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ویرایش: 2nd
نویسندگان: Spencer Tucker (editor)
سری:
ISBN (شابک) : 1851099603, 9781851099610
ناشر: ABC-CLIO
سال نشر: 2011
تعداد صفحات: 2040
زبان: English
فرمت فایل : PDF (درصورت درخواست کاربر به PDF، EPUB یا AZW3 تبدیل می شود)
حجم فایل: 48 مگابایت
در صورت تبدیل فایل کتاب The Encyclopedia of the Vietnam War 4 volumes : A Political, Social, and Military History به فرمت های PDF، EPUB، AZW3، MOBI و یا DJVU می توانید به پشتیبان اطلاع دهید تا فایل مورد نظر را تبدیل نمایند.
توجه داشته باشید کتاب دائرlopالمعارف جنگ ویتنام 4 جلد: یک تاریخ سیاسی ، اجتماعی و نظامی نسخه زبان اصلی می باشد و کتاب ترجمه شده به فارسی نمی باشد. وبسایت اینترنشنال لایبرری ارائه دهنده کتاب های زبان اصلی می باشد و هیچ گونه کتاب ترجمه شده یا نوشته شده به فارسی را ارائه نمی دهد.
جنگ ویتنام بیش از یک دهه به طول انجامید، طولانی ترین جنگ در تاریخ ایالات متحده بود و جان نزدیک به 60000 سرباز آمریکایی و همچنین میلیون ها ویتنامی را به همراه داشت که بسیاری از آنها غیرنظامیان غیر نظامی بودند. درسهای آموختهشده از این درگیری غمانگیز همچنان در دنیای امروز اهمیت زیادی دارد. اکنون در ویرایش دوم خود، دایرهالمعارف جنگ ویتنام: تاریخ سیاسی، اجتماعی و نظامی، حجم کاملی از مدخلها را به نسخه اول از قبل جامع اضافه میکند. ، آن را به جامع ترین مرجع موجود در مورد یکی از بحث برانگیزترین رویدادهای تاریخ ایالات متحده تبدیل می کند. این کتاب برای ارائه دیدگاههای چند بعدی به مناقشه نوشته شده است، نه تنها تجربه آمریکا در ویتنام، بلکه کل دامنه تاریخ ویتنام، از جمله تجربه فرانسه و جنگ هندوچین، و همچنین ریشههای درگیری، چگونگی ایالات متحده را نیز پوشش میدهد. درگیر شد و پیامدهای گسترده این جنگ طولانی مدت. همچنین کاملترین و دقیقترین نظم نبردی را که تاکنون منتشر شده است، بر اساس دادههای گردآوریشده از منابع ویتنامی ارائه میکند. این آخرین نسخه حتی بیشتر از آنچه خوانندگان از سردبیری اسپنسر سی. تاکر و کارشناسان تاریخ نظامی در ABC-CLIO انتظار دارند را ارائه می دهد.
The Vietnam War lasted more than a decade, was the longest war in U.S. history, and cost the lives of nearly 60,000 American soldiers, as well as millions of Vietnamese—many of whom were uninvolved civilians. The lessons learned from this tragic conflict continue to have great relevance in today's world.Now in its second edition, The Encyclopedia of the Vietnam War: A Political, Social, and Military History adds an entire additional volume of entries to the already exhaustive first edition, making it the most comprehensive reference available about one of the most controversial events in U.S. history. Written to provide multidimensional perspectives into the conflict, it covers not only the American experience in Vietnam, but also the entire scope of Vietnamese history, including the French experience and the Indochina War, as well as the origins of the conflict, how the United States became involved, and the extensive aftermath of this prolonged war. It also provides the most complete and accurate order of battle ever published, based upon data compiled from Vietnamese sources. This latest release delivers even more of what readers have come to expect from the editorship of Spencer C. Tucker and the military history experts at ABC-CLIO.
