Paying the Dane-geld
U.S. leaders, including Kissinger, would rather pay off the Communists, than cultivate courage and morality to bring home POWs. (February 1988)
A common misconception is that Vietnam was lost because our civilian leaders mishandled the war and hawkish politicians were reluctantly forced to respond to the anti-war sentiment encouraged by a hostile mass media. The facts speak otherwise — the men at the top were not stupid. They had no intention of crippling Communism. From the very beginning, American leaders and their counterparts in the Soviet Union, China, and North Vietnam used the war as a means to build their new world order.
U.S. leaders, including Kissinger, would rather pay off the Communists, than cultivate courage and morality to bring home POWs. (February 1988)
During President Bush's administration, U.S. foreign policy was directed by Kissinger devotees. (December 1989)
Interview of Lt. General Harold G. Moore by William F. Jasper — Lt. General Harold G. Moore, the real-life protagonist portrayed by Mel Gibson in We Were Soldiers, talks with THE NEW AMERICAN about the movie, his book, and Vietnam. (March 2002)
U.S. foreign policy clearly enshrines the abandonment of anti-Communist countries friendly to the United States (August 1986)
The American surrender in Vietnam can effect the overall security of the U.S. for years to come. (February 1986)
Vietnamese-American professor, lawyer and journalist Dr. Pham Kim Vinh says American soldiers were victimized by politicians. (February 1986)
This post-Vietnam War article traces activity from before and during the war that proves the U.S. administration planned Vietnam to be a no-win war. (June 1975)
John F. McManus explains in a 1975 report the connection between CFR members and and the conduct of war in Vietnam. (May 1975)
A recount of how Vietnam soldiers desire to win the war but are prevented from doing so by American policies. (January 1969)
Congressman Dies of Texas tells how the "Liberals" in power during the Vietnam War were deliberately preventing American soldiers from winning the war quickly and decisively. (May 1966)
Explains how the Johnson Administration not only refused to adequately supply U.S. troops in Vietnam, but supplied food, clothing, war materials and other goods to the Vietcong. (May 1968)