Crisis of Faith: America and the Vietnam War Audiolibro Por Vu Manh Dung arte de portada

Crisis of Faith: America and the Vietnam War

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Crisis of Faith: America and the Vietnam War

De: Vu Manh Dung
Narrado por: Virtual Voice
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The Vietnam War was one of the 20th century's most divisive and tragic conflicts, leaving a legacy of political and social unrest that echoes to this day. This comprehensive narrative chronicles the Second Indochina War from its origins, starting with the 1954 Geneva Accords that temporarily divided the nation. What was meant to be a short-term solution quickly hardened into a global Cold War frontline, pitting a communist North against an unstable, American-backed South.

Follow the path of escalation as the United States deepened its commitment, moving from Kennedy's advisors to the US-backed coup against the South's leader. After the Gulf of Tonkin incident provided justification, President Johnson fully committed America's military might, sending hundreds of thousands of ground troops. This Americanization of the war transformed the conflict from a counter-insurgency into a brutal conventional war.

Experience the war's turning points, from the shocking 1968 Tet Offensive to the divisive anti-war movement that fractured the American home front. President Nixon's election on a promise of peace with honor led to the secret, controversial bombing campaigns in Cambodia and Laos. These secret wars widened the conflict even as American troops began to withdraw.

This narrative covers the final years of the war, from the flawed Paris Peace Accords to the complete cessation of US military activity in 1973. It details the final, conventional offensive that led to the fall of Saigon in 1975 and the reunification of Vietnam as a communist nation. Finally, it examines the war's enduring legacy: a widespread and persistent loss of faith in the US government and the unresolved questions about those left behind.
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