How to go to your page......Page 2
Contents......Page 11
Volume I: A–G......Page 5
List of Entries......Page 13
List of Maps......Page 27
Foreword......Page 29
Preface......Page 33
General Maps......Page 35
Overview of the Vietnam War......Page 43
A......Page 49
B......Page 135
C......Page 197
D......Page 301
E......Page 371
F......Page 405
G......Page 453
Volume II: H–P......Page 515
List of Entries......Page 523
List of Maps......Page 537
General Maps......Page 539
H......Page 547
I......Page 635
J......Page 649
K......Page 667
L......Page 723
M......Page 799
N......Page 895
O......Page 967
P......Page 977
Volume III: Q–Z......Page 1086
List of Entries......Page 1094
List of Maps......Page 1108
General Maps......Page 1110
Q......Page 1118
R......Page 1122
S......Page 1176
T......Page 1252
U......Page 1322
V......Page 1390
W......Page 1480
X......Page 1518
Y......Page 1522
Z......Page 1528
Volume IV: Documents......Page 1560
List of Documents......Page 1568
Introduction......Page 1574
1. Ho Chi Minh: Speech at the Tours Congress, December 1920......Page 1576
2. Ho Chi Minh: Open Letter to Léon Archimbaud, January 15, 1923......Page 1577
3. Ho Chi Minh: Appeal Made on the Occasion of the Founding of the Communist Party, February 18, 1930......Page 1578
4. Ho Chi Minh: Letter from Abroad, June 6, 1941......Page 1579
6. Charles Taussig: Memorandum of Conversation with President Franklin D. Roosevelt by the Adviser on Caribbean Affairs, March 15, 1945 [Excerpt]......Page 1580
7. State Department Division of European Affairs: Draft Memorandum for President Harry S. Truman, April 20, 1945......Page 1581
8. State Department Division of Far East Affairs: Draft Memorandum for President Harry S. Truman, April 21, 1945......Page 1582
9. Joseph Grew, Acting Secretary of State: Telegram to Ambassador Jefferson Caffery in France, May 9, 1945......Page 1584
11. U.S. State Department: Paper on U.S. Postwar Policy toward Asia and the Pacific, June 22, 1945 [Excerpts]......Page 1585
13. Abdication of Emperor Bao Dai of Annam, August 1945......Page 1587
14. Vietnamese Declaration of Independence, September 2, 1945......Page 1588
15. Dean Acheson, Acting Secretary of State: Telegram to Charge Walter Robertson in China, October 5, 1945......Page 1589
17. Ho Chi Minh: Letter to Secretary of State James F. Byrnes, October 22, 1945 [Excerpts]......Page 1590
18. Ho Chi Minh: Speech on the Resistance War in Southern Vietnam, November 1945......Page 1591
19. Ho Chi Minh: Declaration of the Policy of the Provisional Coalition Government, January 1, 1946......Page 1592
21. James F. Byrnes, Secretary of State: Note to French Ambassador Henri Bonnet, April 12, 1946......Page 1593
22. Ho Chi Minh: Letter to Compatriots in Nam Bo, May 31, 1946......Page 1594
24. Abbot L. Moffat, Chief of the Division of Southeast Asian Affairs: Memorandum to John Carter Vincent, Director of the Office of Far Eastern Affairs, August 9, 1946......Page 1595
25. Franco-Vietnamese Modus Vivendi, September 14, 1946......Page 1597
26. Ho Chi Minh: Proclamation to the People upon His Return from France after Negotiations, October 23, 1946......Page 1598
28. Colonel Pierre-Louis Debès, French Commander at Haiphong: Ultimatum to Haiphong Administrative Committee, November 22, 1946......Page 1600
29. Dean Acheson, Acting Secretary of State: Telegram to Division Chief Abbot L. Moffat in Saigon, December 5, 1946......Page 1601
30. Abbott L. Moffat: Telegram from Hanoi to the State Department, December 1946 [Excerpt]......Page 1602
32. Consul Charles Reed in Saigon: Telegram to Secretary of State James F. Byrnes, December 24, 1946......Page 1603
33. George C. Marshall, Secretary of State: Telegram to Ambassador Jefferson Caffery, February 3, 1947......Page 1604
34. Democratic Republic of Vietnam: Account of Ho Chi Minh–Paul Mus Meeting, May 12, 1947......Page 1605
35. George C. Marshall, Secretary of State: Telegram to Jefferson Caffery in Paris, May 13, 1947......Page 1606
