Nixon's Vietnam War
Jeffrey Kimball
528 pages, 6 x 9
Modern War Studies
Paper ISBN 978-0-7006-1190-4, $24.95
WINNER OF THE ROBERT H. FERRELL BOOK PRIZE
WINNER OF THE OHIO ACADEMY OF HISTORY BOOK AWARD
The signing of the Paris Agreement
in 1973 ended not only America's Vietnam War but also Richard
Nixon's best laid plans. After years of secret negotiations,
threats of massive bombing, and secret diplomacy designed to
shatter strained Communist alliances, the president had to settle
for a peace that fell far short of his original aims.
This is the first book to focus exclusively on Nixon's direction
of the Vietnam War. Based on extensive interviews with principal
players and original research in Vietnam, it goes behind the
scenes in Washington and into the minds of America's leaders
to provide the most complete and balanced analysis of Nixon's
and Kissinger's complex and tortuous strategy and diplomacy.
Jeffrey Kimball has conducted exhaustive research into recently
declassified files and has reexamined Nixon's and Kissinger's
postwar writings to depict a hidden reality quite different from
that previously presented. His absorbing tale traces Nixon's
involvement with Vietnam back to 1953 with his advocacy of interventionist
policies and demonstrates how the foreign policy lessons he learned
before his election served as the basis for the goals he pursued
in office. He describes Nixon's struggle to appease his hawkish
supporters while making good on his campaign promise to end the
war and how in the face of other foreign and domestic problems,
Vietnam became the major preoccupation of his presidency.
Kimball explores Nixon's peculiar psychology and his curious
relationship with Henry Kissinger to reveal how they influenced
his pursuit of globalist goals in Vietnam. He reveals how the
Nixon-Kissinger relationship worked--and how it almost fell apart.
He also describes the keystone of Nixon's strategy--the "Madman
Theory"--which he employed to make the Communist nations
think he could be provoked into fits of irrationality that might
lead him to use nuclear weapons.
Compellingly written and painstakingly researched, Nixon's
Vietnam War combines grand synthesis with new information
and revealing insights, including the perspectives of the Vietnamese
and their Chinese and Soviet allies. As more is disclosed about
the war, it will serve as an indispensable resource for understanding
both that tragic conflict and the troubled mind of the leader
who ultimately prolonged it.
"An enormously impressive work that lays bare the real
Nixon and, along the way, reduces Nixon's version of the war
to a legend of his own making. Will be the standard for understanding
Richard Nixon and Vietnam-both central to our contemporary history."--Stanley
Kutler, author of Abuse of Power and The Wars of
Watergate
"A major accomplishment. Far and away the best study
of Nixon's Vietnam policies we are likely to have for some time."--George
Herring, author of America's Longest War and LBJ
and Vietnam
"Kimball explains, as no historian has before, how Nixon
and Kissinger conducted their complicated and devious Vietnam
War diplomacy. Making brilliant use of new documentary sources
and interviews from the American as well as the North Vietnamese
side, he has made a singular contribution to our understanding
of U.S. involvement in the Vietnam War and, even more important,
to our understanding of that most fascinating of presidents,
Richard M. Nixon."--Melvin Small, author of Johnson,
Nixon, and the Doves
"An important contribution to our understanding of a
tragic period in American politics and diplomacy."--Herbert
S. Parmet, author of Richard Nixon and His America
"The most balanced and comprehensive study of the subject
that we are likely to have for some time."--David Anderson,
editor of Shadow on the White House: Presidents and the Vietnam
War, 19451975
"A deeply necessary in-depth look at Nixon. Let us not
soon forget."--Oliver Stone
JEFFREY KIMBALL is professor of history at Miami University,
Ohio, and editor of To Reason Why: The Debate about the Causes
of American Involvement in the Vietnam War.
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