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9 Reviews
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Well researched and yes detailed- so what?,
By A Customer
This review is from: Inside the VC and the NVA (Mass Market Paperback)
Lanning and Crasgg produces a well researched tome drawing on numerous NVA/VC prisioner/ defector interviews. The book is excelent and offers a salient reminder to the naivete of so many who still romanticize the VC/NVA as noble, black pajama clad part-time farmers.In fact they were very tough troops, living on a supply package incomprehensible to Western armies, and very well motivated. Fighting on their own home ground, amidst a friendly or intimidated local population, and with favorable terrain and relatively secure sanctuary areas,they were given, they were well equipped, well organized and skillful adversaries. They were also a murderous, vicious and ruthless force as the hail of well documented assasinations, terror bombings, and massacres they carried out shows - a reality too often forgotten by the naive or apologists for Communism. Some reviewer complained that: "Lanning does such a good job, that I think he overdoes it. Parts of the text read much like accounts of Caesar's struggles in Gaul. Doe we really need to know what a bunch of stuffed-shirt REMF generals thought of the VC and NVA? Do we really want to know the political struggles that took place behind closed doors in Hanoi? "Inside the VC and NVA" reads like a school book. " Yes friend we do really need to know. We need to know that these people, vicious and ruthless as they were, were not merely "gooks" but also human beings who wrote letters home and yes, composed poetry. The books adds a human dimension to the VC/NVA often missing in discussions about the 'Nam. And yes friend, we do really need to know the behind the scene political struggles- for they expose the naivete of the dupes who envisaged a noble "general uprising" or a simple "internal" insurgency led by "oppressed southern compadres" when in reality behind the scenes the brutal facts of northern manipulation, domination and hegemony held sway. And yes we do really need to know such details as the typical VC/NVA march formation or how they constructed bunkers. They show that these people, within the parameters of their conflict, and the political limitations imposed on US Forces, knew what the hell they were doing, and were a tough enemy to overcome. This book should be required reading. It adds a military perspective with a new twist. There are a glut of such perspectives from the American side- helicopters, firebases, Big Iron hitting the Ho Chi Minh trail, etc. Now we have added to our knowledge a little of what it was like on the receiving end, and how our enemies coped and eventually triumphed. It offers lessons not to be forgotten.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
NOW THEY TELL ME!!!,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Inside the VC and the NVA: The Real Story of North Vietnam's Armed Forces (Williams-Ford Texas A&M University Military History Series) (Paperback)
"Inside the VC and The NVA" by Michael Lee Lanning and Dan Cragg is a Texas A&M University Press publication. The book is obviously a product from Texas A&M' Vietnam studies and is a superb informational guide to all aspects of Vietnam, including it's history, it's climate, it's people, and...it's unique ability to wage war!
I just recently ordered the book and have not finished it. However, this book is not necessarily meant as a readable novel, or biographical sketch to be finished at one sitting. This book is more than that, it is... an astute collection of practical and knowledgeable facts to satisfy your curiosity while giving you "everything you wanted to know about the Vietnamese but, were afraid to ask." This is a great research tool, and unlike most books of this nature, this is one you will enjoy reading! I only wish our Government would have made this book (or one like it), available to every one of us who got orders to Vietnam 40 years ago (now they tell me!). Perhaps, going into a war zone with this type of knowledge would have made a difference in the final outcome. If, you research the Vietnam era, teach history, or simply enjoy learning, then... this book is a "Must!"
3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Excellent book,
By Frank (Stockton CA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Inside the VC and the NVA (Mass Market Paperback)
This book is a must-read for anyone seeking a deeper understanding of the Vietnam war. The first review complains that this "reads like a school book. Ideal for the scholar, maybe less than ideal for the casual reader." Well, what did that "casual" reader expect from a book whose cover proclaims that it "fills a huge gap in the historiography of the Vietnam War" ??This is NOT a dull or difficult book for anyone interested in the subject. The facts, figures, and background the authors include are very helpful in understanding what led the several armed forces to come into battlefield contact, and why they acted as they did. Particularly helpful is the authors' technique of letting participants tell their own stories -- even stories that contradict each other. The book has a helpful index, and extensive source notes and bibliography for those who wish to read further. Perhaps the major fault of the book is that the authors detail the terror and coercive tactics of North Vietnamese forces, and the failings of North Vietnamese leadership, while omitting any mention of similar tactics and the failings of the US/South Vietnamese forces (except the inescapable acknowledgment of My Lai). By this omission, the authors leave the mistaken impression that South Vietnam had a legitimate and widely-supported democratic government with civil rights, whose secret police, ARVN, and US troops never engaged in abuse of the population and enemy prisoners. The VC/NVA actions should at least have been put in context by mention of the South Vietnamese/USA Phoenix program, corruption, tiger cages, etc. The reader may wish to also read _Our Vietnam/Nuoc Viet Ta: A History of the War 1954-1975_ by A. J. Langguth to get additional perspective on the failings of the South Vietnamese government. The authors' limited use of their own feelings about the war, combined with a skillful combination of others' personal narratives and official reports and information, results in a very readable, informative and valuable book. Particularly moving is the Afterword, which reads in part, "We questioned each other and ourselves about whether we were 'going soft' on the VC/NVA who were dedicated to the deaths of our friends.... Yet, the more we researched and wrote, the more we learned that the majority of the VC/NVA did their duty as they saw it -- not unlike ourselves and our fellow soldiers.... "Slowly, and despite our efforts to do otherwise, we began to feel more kinship with the VC/NVA than we did with many of our fellow [civilian] Americans.... Even more sobering to us was the moment when we finally realized that we had more in common with our former enemies than with the politicians who had sent us to war."