36. Charles S. Reed: Airgram to Dean Acheson, June 14, 1947 [Excerpts]......Page 1607
37. George C. Marshall, Secretary of State: Telegram to the Consul General at Saigon (Later Repeated for Paris), July 17, 1947......Page 1608
38. James L. O’Sullivan, Vice-Consul in Hanoi, and Charles S. Reed in Saigon: Telegrams to George C. Marshall, July 21 and 24, 1947 [Excerpts]......Page 1609
39. Department of State Policy Statement on Indochina, September 27, 1948 [Excerpts]......Page 1611
41. Dean Acheson, Secretary of State: Telegram to the Embassy in France, February 25, 1949......Page 1613
42. Dean Acheson, Secretary of State: Telegram to the Consulate General in Saigon, May 10, 1949......Page 1614
43. Dean Acheson: Telegram to the Consulate in Hanoi, May 20, 1949......Page 1615
45. Raymond B. Fosdick, Consultant to the Secretary of State on Far Eastern Policy: Memorandum for Ambassador-at-Large Philip Jessup, November 4, 1949......Page 1616
46. National Security Council Paper No. 64, 1950......Page 1617
47. Dean Acheson, Secretary of State: Telegram to the Embassy in the United Kingdom, January 30, 1950......Page 1618
48. Paper on Military Aid for Indochina by a Working Group in the Department of State, February 1, 1950 [Excerpts]......Page 1619
49. Dean Acheson, Secretary of State: Telegram to U.S. Ambassador to France David Bruce, March 4, 1950......Page 1620
51. President Harry S. Truman: Statement Announcing Direct U.S. Military Aid to Indochina, June 27, 1950......Page 1621
52. Ho Chi Minh: Answers to Questions Put by the Press Regarding U.S. Intervention in Indochina, July 25, 1950......Page 1622
54. Dean Acheson, Secretary of State: Telegram to Ambassador to France David Bruce, November 11, 1950......Page 1623
55. John Ohly, Deputy Director of the Mutual Defense Assistance Program: Memorandum to Secretary of State Dean Acheson, November 20, 1950 [Excerpts]......Page 1624
56. Joint Chiefs of Staff: Memorandum to Secretary of Defense George C. Marshall, January 10, 1951......Page 1625
57. Dean Acheson, Secretary of State: Telegram to the Legation in Saigon, January 30, 1951......Page 1626
58. Dean Acheson, Secretary of State: Report to the National Security Council on Conversations between President Harry S. Truman and French Premier René Pleven, February 23, 1951 [Excerpt]......Page 1627
59. R. Allen Griffin, Special Far East Representative, Economic Cooperation Administration: Telegram to Richard M. Bissell Jr., Acting Administrator, Economic Cooperation Administration, November 30, 1951......Page 1628
60. National Security Council Staff Study on Objectives, Policies, and Course of Action in Asia (Annex to NSC 48/4), May 17, 1951 [Excerpts]......Page 1629
62. Ambassador David Bruce: Telegram to Secretary of State Dean Acheson, December 26, 1951 [Excerpt]......Page 1631
63. Ho Chi Minh: Talk to Officers Preparing for the Military Campaign in Northwestern Vietnam, September 9, 1952......Page 1632
65. John Foster Dulles, Secretary of State: Telegram to C. Douglas Dillon, Ambassador to France, March 26, 1953 [Excerpt]......Page 1634
66. Douglas MacArthur II, Assistant Secretary of State for Congressional Relations: Memorandum, April 27, 1953......Page 1635
67. Lieutenant General John W. O’Daniel: Report to the Joint Chiefs of Staff on the U.S. Joint Military Mission to Indochina, July 14, 1953 [Excerpts]......Page 1636
68. Secretary of State John Foster Dulles: Telegram to C. Douglas Dillon, Ambassador to France, September 9, 1953 [Excerpts]......Page 1637
70. Ho Chi Minh: Report to the National Assembly, December 1, 1953 [Excerpts]......Page 1638
71. Vo Nguyen Giap: Report to Senior Field Commanders on the Dien Bien Phu Campaign, January 14, 1954 [Excerpt]......Page 1640
72. Joint Chiefs of Staff: Memorandum for Secretary of Defense Charles E. Wilson, March 12, 1954......Page 1641
73. U.S. Army Position on National Security Council Action No. 1074-A, April 1954......Page 1643
