Last stand at Khe Sanh The U.S. Marines' finest hour in Vietnam

Gregg R. Jones

Book - 2014

Describes the biggest battle of the Vietnam War as experienced by the men who fought it, when the embattled American troops turned around several weeks of besiegement and boldly assaulted the North Korean mountain stronghold of Khe Sahn.

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Subjects
Published
Boston, MA : Da Capo Press 2014.
Language
English
Main Author
Gregg R. Jones (-)
Edition
First Da Capo Press edition
Physical Description
xx, 358 pages, 16 unnumbered pages of plates ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9780306821394
  • Maps
  • Acknowledgments
  • Introduction
  • Prologue: January 17, 1968
  • Part I.
  • Chapter 1. Death in the Tall Grass
  • Chapter 2. The Battle of Hill 861
  • Chapter 3. "Get Up and Man Your Position!"
  • Chapter 4. Khe Sanh Village
  • Chapter 5. Muscle Shoals
  • Chapter 6. The Walking Dead
  • Chapter 7. "Should We Withdraw from Khe Sanh?"
  • Part II.
  • Chapter 8. "Hell in a Very Small Place"
  • Chapter 9. The Battle of Hill 861 Alpha
  • Chapter 10. "Tanks in the Wire"
  • Chapter 11. The Battle of Hill 64
  • Chapter 12. "Home Is Where You Dig It"
  • Chapter 13. "What the Hell Is Out There?"
  • Chapter 14. "Proud to Be a Marine"
  • Chapter 15. Super Gaggle
  • Part III.
  • Chapter 16. "Why Are You Leaving Us Out Here to Die?"
  • Chapter 17. "A Military Challenge Unprecedented in This War"
  • Chapter 18. "I Just Came from Hell"
  • Chapter 19. "Bitter Hardships and Blood"
  • Chapter 20. "The Agony of Khe Sanh"
  • Chapter 21. "We Made Them Pay"
  • Chapter 22. Breakout
  • Epilogue
  • Notes
  • Sources
  • Bibliography
  • Index
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Journalist Jones (Honor in the Dust) examines one of the most iconic and controversial engagements of the Vietnam War, the 77-day (February-April 1968) siege of the 6,000-man U.S. Marine base at Khe Sanh by some 20,000 North Vietnamese Army troops. This is not the first book to look at Khe Sanh, as a number of memoirs and military histories have chronicled the siege's brutal on-the ground-action and bigger picture strategic issues, and Jones gives cursory attention to the larger picture-who won, who lost, and why. "Definitive answers" to questions such as the NVA's true objectives at Khe Sanh, he says, "will likely remain elusive." Instead, Jones concentrates on sharing the personal stories of the American Marines in the trenches, leaning heavily on interviews he conducted with veterans and making them the core of a readable narrative that also includes facts and figures from secondary sources and official records. This informative account serves as a testament to those who "heeded the call of their duly constituted leaders" and "went to Vietnam with the best of intentions," earning "a place of honor in American history." (Apr.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.


Review by Kirkus Book Review

An acclaimed journalist recounts the hell that was the siege of Khe Sanh.In this history of one of the worst follies of Vietnam, Jones (Honor in the Dust: Theodore Roosevelt, War in the Philippines, and the Rise and Fall of America's Imperial Dream, 2012) relies on a mix of well-reported historical detail for his combat narrative but rarely finds the depth of personal remembrance readers embrace in other works of Vietnam literature. Old soldiers remember that the siege was an absolute blood bath, an event whispered alongside names like Okinawa and Dien Bien Phu. Turning his focus to just four months at the beginning of 1968 allows the author to capture the worst of it. However, there is a larger context here. The question remains whether Defense Minister Vo Nguyen Giap was setting up the war's killing blow or distracting Gen. William Westmoreland from the onslaught of the Tet Offensive. Jones focuses on the brave Marines and other soldiers who maintained their defenses under impossible circumstances. Unfortunately, the book becomes in some ways a too-long list of faceless, if not nameless, casualties of war, cut down badly and far too young. To be fair, the author attempts to give personalities to all the soldiers, although some of the more colorful rise to the surfacee.g., fire support officer Harry Baig or chopper pilot David "Balls to the Wall" Althoff, who sometimes used up three war birds in a day. In other places, occasionally grim humor unlocks the story: the war-maddened soldiers doing their chicken dance to taunt the enemy or the surgeons who took out an ad in the New England Journal of Medicine reading, "Wanted, General Practitioner to assume a diversified medical and surgical practice in a small, quiet, mountain setting."An imperfectly told story about a long-abandoned fire base where too many died, which makes it a story worth remembering. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.