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The Village (Paperback)

by Francis J. West (Author)
4.7 out of 5 stars See all reviews (29 customer reviews)


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Editorial Reviews

Review
Washington Post Book Review This is the way Vietnam should have been fought -- by tough volunteers who lived alongside the Vietnamese....It will take the sternest idealogue to remain unmoved by West's perceptive and human treatment of the men who fought it....It's an account of brave men at war in a far country, honestly told. -- Review --This text refers to the Mass Market Paperback edition.

Review
The Washington PostA minor classic about war.

The New York TimesA vivid and unbiased portrait of one Vietnamese hamlet in the grip of war...Exceptional insight....West has told this story with honesty and without embroidery, while bringing out its inherent human drama.

Charles B. MacDonaldAuthor of Company CommanderUnquestionably the best book to come out of the Vietnam war -- human, compassionate, suspenseful, dramatic.

Peter BraestrupAuthor of TetA superbly honest, readable work that goes beyond journalism to become good literature.

Washington Post Book ReviewThis is the way Vietnam should have been fought -- by tough volunteers who lived alongside the Vietnamese....It will take the sternest idealogue to remain unmoved by West's perceptive and human treatment of the men who fought it....It's an account of brave men at war in a far country, honestly told.

Keith William NolanAuthor of The Battle for Saigon and A Hundred Miles of Bad RoadOne of the small handful of truly great books to come out of the Vietnam war.

Pacific AffairsPure Hemingway in the best sense of that characterization....West brilliantly portrays the drama of a war few Americans have known.

Leatherneck MagazineA fantastic, down in the mud and crud book of enlisted Marines fighting to defend a village....West tells of some of the victories and the tragic cost. And he tells it well. --This text refers to the Mass Market Paperback edition.

See all Editorial Reviews

Product Details

  • Paperback: 320 pages
  • Publisher: University of Wisconsin Press; Revised edition (May 1985)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0299102343
  • ISBN-13: 978-0299102340
  • Product Dimensions: 8.5 x 5.5 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 14.6 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.7 out of 5 stars See all reviews (29 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #644,397 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

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Customer Reviews

29 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.7 out of 5 stars (29 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
38 of 38 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A Classic Study Relevant to Modern Challenges, January 14, 2004
By Newt Gingrich (Washington, DC United States) - See all my reviews
("THE")   
Anyone interested in understanding the challenges of security in Iraq and Afghanistan would do well to read Bing West's "The Village." This is the classic study of small unit anti-guerrilla activity in Vietnam.

The Marines had a model of intervention built around their justly famous Small Wars Manual (originally written with considerable help from the Army based on its Philippines experience from 1898-1913). Where General Westmoreland and the senior Army favored large units sweeping across areas and hunting for large Vietcong forces, the Marines had developed a small unit action program, which was uniquely effective.

"The Village" is about one squad of Marines in Binh Nghia village (actually a collection of villages numbering about 6,000 people.) As Bing West notes, "This is the story of fifteen Marines who lived and fought for two years inside a Vietnamese village. There was shooting almost every night: from across the river a seasoned Viet Cong battalion attacked repeatedly. In the village, the South Vietnamese farmers planted rice during the day and after dusk patrolled with the Marines....at the height of the Vietnam War a dozen U.S. Marines did live in the village and were generally accepted by 6,000 Vietnamese farmers."

West was sent by the Marine Corps to study this process in 1966. He writes, this is "what war is like when you fight guerrillas, and of how Americans behaved when they volunteered to fight among the people. It was a bloody and intensely personal war." West went back to the village in 2002 and has a new closing chapter on the memories of Americans that remain despite a generation of Communist dictatorship.

This book is a useful introduction to policing in third world settings and establishing security through small-unit, intensely local efforts that build knowledge of the community and a network of personal relationships.

Anyone interested in better understanding how to win societal wars at the tactical level will find this a helpful book.

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18 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars superlative book, October 23, 2003
By Daniel Ford (at danford dot net) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This is a wonderful book. It tells the story of 15 marines assigned
to defend a hamlet, working with about the same number of Popular Force
militiamen. Of that original band, 7 are killed in the first half of
the book, most of them in a single firefight when their "fort" is
over-run. (The PFs suffer losses at roughly the same rate.) But
they love the work, get along fine with the villagers, and exact an
even higher toll on the Viet Cong and North Vietnamese units sent
against them.

