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Kill Anything That Moves

The Real American War in Vietnam

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Kill Anything That Moves

De: Nick Turse
Narrado por: Don Lee
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Americans have long been taught that events such as the notorious My Lai massacre were "isolated incidents" in the Vietnam War, carried out by a few "bad apples." However, as award-winning journalist and historian Nick Turse demonstrates in this pioneering investigation, violence against Vietnamese civilians was not at all exceptional. Rather, it was pervasive and systematic, the predictable consequence of official orders to "kill anything that moves."

Drawing on a decade of research into secret Pentagon files and extensive interviews with American veterans and Vietnamese survivors, Turse reveals the policies and actions that resulted in millions of innocent civilians killed and wounded. He lays out in shocking detail the workings of a military machine that made crimes all but inevitable.

Kill Anything That Moves finally brings us face-to-face with the truth of a war that haunts America to this day.

©2013 Nick Turse. Recorded by arrangement with Metropolitan Books, an imprint of Henry Holt and Company, LLC. All rights reserved. (P)2013 HighBridge Company.
Ciencia militar Guerra de Vietnam Guerras y Conflictos Militar Guerra Japón imperial China Fuerza Aérea de US Fuerza Aérea

Reseñas de la Crítica

"A powerful case.... With superb narrative skill, he spotlights a troubling question: Why, with all the evidence collected by the military at the time of the war, were atrocities not prosecuted?" ( Washington Post)
"A comprehensive picture, written with mastery and dignity, of what American forces actually were doing in Vietnam. A convincing, inescapable portrait of this war - a portrait that, as an American, you do not wish to see; that, having seen, you wish you could forget, but that you should not forget." ( The Nation)
"Nick Turse's explosive, groundbreaking reporting uncovers the horrifying truth." ( Vanity Fair)
Comprehensive Documentation • Detailed Accounts • Competent Narration • Truthful Revelations • Crucial Understanding

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As a guy who grew up in the sixties and joined the Army in the seventies, I thought I understood our history in Vietnam. Lt. William Calley of My Lai wasn't just a news story, his mother was my school nurse. Also, I study history as my primary topic of reading. Yet with that mindset I was as blind to the war crimes our own men routinely committed.

While the book was eye opening, the narration was horrid. As I've said I grew up with Vietnam on the news every night and you learned how to pronounce names of places like Da Nang which the narrator massacred. At first I was impressed with the pronunciation of the litany of Vietnamese names in the book but after hearing repeated bad city names I began to wonder. However it was a very English word the narrator should be able to pronounce if he intends on narrating a book about warfare. The word noncombatants was never pronounced properly. It was pronounced as "non com bet ants" instead of "non con bat ants". Anyone with middle school English ought to know the root word of noncombatants is combat.

Pronunciation wasn't the only problem. The narrator read about the brutal acts in th his book like he was reading the classified section of a newspaper. There was no emotion or intonation imparted to the text. This book contains atrocities that revival nearly the worst I can imagine, in fact only Hilter sounds worse. However I got the impression the reader was "phoning it in".

Disgraceful but factual account of Vietnam

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I’ve seen almost every movie on America’s war on Vietnam and read a few books now. Nothing compares to the brutality caught in this book. The indiscriminate killing of innocent women, children, and elderly is only the beginning. Note: these are also the descriptions of Vietnam Vets themselves, in addition to Vietnamese civilians. A difficult read, but a must.

The brutality caught in this book is second to none

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This book clearly lays out the policies that drove the US military efforts in Vietnam, and outlines some of the tragic results of those policies.

Deeply Disturbing but it's supposed to be

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Detailed narrative revealing the truth about the Vietnam War, and the actions of many American soldiers serving there. The sadness the pages provoke in the reader is matched only by the anger that such things were allowed to occur. Unfortunately, the American attitude of viewing the Vietnamese as subhuman and of little value has a long history, going back to slavery, native Americans, filipinos, and countless other peoples.

Turse does a terrific job of detailing many less well known examples of American atrocities, such as Speedy Express, a controversial military operation in the Mekong delta, to more well known incidents such as the My Lai massacre. The biggest take away from the book is that My Lai was not a rare, isolated incident...but rather a pattern of military operations.

What led to the American brutality and horrendous behavior? Besides the general devaluing of the Vietnamese, the military's promotion of "body count" of dead enemy combatants as a measure of success. This led to the regarding, or pretending, that any Vietnamese was Viet Cong, or part of the opposition. Mostly, this was not the case. Unknown number of Vietnamese were murdered, raped, abused, tortured, kidnapped, humiliated...in the most inhuman ways possible. Turse goes to some length of cataloging many of these episodes...invading villages, destroying homes, killing livestock, ruining farm lands, desecrating sacred places, and subjugating the natives.

The book was very informative, but a tough listen because as an American, it is appalling that these actions were taken by fellow countrymen. And while I am not a proponent of the military, or any war, it is particularly disgusting that such a war was conducted on completely false conditions (the ridiculous domino theory). The legacy of Vietnam, as shown in this book, is a despicable chapter that is a blight on the history of this country. The saddest fact of all is that, despited the commendable efforts of people like Nick Turse, the American government and military didn't stop with Vietnam, as atrocities are widespread today, in places from Iraq to Afghanistan. As well as the outright support of the genocide Israel is conducting against the Palestinians.

One minor note...some of the reader pronunciations (such as combatant) are awful. It's not AI, or Virtual Voice. It's just bad reading. Let's do better, huh?

If it runs, we can kill it

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This book, had to pausing just to listen at points where such horrific scenes took place. Vietnam war was new to me learning how Geneva Convention was ignored and how the Army did not take action on these crimes. Informed me in so many ways I enjoyed this book.

War crimes

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It’s hard to say I “liked” this book, because it was stomach turning, but I think every American should read it.

My Lai was not an aberration

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The feeling I get from this book and it's intention to honestly show a side of the Vietnam War is what I get of wars in general. The narratives surrounding wars are controlled and information countering those narratives are lost or often destroyed. To fight war, the young men and women recruited to fight it are indoctrinated to totally dehumanize the adversary. The conditions of that dehumanization often lead or inform some awful attitudes or actions. Generally, some other group is othered and in large part seen as subhuman. You have to make an enemy soldier and his fellow country men animals unworthy of life, even say that life for them is meaningless. If we can characterize them so harshly we can rationalize treating them with such hatred and disdain, becoming monsters in the process. If we kill their women and children we rationalize that with, "they're sympathetizers" to the enemy or "If they grow up, they'll just become the enemy".

The book really nails the ugly rationalizations some soldiers make in their conduct during war time. War crimes only logically seem inevitable if the attitude of the soldier is to see others as inhuman. The myth is more that wars are largely honorably fought and that sort of narrative requires a lot to excised or erased to stand.

Great primer on the Vietnam War and understanding of war in modern time

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...this book is merely one of the many i'll show them.

cute little blooper halfway thru chapter 4 lol. decent narrator otherwise.

very difficult read but very important to face and accept, as well as understand actions like these are not constrained to only the Vietnam war. I'd like to say it's unbelievable but it really isn't. Just sad and beyond horrific and gut wrenching. Hard stuff to listen to but it's vital to know what is done to innocent people in the name of American empire.

when someone asks why i'm anti war...

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A lot of info for fellow historical nerds.

Not sure I'd take this as the final word on Vietnam but I feel it's likely a valuable component of understanding Vietnam and worth listening to to give a different perspective from other voices and authors and memoirs on Vietnam.

Worthwhile for those who interested in Vietnam War

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Reading or listening to this book should be a prerequisite for obtaining a high school degree.

Should be required reading

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