From Publishers Weekly
In June 1969 a group of Green Beret officers, suspecting that one of their Vietnamese operatives was a double agent, executed him and dropped his weighted body into the ocean off Nha Trang. A dogged investigation by two Army detectives led to their arrest, followed by a hearing to determine whether they would face court-martial. The admitted triggerman, Capt. Robert Marasco, defended the group's action by stating that eliminating Thai Khac Chuyen was no different than eliminating a Vietcong during a search-and-destroy mission. Gen. Creighton Abrams, commander of U.S. forces in Vietnam, didn't see it that way; neither did Army Secretary Stanley Resor. When the case became a cause celebre in the States, however, most Americans viewed the arrests as evidence of the high-level politicking that had hamstrung our troops from the start. In the end the Army dropped the charges, but the "Green Beret case" nevertheless had a significant effect on the conduct of the war: it provoked Daniel Ellsberg to leak the Pentagon Papers. In this skillfully told, engrossing narrative, Stein ( The Vietnam Fact Book ) presents all sides of this controversial case, a veritable metaphor for the ambiguities of the Vietnam War. Photos.
Copyright 1992 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
From Library Journal
In the summer of 1969, an alleged North Vietnamese spy "disappeared." The commander of all Green Berets in Vietnam and several of his top subordinates were arrested, charged with the murder, and locked up in solitary confinement at the Long Binh jail. A national uproar ensued when these charges were leaked to the press, but in October the story vanished from the front pages--due, the author implies, to efforts by President Richard Nixon, his cabinet, and the CIA to quash the story. Washington-based journalist Stein has obtained secret files and interviewed the surviving key players in a trial that pitted America's top defense lawyers against army leadership. Revelations of government-sponsored terrorism and assassination were so embarassing that the case was eventually dropped as part of a cover-up that prompted a disenchanted Daniel Ellsberg to leak the Pentagon Papers. Highly recommended.
- David Lee Poremba, Detroit Copyright 1992 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.