Bing West is a gifted writer. Here he is, describing a
marine with a fifty-caliber machine gun:

"The drunken soldier was set now, having leaned his body over the
rear of the gun and swung the heavy barrel upward. It wavered around
the fort and then slowly swung out toward the paddies, like a compass
needle coming to rest. Then came the solid, belting jackhammer sound
of the weapon firing and the thick incendiary slugs, big as cigars,
burned out over the paddies."

He also knows what he's writing about: West was a platoon leader
in Vietnam; he visited the village often, and he led some of the
patrols he describes, though mostly the book is based on interviews
with the men of the combined-action squad.

Later, West was an assistant secretary of defense in the Reagan
administration. He wrote the superlative account of the 2003 Iraq
War, "The March Up", which is what led me
to this book. I'm glad I had the chance to discover it, and I
recommend it without reservation. -- Dan Ford

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14 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars USMC Pacification: The Road Least Taken, February 13, 2000
"This is the story of a handful of Americans and Vietnamese who lived and fought together in a Vietnamese village. It is not a political book or a critique of national policy.... /// The story is not typical of military operations in Vietnam. Less than one percent of American forces there were employed in the [combined] fashion described in this book. Nor was the combat typical. Throughout Vietnam, one out of four hundred night patrols in the populated areas made contact; in this village, it was one out of every two." (p. xv) (Captain F. J. West, USMCR; from the preface to The Village) /// The Combined Action Program was an unconventional approach to pacification conceived by the Marine Corps and unique to the Vietnam War. Marine infantry squads (10-14 men) integrated with local militia units ("Popular Forces" or PFs) at the village and hamlet level in South Vietnam. Theoretically, the employment of the Marines in this fashion would increase the effectiveness of the PFs and gain the confidence of the Vietnamese by demonstrating a long-term commitment to their security. III Marine Amphibious Force first experimented with combined action in 1965. The experiment yielded positive results. Thus, the Combined Action Program was formally established and centered on the combined action platoon (CAP)-the Program's basic tactical unit. By 1970, more than 1,700 Marines, 100 Navy corpsmen and 3,000 PFs formed 113 CAPs in 102 villages throughout I Corps. This book tells the story of one such CAP stationed in the village of Binh Nghia. /// Binh Nghia was located in a highly contested area south of Chu Lai in Quang Ngai Province. Prior to the arrival of the Marines in 1966, the Viet Cong owned Binh Nghia-controlling five of the village's seven hamlets. The VC garrisoned one of their main force battalions on the far shore of the village's neighboring tidal river and used the waterway to transport their rice and supplies. Seventeen months after the arrival of the Marines, however, the Viet Cong were gone-largely due to the success of the Binh Nghia CAP. /// Four noncommissioned officers rotated command of the Marine garrison in Binh Nghia: Corporal Beebe, Sergeant Sullivan, Sergeant White, and Sergeant McGowan. West cites a key event during the tenure of each Marine as a turning point in the book. Corporal Beebe's rotation home in June 1966 coincided with the deaths of Private First Class Page, the first Marine death in Binh Nghia; Ap Thanh Lam, the village's highly regarded police chief; and Khoi, the younger of two PF brothers serving with the Marines. West asserts that the intended Viet Cong message never reached the Marines: "The Viet Cong had a problem....The villagers and the PFs who knew the history of Binh Nghia could clearly see the power of the Viet Cong manifested in the deaths of Khoi, Page, and Lam. /// Not so the Marines.... not knowing [Binh Nghia's history], they did not view the events as a prelude to the future. There is no evidence [that] the Marines shared the Vietnamese view of the situation in the village." (p. 47) /// Higher headquarters in Chu Lai dispatched Lieutenant O'Rourke to "observe" the CAP's activities in Binh Nghia during Sergeant Sullivan's tenure. As a direct result of O'Rourke's presence, the CAP patrolled more aggressively and achieved better results. But complacency set in after O'Rourke departed in August 1966. Less than thirty days later, the VC launched a successful attack against Fort Page. (Fort Page was the CAP stronghold in Binh Nghia named in memory of Private Page.) Sergeant White succeeded Sullivan after the attack and the Viet Cong increased their efforts to reclaim the village. During this crucial period, the CAP held out and defeated the VC (largely because of White's leadership). McGowan relieved Sergeant White in January 1967 and maintained command until October 1967-when the Binh Nghia CAP was disbanded because the Marines were no longer needed. /// Marine captains were not normally sent into villages to accompany CAP patrols (such as the author was). West took up the story of the Binh Nghia CAP because the Marine Corps had identified a need to study and disseminate small unit action "lessons learned" from Vietnam. West came back onto active duty during the summer of 1966 in fulfillment of this requirement. He was hand-selected for the job because of his military and academic credentials. (West already had an undergraduate degree in history and was a graduate student at the time he left for Vietnam.) These qualifications made West eminently qualified to tell the Binh Nghia CAP's story. /// West concludes that that the combined action effort in Binh Nghia was successful. After October 1967, the Viet Cong no longer dominated the village and the PFs were able to maintain security without the Marines. Although it is obvious that West is a proponent of combined action, he refrains from making any assertions beyond Binh Nghia regarding the Program. West does, however, state that the "strategic implications" of combined action "merit careful analysis" in "Fast Rifles," an article that appeared in the October 1967 issue of the Marine Corps Gazette (which served as the precursor to this book). Would the combined action strategy have been successful if it was implemented throughout all of Vietnam? Although it is a moot point, the issue does bear further analysis-particularly in light of the strong differences in opinion between top Marine and Army officials. For example, whereas General Walt (senior Marine commander in Vietnam) championed combined action in his Strange War, Strange Strategy (New York, 1970): "Of all our innovations in Vietnam none was as successful, as lasting in effect, or as useful for the future as the Combined Action Program." (Walt 1970, p. 105) /// General Westmoreland (senior Army commander) expressed otherwise in A Soldier Reports (New York, 1976): "Although I disseminated information on the [combined action] platoons and their success to other commands ... I simply had not enough numbers to put a squad of Americans in every village and hamlet; that would have been fragmenting resources and exposing them to defeat in detail." (Westmoreland 1976, p. 216) /// In summary, this book's greatest value lies in the author's prose. The Village was written for the enlisted Marine and junior officer. Although it is historically accurate and highly readable, the book is not intended for scholarly inspection. There is no bibliography or index. West's sole purpose is to demonstrate how the combined force of Marines and PFs were able to achieve success against the numerically superior Communists. To this end, he is successful. Although there has been an outpouring of literature written in the same vein, the Village still stands alone as the best eyewitness narrative of a combined action platoon. Those seeking a more scholarly, balanced account should see Michael Peterson's The Combined Action Platoons: The US Marines' Other War in Vietnam (New York: Praeger, 1989).
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars One of the best books I have read in a long time
This is an incredible book. Very seldom do I find books that I just can't put down but this was one of them. Read more
Published 1 day ago by Patrick M. Carroll