74. C. Douglas Dillon, Ambassador to France: Telegram to Secretary of State John Foster Dulles, April 4, 1954......Page 1644
76. National Security Council Planning Board Report on NSC Action No. 1074-A, April 5, 1954 [Excerpt]......Page 1645
77. John Foster Dulles, Secretary of State: Telegram to C. Douglas Dillon, Ambassador to France, April 5, 1954......Page 1647
79. Minutes of Meeting among President Dwight Eisenhower, Secretary of State John Foster Dulles, and Special Assistant to the President Robert Cutler, May 7, 1954......Page 1648
81. John Foster Dulles, Secretary of State: Telegram to C. Douglas Dillon, Ambassador to France, June 14, 1954......Page 1650
82. Walter Bedell Smith, Head of the U.S. Delegation in Geneva and Undersecretary of State: Telegram to Secretary of State John Foster Dulles, June 17, 1954......Page 1651
83. Walter Bedell Smith, Head of the U.S. Delegation in Geneva and Undersecretary of State: Telegram to Secretary of State John Foster Dulles, June 18, 1954......Page 1652
84. Ho Chi Minh: Report to the Sixth Plenum of the Party Central Committee, July 15, 1954 [Excerpt]......Page 1653
85. Walter Bedell Smith, Head of the U.S. Delegation in Geneva and Undersecretary of State: Telegram to Secretary of State John Foster Dulles, July 17, 1954......Page 1654
86. Final Declaration of the Geneva Conference on Indochina, July 21, 1954......Page 1656
87. U.S. Government Response to the Geneva Declarations, July 21, 1954......Page 1657
89. National Intelligence Estimate 63-5-54 on the Post-Geneva Outlook in Indochina, August 3, 1954 [Excerpt]......Page 1658
90. NSC 5492/2, “Review of U.S. Policy in the Far East”, August 20, 1954 [Excerpts]......Page 1659
92. President Dwight Eisenhower: Letter to Ngo Dinh Diem, October 23, 1954......Page 1661
93. Democratic Republic of Vietnam: Declaration on Normalizing Relations between the Northern and Southern Zones, February 4, 1955......Page 1662
94. John Foster Dulles, Secretary of State: Telegram to the Embassy in Saigon, April 6, 1955 [Excerpt]......Page 1663
95. John Foster Dulles, Secretary of State: Telegram to Special Representative General J. Lawton Collins in Saigon, April 9, 1955......Page 1664
96. NSC 5519, Draft Statement and National Security Council Staff Study on U.S. Policy on All-Vietnam Elections, May 17, 1955 [Excerpts]......Page 1665
97. Message from Ho Chi Minh and Foreign Minister Pham Van Dong to the Chief of State of the Republic of Vietnam, July 19, 1955......Page 1667
98. NIE 63-1-55, “Probable Developments in North Vietnam to July 1956”, July 19, 1955 [Excerpts]......Page 1668
100. NIE 63-56, July 17, 1956 [Excerpt]......Page 1669
101. Le Duan: “Duong Loi Cach Mang Mien Nam” [The Path of Revolution in the South], 1956......Page 1670
102. Elbridge Durbrow: Assessment of the Ngo Dinh Diem Regime, January 1, 1957......Page 1673
104. Vo Nguyen Giap: “People’s War, People’s Army”, 1959 [Excerpts]......Page 1674
106. Ho Chi Minh: Talk at a Cadres’ Meeting Debating the Draft Law on Marriage and Family, October 1959 [Excerpt]......Page 1683
107. Elbridge Durbrow, U.S. Ambassador in Saigon: Telegram to Secretary of State Christian A. Herter, March 7, 1960......Page 1684
108. Party Central Committee Secret Cable No. 160 to the Cochin China Regional Party Committee, April 28, 1960 [Excerpt]......Page 1686
109. Resolution of the Vietnamese Workers’ Party’s Third National Congress of Delegates on the Party’s Missions and Policies in This New Era, September 10, 1960 [Excerpt]......Page 1687
110. Politburo Cable No. 17-NB Sent to the Cochin China Region Party Committee and the Interzone 5 Region Party Committee, November 11, 1960 [Excerpts]......Page 1689
111. Manifesto of the National Liberation Front, December 1960......Page 1690
113. Gilpatric Task Force Report, April 27, 1961 [Excerpt]......Page 1692
114. Memorandum of Conversation Involving Secretary of State Dean Rusk, Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara, the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and Other Officials, April 29, 1961 [Excerpts]......Page 1693
