America in Vietnam
A Documentary History
Edited with Commentaries by William Appleman Williams, Thomas McCormick, Lloyd Gardner, and Walter LaFeber
This collection of essays and documents, written and compiled by four distinguished
historians, is an essential source book for anyone seeking to understand the causes,
character, and consequences of American involvement in Vietnam.
Through a wide variety of documentsincluding newly opened presidential papers,
congressional debates, military reports, treaties, and newspaper articlesthe
authors trace the origins of the war back to preWorld War II attitudes and then
proceed through the development of the "domino theory" and the policies of Truman,
Eisenhower, Kennedy, Johnson, and Nixon to the fall of South Vietnam in 1975.
Each of the editors has written an introductory essay to place the documents in
heir historical context. These essays explore the controversial questions raised
by Vietnamsuch as whether each president understood what he was getting into,
whether (as some now charge) the media and public opinion undermined America's ability
to win the war, whether official statements were intended to mislead the American
people, and, most fundamentally, why America was in Vietnam.
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