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The Spy Who Loved Us: The Vietnam War and Pham Xuan An's Dangerous Game
 
 
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The Spy Who Loved Us: The Vietnam War and Pham Xuan An's Dangerous Game [Hardcover]

Thomas A. Bass (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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Book Description

February 10, 2009

Pham Xuan An was a brilliant journalist and an even better spy. A friend to all the legendary reporters who covered the Vietnam War, he was an invaluable source of news and a font of wisdom on all things Vietnamese. At the same time, he was a masterful double agent. An inspired shape-shifter who kept his cover in place until the day he died, Pham Xuan An ranks as one of the preeminent spies of the twentieth century.

When Thomas A. Bass set out to write the story of An’s remarkable career for The New Yorker, fresh revelations arrived daily during their freewheeling conversations, which began in 1992. But a good spy is always at work, and it was not until An’s death in 2006 that Bass was able to lift the veil from his carefully guarded story to offer up this fascinating portrait of a hidden life.

A masterful history that reads like a John le Carré thriller, The Spy Who Loved Us offers a vivid portrait of journalists and spies at war.
 


Frequently Bought Together

Customers buy this book with Perfect Spy: The Incredible Double Life of Pham Xuan An, Time Magazine Reporter and Vietnamese Communist Agent $11.21

The Spy Who Loved Us: The Vietnam War and Pham Xuan An's Dangerous Game + Perfect Spy: The Incredible Double Life of Pham Xuan An, Time Magazine Reporter and Vietnamese Communist Agent


Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Bass (The Eudaemonic Pie) expands his New Yorker profile of Vietnamese journalist-spy Pham Xuan An into this atmospheric study of tangled war-time loyalties. Working from 1965 to 1976 in Time magazine's Saigon bureau, An became known as a well-informed and connected reporter. Meanwhile, he passed clandestine reports and top-secret South Vietnamese and American military documents to the Communists; his intelligence purportedly helped decide several important battles. The ironies of An's character—the Communist agent who admired Americans while working to defeat them, the honest reporter (American colleagues insist he never slanted his coverage of the war) who was a little too honest with the wrong people—aren't as profound as Bass wants them to be. Nor do An's loquacious but cagey reminiscences yield much insight into the war's dynamics. (The author seems a bit credulous: [W]ith 21 bullets remaining, he killed 21 enemy soldiers, he writes of another Vietcong agent allegedly surrounded by 700 attackers.) Bass's account succeeds mainly as an evocation of a murky Saigon during war, where truth was a rare commodity and virtually everyone had an ulterior motive. Photos, maps. (Feb.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Review

John Le Carré
“I was deeply impressed by this book. It is relevant, instructive, funny. The shock of the double never goes away. Neither does the gullibility of the arrogant intruder.”

Morley Safer, Correspondent, CBS 60 Minutes and author of Flashbacks: On Returning to Vietnam
“The story of Pham Xuan An is the revelation of a remarkable life and a remarkable man. Fictional accounts of practitioners of the Great Game—the craft of spying—come nowhere near the real thing that was practiced by An. In The Spy Who Loved Us, An is revealed as a man of split loyalties, who managed to maintain his humanity. Cast prejudices aside and you will discover a true hero, scholar, patriot, humanist and masterful spy.”

Daniel Ellsberg, author of Secrets: A Memoir of Vietnam and the Pentagon Papers
"This is a brilliant book about a man and his times. It strengthens the feeling I got from meeting him late in his life that Pham Xuan An was one of the most impressive people I have ever encountered. He was a man of wisdom, courage, and clear-headed patriotism. He was also—even if it seems ironic to say this under the circumstances—a man of extraordinary integrity. He loved us at our best even while confronting us at our worst."

H.D.S. Greenway, Editor, The Boston Globe and Vietnam war reporter for Time and the Washington Post
“Thomas Bass tells a fantastic tale of intrigue, espionage, and friendship. His book reads as if it came from the farthest shores of fiction, and I wouldn't believe a word of it if I hadn’t met so many of its characters and didn't know the story to be true.”

John Laurence, Vietnam war reporter for CBS News and author of The Cat from Hue: a Vietnam War Story
“Every veteran, every scholar, every student, everyone who survived the Vietnam War is advised to read this book and reflect on its wisdom. In his thoughtful, provocative biography of one of the most successful espionage agents in history, Thomas Bass challenges some of our most fundamental assumptions about what really happened in Vietnam and what it means to us today.”

Seymour Hersh, author of Chain of Command: The Road from 9/11 to Abu Ghraib
"This is a chilling account of betrayal of an American army -- and an American press corps -- involved in a guerrilla war in a society about which little was known or understood. The spy here was in South Vietnam, and his ultimate motives, as Thomas Bass makes clear, were far more complex than those of traditional espionage. This book, coming now, has another message, too, for me -- have we put ourselves in the same position, once again, in Iraq?"

