Dylan Matthews

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This reverses more familiar accounts, which assume that US military actions in Southeast Asia were the consequence of Cold War fears of the communist “superpowers.” While that description is arguably relevant to earlier decision-making, it is profoundly misleading when applied to the Nixon years. In fact, the administration’s mounting difficulties in solving its Vietnam problem increasingly shaped interactions with Moscow and Beijing.
Fire and Rain: Nixon, Kissinger, and the Wars in Southeast Asia
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