2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Great book,
This review is from: Inside the VC and the NVA (Mass Market Paperback)
Overall I thought this was a great book. It went into great detail concerning even the most mundane details of VC/NVA life (I consider this an asset, not a liability). I enjoyed reading about how they fought, what kind of weapons they used, and the tactical and logistical details of the various VC/NVA units discussed. This book is limited in scope, after all it is called "Inside the VC and the NVA", so of course it's not going to go into detail about the ARVN fighting ability and THEIR details, nor does it address allied "atrocities". There were some drawbacks however. The VC and NVA interviews were interesting, but I think the information contained in them needs to be taken with a grain of salt. Although the authors address and dismiss the possibility of coercion, I think that's a very real possibility. Secondly, the book could have done without the input of the generals. For the most part, I thought the comments of the generals were suspect. After all, they had the kill ratio/body count agenda. All in all, a great book.
4.0 out of 5 stars
Revealing myths and truth,
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Inside the VC and the NVA (Mass Market Paperback)
I am a veteran grunt who served in Nam with the 173rd Airborne Brigade.We spent weeks at a time out in the jungle on sweeps, search and destroy, ambushes, etc. Never once did I see the enemy as being human. A real person. They were considered as sub-human. This book, however, has done a little something to help change me for the better in my regards to our ex-enemies. I would recommend this book to any historian or vietnam Vet.It provides info I can actually relate to. Very interesting and thought provoking.
4.0 out of 5 stars
To face your enemy you must know and respect them!,
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Inside the VC and NVA: The Real Story of North Vietnam's Armed Forces (Hardcover)
If only we knew as much then as this book covers now....... Lanning is a great author on Vietnam and has added another great book to his list of Vietnam hits. It covers in great detail the training, life, beliefs, and hardships faced by the elusive VC/NVA soldier. And it puts to rest some of the myths about the life of a soldier. Especially interesting is the personal accounts of many officers,nco's, and grunts on their opinion of the enemy and his fighting abilities. Most will agree that the VC/NVA we a serious foe worthy of respect.
4.0 out of 5 stars
one stop information on the VC,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Inside the VC and the NVA (Mass Market Paperback)
This book took me forever to read. I was interspersing it with books from the Library. This one I own. The book has a chapter interviewing American Generals, one on the American soldier, and one from the VC themselves. In a fashion, the book is written chronologically: first recruiting, the trip south, organization, arms and equipment, logistics, and finally battles. If you want to know what the VC and NVA were up to, this is a one stop way to find out.
2 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Some Useful Insights, but Not Much Depth,
By
This review is from: Inside the VC and the NVA (Mass Market Paperback)
A decent look at VC/NVA training, equipment, recruiting, organization and logistics. The authors were both combat veterans of Vietnam and their analysis carries credibility. Unfortunately, the core of this book rests on two very subjective sections: captured VC/NVA diaries and post-war American surveys on the VC/NVA. There is very little tactical analysis of how the VC/NVA fought and no analysis of specific actions (it would have been useful to dissect a few selective actions with accounts from both sides). Overall, the book is valuable for painting a portrait of a determined, resourceful enemy who made do with much less than we thought possible. Most important is the conclusion that NVA morale was sustained by their indoctrination/propaganda and the value of group criticism/group cohesion. Several maps, adequate but barely.
0 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Well researched, highly detailed,
By A Customer
This review is from: Inside the VC and the NVA (Mass Market Paperback)
Anyone who has read any of Lanning's books about "the Nam" would expect a well researched, highly detailed account of the VC's and NVA's struggle during America's involcvement in Indo-China. You won't be disappointed by Lanning's effort,"Inside the VC and the NVA" from Ivy Books. Lanning goes back thousands of years in the history of Vietnam to set the stage for his narrative of the role played by the "other side" in the Vietnam War.From recruiting and training, the complex megalopalis that was the Ho Chi Minh Trail, to the organization, equipment, logistics, and camp life of the "other side", Lanning even includes songs, poems and letters of our adversaries.
In fact, Lanning does such a good job, that I think he overdoes it. Parts of the text read much like accounts of Caesar's struggles in Gaul. Doe we really need to know what a bunch of stuffed-shirt REMF generals thought of the VC and NVA? Do we really want to know the political struggles that took place behind closed doors in Hanoi? "Inside the VC and NVA" reads like a school book. Ideal for the scholar, maybe less than ideal for the casual reader.
I bought the book because in the two previous books of Lanning's, "The Only War We Had" and "Inside the LRRPs", Lanning put down his experiences in "Nam" with a down-and-dirty grit that gave you the feeling that you were cowering behind a paddy dike with the author.
I very much enjoyed Lanning's other two books that I read; and no offence Michael, I think you should stick to writing about your own experiences.
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Inside the VC and the NVA by Dan Cragg (Mass Market Paperback - December 4, 1993)
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