116. General Maxwell Taylor: Cable to President John F. Kennedy Recommending Dispatch of U.S. Forces to South Vietnam, November 1, 1961......Page 1695
117. Robert McNamara, Defense Secretary: Memorandum to President John F. Kennedy, November 8, 1961......Page 1697
118. Dean Rusk and Robert S. McNamara: Memorandum to President John F. Kennedy, November 11, 1961 [Excerpts]......Page 1698
119. McGeorge Bundy, White House Special Assistant for National Security Affairs: National Security Action Memorandum No. 111, November 22, 1961......Page 1700
120. President John F. Kennedy: Letter to President Ngo Dinh Diem, December 14, 1961......Page 1701
121. Assistant Secretary of State Roger Hilsman: “The Situation and Short-Term Prospects in South Vietnam”, December 3, 1962 [Excerpt]......Page 1702
122. Mike Mansfield, Senator: Report to President John F. Kennedy on Southeast Asia and Vietnam, December 18, 1962 [Excerpt]......Page 1703
123. Nguyen Chi Thanh, Lao Dong Political Bureau Member: Article, July 1963 [Excerpt]......Page 1704
124. Memorandum for the Record of U.S. State Department Meeting, August 31, 1963......Page 1705
125. President John F. Kennedy’s Remarks on the Situation in Vietnam, September 2, 1963......Page 1706
126. Report of the McNamara-Taylor Mission to South Vietnam, October 2, 1963 [Excerpt]......Page 1707
128. White House: Cablegram to U.S. Ambassador to Vietnam Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. on the CIA Channel, October 5, 1963......Page 1709
130. Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge Jr.: Cable to National Security Advisor McGeorge Bundy Discussing Coup Prospects, October 25, 1963......Page 1710
131. McGeorge Bundy, National Security Advisor: Cable to Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. Expressing Reservations about the Coup, October 30, 1963......Page 1711
133. Joint Chiefs of Staff: Memorandum 46-64, January 22, 1964......Page 1713
134. Robert McNamara, Secretary of Defense: Memorandum for President Lyndon Johnson, March 16, 1964 [Excerpts]......Page 1715
136. George W. Ball, Undersecretary of State: Telegram to President Lyndon Johnson and Secretary of State Dean Rusk, June 5, 1964 [Excerpt]......Page 1717
137. Blair Seaborn, Canadian International Control Commission Representative: Notes on Meeting with Pham Van Dong, June 18, 1964......Page 1719
139. Admiral Thomas H. Moorer, Commander in Chief, Pacific Fleet: Order to All Subordinate Units, August 2, 1964......Page 1720
141. Thomas H. Moorer, Commander in Chief, Pacific Fleet: Message to Captain John Herrick, August 3, 1964 [Excerpts]......Page 1721
142. President Lyndon Johnson’s Message to Congress, August 5, 1964 [Excerpts]......Page 1722
144. Robert S. McNamara Recommends Escalation, July 1, 1965 [Excerpts]......Page 1723
145. McGeorge Bundy: Memorandum to President Lyndon Johnson, February 7, 1965 [Excerpts]......Page 1725
146. Joint Statement of Soviet Premier Aleksai Kosygin and Pham Van Dong in Hanoi, February 10, 1965......Page 1726
147. Dean Rusk, Secretary of State: Telegram to Ambassador Maxwell Taylor, February 13, 1965 [Excerpt]......Page 1727
148. SNIE 10-3/-65: Communist Reactions to Possible U.S. Courses of Action against North Vietnam, February 18, 1965 [Excerpts]......Page 1728
149. “Aggression from the North”: State Department White Paper on Vietnam, February 27, 1965 [Excerpts]......Page 1729
150. Le Duan: “Letters to the South”, February 1965 [Excerpts]......Page 1730
151. Maxwell Taylor, Ambassador: Telegram to Secretary of State Dean Rusk, March 18, 1965......Page 1733
152. National Security Action Memorandum No. 328, April 6, 1965......Page 1734
153. President Lyndon Johnson, “Peace without Conquest”: Address at Johns Hopkins University, April 7, 1965......Page 1736
154. Pham Van Dong: Report to the Second Session of the Third National Assembly, April 8, 1965 [Excerpts]......Page 1739
