Book review: The Myths of Tet

Book review: The Myths of Tet

Our generals lied about it…

 

 

Book review:

The Myths of Tet:

The Most Misunderstood Event of the Vietnam War

 

Edwin E. Moïse

Lawrence, KS: University Press of Kansas, 2017

276 pages

 

Too many lies. That’s what Edwin Moïse’s book says about the war in Vietnam.

No surprise, more or less. Moïse carefully and compellingly documents the lies created by American generals in Vietnam (“body counts,” “we’re winning the war”) and fed to credulous U. S. government officials right up to President Johnson. In The Myths of Tet, Moïse documents the lies manufactured by North Vietnamese military leaders and used to rationalize their combat strategies that resulted in uncounted military and civilian deaths.

The U. S. was not “winning the war” at the time of the Tet attacks in 1968. The early success of the North Vietnamese and Viet Cong attacks was barely understood at the time by the American intelligence apparatus. American combat deaths soared immediately, but somehow this evidence of enemy military success was not fully interpreted by the U. S. military, the American government, and the American people.

Sadly, truth wasn’t the only casualty of the Tet Offensive.

I was in the city of Hue two years after the Tet fighting. The city still looked like a combat zone in 1970. Every wall and building I saw was pockmarked by bullets and explosives. The graffiti that North Vietnamese soldiers had scrawled on the walls was still visible, and it wasn’t funny.

That’s no lie.

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Book review. Copyright © Richard Carl Subber 2017 All rights reserved.

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Book review: To Serve Them All My Days

by R. F. Delderfield

A beloved teacher,

      you know this story…

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