5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent!!
This book is a very accurate account of the Marines in small unit special operations during the Viet Nam War. Read more
Published 2 months ago by William D. Lafrance

5.0 out of 5 stars Good perspective on Vietnam in the 60's
This book was written and published during the earlier years of America's involvement in Vietnam and gives a unique insight into the attitude of the US military at that time as... Read more
Published 3 months ago by Thomas P. Mackin

4.0 out of 5 stars Good book... lots of lessons applicable to today's wars
This book was very useful in trying to understand what it is like to fight a war among people who have mixed loyalties. Lots of things to think about. Read more
Published 8 months ago by Karl

5.0 out of 5 stars small wars great men
I thought this was a great lesson on how to win against insurgencies one village at a time. This was a unvarnished true story of one village and some US Marines who stopped the VC... Read more
Published 9 months ago by Michael H. Adamson

5.0 out of 5 stars Very Good Read
The Village is a very good read while at the same time contains applicable lessons to future wars.
Published 16 months ago by Stephen Tye

5.0 out of 5 stars The way the Vietnam War should have been fought
Probably the way that the VN War should have been conducted (provided that we belonged there in the first place); very aggressive small unit tactics constructed around endless... Read more
Published 17 months ago by JJ Schwartz

4.0 out of 5 stars A Day In The Life In Vietnam
Cutting through all the politics and proganda the clouds the Vietnam War, this book gives a simple history of soldiers defending one village during the war. Read more
Published 19 months ago by Michael A. Wolff

4.0 out of 5 stars The Village
A tell all story of small unit tactics in Vietnam. Bing West provides the reader insights into how small units can make a difference within much larger conflicts. Read more
Published 19 months ago by Lazander Tomlinson

4.0 out of 5 stars COIN a la Vietnam
This was a great story-like lesson book on COIN. I really had a hard time setting it down while I read it on vacation. Read more
Published 20 months ago by Eric Bauswell

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