American policymakers.
— Booklist
A competent summary of principal arguments holding that the United States embarked on a futile and misguided quest in Vietnam. . . . Both highly readable and thoughtfully argued. As a concise exposition on the inexorable logic of failure in Vietnam, it fulfills the author's intent and provides a good foundation for a nonspecialist seeking a basic explanation of America's withdrawal from Vietnam.
— Military Review
[Schandler] stands out, however, as the most significant orthodox scholar coming from a military background. . . . Schandler's account is especially useful in understanding civilian-military relations and North Vietnam's response to American warfare. The conclusions are well-stated and persuasive.
— Pacific Affairs
Provides a definitive narrative and analysis of the American failure in Vietnam
Offers clear-eyed lessons learned from the perspective and motivations of America's victorious enemy
Presents North Vietnamese viewpoints, including frank quotes from North Vietnamese diplomats and officers
Shows how U.S. leaders misunderstood North Vietnamese outlooks and motivations
Highly relevant to the current guerrilla wars the United States is fighting in Iraq and Afghanistan