'Hanoi's War': A different view of how the Communists conducted the Vietnam war


I'm not
a fan of diplomatic history, but still found parts of Hanoi's War fascinating. It changed the way I think about the Vietnam War. For
example: "Ho and Giap were sidelined by Le Duan and Le Duc Tho at nearly all
key decision-making junctures . . . . It is worth contemplating how Hanoi's war
would have been different had Ho and Giap been in charge."



The
basic argument of the book is that Ho Chi Minh was a figurehead and that the
war was run by "the Comrades Le." In 1967, opposition inside the Communist
Party to the planned Tet Offensive was so pronounced that there was a series
of purges and arrests, including generals allied with General Giap. "The
alleged traitors were imprisoned in central Hanoi at Hoa Lo, known to Americans
as the ‘Hanoi Hilton.'" Giap himself was pushed in a kind of temporary
self-exile. 



The
focus of participants to post-American Vietnam began to shift surprisingly early. In
1970, Hanoi already was beginning to fear that China would dominate postwar
Indochina. Meanwhile, in Cambodia, not long afterward, Pol Pot began killing
off his Hanoi-trained cadres.



Nor did
I know that Hanoi was very upset and worried by Nixon's 1972 visit to Beijing.
And with good reason: That year, both Beijing and Moscow began cutting their
military aid to the North Vietnamese. 



All in
all, it reminded me of Piers Mackesy's classic The War for America, which shows us the American revolution through the eyes
of the British government.

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Published on September 12, 2012 03:25
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