Seymour Topping, former Southeast Asia Bureau Chief and Managing Editor of The New York Times
“Thomas Bass has rendered a sensitive, revealing portrait of the strangely ambivalent personality I knew during the Vietnam War. In doing so he provided us with unique insights into the nature, conflicting sentiments and heartbreak of many Vietnamese who worked with Americans, made friends with them, but in the end loved their land more and sought, as their ancestors had a for a thousand years, to free it from all trespassers.”

The Foreword, January/February issue
“Intriguing … masterful ….This first-rate account, which will appeal to general readers as well as historians, portrays An as a man caught between two cultures who never lost sight of his ultimate goal, peace and prosperity for Vietnam.”


Product Details

  • Hardcover: 320 pages
  • Publisher: PublicAffairs; 1 edition (February 10, 2009)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1586484095
  • ISBN-13: 978-1586484095
  • Product Dimensions: 9.2 x 6.3 x 1.3 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.1 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #197,824 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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11 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Betrayal of the Americans in the War in Vietnam, July 29, 2009
By 
Ted Marks (Phippsburg, ME, USA) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: The Spy Who Loved Us: The Vietnam War and Pham Xuan An's Dangerous Game (Hardcover)
Americans can be, it seems, simplistic saps in both love and war. This is the message of THE SPY WHO LOVED US, a new book by Thomas Bass, which describes the amazing career of Pham Xuan An, a man who served as both a senior reporter for Time Magazine in Saigon, and one of North Vietnam's top spies.

An's saga is a cautionary tale, however, that raises serious questions about the American press during the Vietnam War. More on that later, but this review should note from the beginning that this book describes the life of an incredible man who successfully bridged the gap between Vietnam and America during one of our most contentious wars.

An was a man of conflicting loyalties. He was, most of all, a Vietnamese nationalist. But he was also a communist whose mission was to love America - in order to destroy its military adventure in South Vietnam. Because he became immersed in the American way of life (on orders from Hanoi, An spent two years at a California college in the late 1950's), he was able to provide valuable guidance to the North Vietnamese hierarchy in Hanoi (and elsewhere) as they fought to defeat America in Vietnam.

The author, Thomas Bass, a journalist and college professor, gives An full credit for the American defeat in Vietnam. An not only gave Ho Chi Minh valuable insights into the American psyche, the North Vietnamese agent also provided tactical and strategic planning for the battle of Ap Bac in 1963 (where the Viet Cong first defeated the South Vietnamese army that were equipped for the first time with U.S. helicopters) and the 1968 Tet offensive (An actually played a key role in identifying the targets in the communist attacks). In addition, An's analysis of American bargaining strategy at the Paris peace talks laid the basis for the eventual North Vietnam takeover of South Vietnam. That he did this while working full time for Time Magazine only enhances the legend that An, who died in 2006, left behind. Certainly Time Magazine founder Henry Luce must be spinning in his grave. One also has to wonder about Henry Kissinger's opinion of An's role in the war.

An got away with his secret role because he established himself as a savvy, bon vivant reporter working for foreign news organizations in the war-time Saigon. He had high-level contacts within both the South Vietnam and American communities (including a close relationship with American counter insurgency expert Edward Lansdale). He held court daily at such hangouts as the Continental Palace shelf bar and the Givral Café where key players from the government, diplomatic and press communities hung out to exchange gossip. And, of course, he provided valuable reporting of the war and Saigon politics for Time Magazine (An worked for Reuters before moving to Time).

But that was his daytime job. At night, An wrote lengthy reports (in invisible ink) analyzing events in Saigon for the Hanoi leadership who eagerly looked forward to his voluminous reports. A courier, and sometimes An himself delivered the reports to the Viet underground base at Cu Chi, which neighbored the massive U.S. airbase at Long Bien, 25 miles outside Saigon. An was extremely disciplined and smart enough to realize that he could not compromise himself by fiddling with the truth - in either of his jobs as a reporter or a spy. He constantly worried about getting trapped by a misstep, in either his reports or his activities.

One decisive intelligence report that originated at a Saigon dinner party alerted the North Vietnamese to the overthrow of Cambodian Prince Norodom Sihanouk and the invasion of Cambodia by South Vietnamese forces. The North Vietnamese evacuated their strongholds inside Cambodia so that the SVN invasion went for naught.

So how was it that Pham Xuan An was able to establish his dual role of a Time Magazine correspondent and his spying for North Vietnam? In the aftermath of the North Vietnamese victory, many have said that the American press in Saigon was both naïve and gullible, or both, to allow one of the highest ranking North Vietnamese agents to establish himself among their ranks.

