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A South Vietnamese
leader's revealing retrospective, now in English
An Loc
The Unfinished War
General TranVan Nhut
with Christian L. Arevian
"The struggle for freedom in Vietnam goes on," said General Tran Van Nhut
on the occasion of a Vietnam memorial's dedication in 2004. "It is a
peaceful but unfinished war."
Tran Van Nhut grew up with a great love for his country's history and
served in the Army of South Vietnam from the Republic's inception in 1954
until its demise in 1975. In 1970, he was appointed province chief of Binh
Long (Peaceful Dragon) Province and commander of its Regional, Popular, and
People's Self Defense Forces. It was in that capacity that he became
involved in the sixty-six-day Battle of An Loc, in 1972, which ended in a
significant South Vietnamese victory.
FROM THE BOOK:
Just after my helicopter took off, communist antiaircraft guns located north
of An Loc directed a ferocious barrage at us. Luckily, not one round hit our
helicopter, but when we tried to land at Loc Ninh, the curtain of North
Vietnamese antiaircraft fire was so thick my American pilot was unable to
land there.
Looking down on
Loc Ninh from above, my heart sank. Smoke curled skyward from the town.
Heavy artillery barrages rained down on district military headquarters and
the headquarters of 9th Regiment, 5th Division. . . .
The recipient of more than
sixty South Vietnamese medals as well as many U.S. decorations, Tran Van
Nhut ended his career as a brigadier general. He and his family are
members of the expatriate Vietnamese community in Santa Ana, California.
Christian L. Arevian, who assisted General Tran in editing his
reflections, is author of A Conservative View of the Vietnam Era
(2006). A native of Aleppo, Syria, Arevian currently resides in Greensboro,
North Carolina.
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