155. Robert McNamara, Secretary of Defense: Memorandum for President Lyndon Johnson, April 21, 1965 [Excerpt]......Page 1758
156. President Lyndon Johnson: Message to Ambassador Maxwell Taylor, May 10, 1965......Page 1759
158. George Ball, Undersecretary of State: Memorandum for President Lyndon Johnson, July 1, 1965......Page 1760
159. Robert McNamara, Secretary of Defense: Memorandum for President Lyndon Johnson, July 20, 1965 [Excerpt]......Page 1762
160. Le Duan: Letter to the Central Office for South Vietnam, November 1965......Page 1764
161. Robert McNamara, Secretary of Defense: Memorandum to President Lyndon Johnson, November 30, 1965 [Excerpts]......Page 1778
163. Le Duan, First Secretary: Speech to the 12th Plenum of the Party Central Committee, December 1965 [Excerpts]......Page 1780
164. William Bundy: Memorandum for Secretary of State Dean Rusk, February 3, 1966 [Excerpt]......Page 1782
165. Aide-Mémoire from the U.S. State Department to the North Vietnamese Government, Delivered to North Vietnamese Consul General Vu Huu Binh in Rangoon, February 16, 1966......Page 1783
166. Ho Chi Minh: Replies to an Interview with Japanese NDN TV, April 1966......Page 1784
167. Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge Jr.: Telegram to Secretary of State Dean Rusk, June 29, 1966 [Excerpts]......Page 1785
168. Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge Jr.: Telegram to Secretary of State Dean Rusk, November 30, 1966 [Excerpt]......Page 1786
170. Nguyen Duy Trinh, Foreign Minister: Report to the Party Central Committee on Initiating a New Talk-Fight Strategy, January 23, 1967 [Excerpts]......Page 1788
172. Ho Chi Minh: Letter to Lyndon Johnson, February 15, 1967......Page 1792
173. Martin Luther King Jr. Declares His Opposition to the War during a Sermon at New York’s Riverside Church, April 4, 1967......Page 1793
174. Central Intelligence Agency: Intelligence Memorandum, “Bomb Damage Inflicted on North Vietnam through April 1967”, May 12, 1967......Page 1800
175. President Lyndon Johnson: Address in San Antonio, Texas, September 29, 1967 [Excerpt]......Page 1801
176. General William Westmoreland, Commander of U.S. Forces in Vietnam: National Press Club Address, November 21, 1967 [Excerpts]......Page 1802
177. President Lyndon Johnson: News Conference, February 2, 1968 [Excerpts]......Page 1803
178. Robert McNamara, Secretary of Defense, and Dean Rusk, Secretary of State: Television Interview, February 4, 1968 [Excerpts]......Page 1804
179. Senator Robert F. Kennedy Calls Vietnam an Unwinnable War, February 8, 1968......Page 1806
180. General Earle G. Wheeler, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff: Report on the Situation in Vietnam, February 27, 1968 [Excerpts]......Page 1808
181. Walter Cronkite Criticizes U.S. Policy, February 27, 1968 [Excerpts]......Page 1811
182. A Communist Party Evaluation of the 1968 Tet Offensive, March 1968......Page 1812
183. President Lyndon Johnson: Televised Address, March 31, 1968 [Excerpts]......Page 1814
185. COSVN Directive, June 10, 1968 [Excerpt]......Page 1817
186. President Lyndon Johnson: Announcement of U.S. Bombing Halt, October 31, 1968 [Excerpt]......Page 1818
187. National Security Study Memorandum No. 1, January 21, 1969 [Excerpts]......Page 1820
189. President Richard Nixon: Televised Address, May 14, 1969 [Excerpt]......Page 1823
190. COSVN Resolution No. 9, July 1969 [Excerpts]......Page 1825
191. Final Statement of Ho Chi Minh, September 9, 1969......Page 1826
192. President Richard Nixon’s Speech on Vietnamization, November 3, 1969......Page 1828
193. Vice President Spiro T. Agnew: Criticism of What He Perceives as Biased Television Coverage of the Richard Nixon Administration’s Vietnam Policy, November 13, 1969 [Excerpts]......Page 1833
194. Politburo Resolution No. 194-NQ/ TW: Policy toward Captured American Pilots in North Vietnam, November 20, 1969......Page 1835