If truth be known, however, An was an excellent reporter, for both Time Magazine and Hanoi, and his success in both journalism and espionage was due to the fact that he reported the truth. One has to wonder about the moral implications of deceiving the Americans in such a role, given that tens of thousands of Vietnamese and Americans were killed due to his undercover work. But one also has to remember that An was a dedicated Vietnamese nationalist who believed that communism offered the best avenue towards independence, even if it was dominated by the North Vietnamese.

Bass reports that some American reporters were suspicious of An (Ray Herndon of UPI, for one); others were disappointed, once they discovered the truth. Peter Arnett told Bass, "Even though I understand him as a Vietnamese patriot, I still feel journalistically betrayed. There were accusations all throughout the war that we had been infiltrated by the Communists. What he did allowed the right-wingers to come up and slug us in the eye. For a year or so, I took it personally. Then I decided it was his business.'

But there were several prominent Americans journalists who counted An as among their most important Vietnamese contacts. Bob Shaplen of the New Yorker was one of the most influential correspondents covering Vietnam who spent inordinate amounts of time with An when Shaplen was in Saigon. David Halberstam of the New York Times was another who was close to An, as was Neil Sheehan of UPI. These journalists were the most prominent critics of the American conduct of the war in Vietnam. Did An turn them against the war effort as part of his Hanoi portfolio? That's a subjective question, and we'll probably never know the true extent of his influence on the American journalists.

But the real failure by the Americans was not inside the media. One has to ask what happened to the American CIA that played a dominant role in the Vietnam War? How is it that the best and the brightest American spies failed to undercover a top agent who was operating right under their noses? Indeed Bass quotes American CIA agent Frank Snepp as saying that the U.S. intelligence service used An to feed information to American journalists. As such, An was the beneficiary of invaluable intelligence from the CIA itself -- which he, of course, passed onto Hanoi.

In his introduction to the book, trying to explain the man he has chosen to write about, Bass makes the following analysis that pretty well sums up An's role in the war:

"During the twenty years it fought the Vietnamese, the United States never understood the people or the culture of Vietnam...America's disregard for its enemy cost it dearly. It lost the war with fifty-eight thousand soldiers killed and hundreds of thousands wounded, and it lost its naiveté about its invincible military might. America's enemy did not make the same mistakes. The Vietnamese studied their adversary. They cultivated an agent who could think like an American, who could get inside the American mind to learn the country's values and believes...They needed a strategic spy, a poetic spy, a spy who loved Americans and was loved by them in return."

Bass's new book is not the only study of An's role in the Vietnam War. In 2007, Larry Berman wrote THE PERFECT SPY: THE INDREDIBLE DOUBLE LIFE OF PHAM XUAN AN, which gives perhaps a more strategic view of An's career as a double agent. Both Berman and Bass had direct access to An in the 1990's and early 2000's, so there are plenty of valuable insights in both books from the man himself.
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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Doublecross, June 25, 2010
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The Spy Who Loved Us: The Vietnam War and Pham Xuan An's Dangerous Game (Hardcover)
Before I read this book I had great animosity for Pham Xuan An. But, after reading this well written account of his life, I've reconsidered. Now I think I better understand him and have a good bit of respect for him. This was such a great read. I finished it in just two days. It was that engrossing. The only question left unanswered is if Pham truly ended up regretting the aftermath of the Vietnam War. Did he expect more than his communist victory delivered? Other than that, a thoroughly researched, fascinating tale.
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10 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Amazing, March 15, 2009
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This review is from: The Spy Who Loved Us: The Vietnam War and Pham Xuan An's Dangerous Game (Hardcover)
He passed information about American troop movements and strategy which he gathered while posing as a journalist for Time and other US media to the VC and NVA, enabling them to win several major engagements and kill thousands of US troops. The American journalists he worked with think there was nothing wrong with this and started a scholarship fund to benefit his son and enable him to study in America. This book inadvertently tells you an awful lot about the bias of the media in Vietnam which was a major contributing cause to the abandonment of South Vietnam and the ensuing misery suffered by millions of Cambodians. Laotians and Vietnamese which followed 1975. Don't forget them or the troops killed by Pham Xuan An's treachery when you read this book, as it is very one-sided. Ask yourself as you read through it what the author would have said about an ethnic German working for the US press in 1939-45 who passed valuable military intelligence on to Hitler.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
spy who
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
United States, South Vietnam, Viet Minh, Poulo Condore, New York, Têt Offensive, Communist Party, World War, Cochin China, North Vietnam, Tam Thao, Continental Hotel, The Quiet American, Dien Bien Phu, Cao Giao, Binh Xuyen, Cao Dai, Graham Greene, Muoi Huong, Bay Vien, Asia Foundation, Rach Gia, Thu Nhan, Con Dao, Pham Xuan An
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