Waging Peace in Vietnam

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Waging_Peace_in_Vietnam an entity of type: Thing

Waging Peace in Vietnam: U.S. Soldiers and Veterans Who Opposed the War is a non-fiction book edited by Ron Carver, David Cortright, and Barbara Doherty. It was published in September 2019 by New Village Press and is distributed by New York University Press. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Waging Peace in Vietnam
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rdf:langString Waging Peace In Vietnam: U.S. Soldiers and Veterans Who Opposed the War
rdf:langString Waging Peace In Vietnam: U.S. Soldiers and Veterans Who Opposed the War
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rdf:langString Ron Carver, David Cortright and Barbara Doherty
rdf:langString Cover of the first edition
rdf:langString United States
xsd:integer 978
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rdf:langString English
rdf:langString Print
rdf:langString Includes oral histories and photographs by Willa Seidenberg and William Short from A Matter of Conscience
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rdf:langString September 2019
rdf:langString Waging Peace in Vietnam: U.S. Soldiers and Veterans Who Opposed the War is a non-fiction book edited by Ron Carver, David Cortright, and Barbara Doherty. It was published in September 2019 by New Village Press and is distributed by New York University Press. The book documents the movement by U.S. GIs and veterans in opposition to the Vietnam War, and asserts that this resistance has "become an almost secret history." Through essays, oral histories, photographs, documents, poems, and pages of the GI underground press, the book refutes what it calls the "post-Vietnam myth" of antiwar protesters spitting on returning Vietnam GIs, and instead shows GIs to have been an integral part of the antiwar movement. In an introductory essay, David Cortright, Director of Policy Studies at the Kroc Institute for International Peace Studies at the University of Notre Dame, counters the claim that the U.S. military could have won the Vietnam War had it not been undermined by politicians and the media, and he writes: "The dissent and defiance of troops played a decisive role in limiting the U.S. ability to continue the war." He adds: "It is arguable that by 1970 U.S. ground troops in Vietnam had ceased to function as an effective fighting force." The book presents evidence for this conclusion.
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