195. President Richard Nixon: Speech on Cambodia, April 30, 1970 [Excerpts]......Page 1836
196. Summary of COSVN Directive No. 01/CT71, January–February 1971 [Excerpts]......Page 1838
197. President Richard Nixon: Televised Interview, March 22, 1971 [Excerpt]......Page 1840
198. John Kerry: Statement of the Vietnam Veterans Against the War to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, April 23, 1971 [Excerpts]......Page 1841
199. Colonel Robert D. Heinl Jr.: Analysis of the Decline of U.S. Armed Forces, June 7, 1971 [Excerpts]......Page 1843
200. Democratic Republic of Vietnam Peace Proposal, June 26, 1971......Page 1846
201. Peace Proposal of the Provisional Revolutionary Government of South Vietnam, July 1, 1971......Page 1847
202. Le Duc Tho: Cable No. 119, March 27, 1972 [Excerpts]......Page 1848
204. Jane Fonda: Broadcast from Hanoi, August 22, 1972......Page 1851
205. Statement of the Provisional Revolutionary Government of South Vietnam, September 11, 1972 [Excerpt]......Page 1852
206. Document by the South Vietnamese Ministry of Foreign Affairs on the Paris Peace Talks, October 24, 1972......Page 1853
207. Henry Kissinger, National Security Advisor: News Conference, October 26, 1972 [Excerpt]......Page 1854
208. North Vietnamese Government Statement, October 26, 1972 [Excerpt]......Page 1855
209. President Richard Nixon: Letter to President Nguyen Van Thieu, November 14, 1972......Page 1858
210. President Richard Nixon: Letter to President Nguyen Van Thieu, January 5, 1973......Page 1859
211. COSVN Directive 02/73: Policies Related to the Political Settlement and Cease-Fire, January 19, 1973 [Excerpt]......Page 1860
212. Paris Peace Agreement, January 27, 1973 [Excerpt]......Page 1861
213. President Richard Nixon: Letter to Pham Van Dong, February 1, 1973 [Excerpt]......Page 1864
214. COSVN Directive 03/CT 73, March 1973 [Excerpts]......Page 1865
215. President Richard Nixon: News Conference, March 15, 1973 [Excerpt]......Page 1867
217. War Powers Resolution, November 7, 1973 [Excerpt]......Page 1868
218. Politburo Resolution No. 236-NQ/ TW: Richard Nixon’s Resignation of the Presidency of the United States and a Number of Urgent Party Tasks, August 13, 1974 [Excerpts]......Page 1869
219. Conclusion of Phase Two of the Politburo Conference of the Lao Dong, January 8, 1975 [Excerpt]......Page 1870
220. Henry Kissinger, Secretary of State: Request for Emergency Aid for the Republic of Vietnam, April 15, 1975......Page 1871
221. Lao Dong Party Secretariat Directive No. 218-CT/TW: Policy toward Enemy Soldiers Who Are Captured or Surrender in the New Situation, April 18, 1975 [Excerpts]......Page 1873
222. Le Duan: Speech at the Meeting Held in Hanoi to Celebrate Victory, May 15, 1975......Page 1876
223. Pham Van Dong: Speech Delivered on National Day, September 2, 1975 [Excerpts]......Page 1879
224. President Bill Clinton Lifts the Trade Embargo on the Socialist Republic of Vietnam, February 3, 1994 [Excerpts]......Page 1885
225. President Bill Clinton: Announcement of Normalization of Diplomatic Relations with Vietnam, July 11, 1995......Page 1886
Appendix A: Unit Designations......Page 1890
Appendix B: Military Ranks......Page 1894
Appendix C: Order of Battle......Page 1902
Chronology......Page 1942
A......Page 1976
B......Page 1977
C......Page 1978
D......Page 1979
F......Page 1980
H......Page 1981
J......Page 1982
L......Page 1983
O......Page 1984
R......Page 1985
S......Page 1986
T......Page 1987
W......Page 1988
Selected Bibliography......Page 1990
List of Editors and Contributors......Page 2000
Categorical Index......Page 2006
Index......Page 2016
A......Page 2017
B......Page 2018
C......Page 2019
D......Page 2021
F......Page 2022
G......Page 2023
H......Page 2024
I......Page 2025
K......Page 2026
L......Page 2027
M......Page 2028
N......Page 2030
P......Page 2032
R......Page 2033
S......Page 2034
T......Page 2035
U......Page 2036
V......Page 2038
Z......Page 2040