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Description
Sheds crucial new light on the epochal U.S. interventions in Southeast Asia after WWII. Antiwar activist Fred Branfman describes the tragic lives of Laotian peasants under U.S. bombing. Cambodia scholar Ben Kiernan and colleague Owen Taylor illuminate the course of Cambodia history after unprecedented U.S. bombing. The book further includes classic work by Noam Chomsky, Nick Turse, and Edward Herman.
Author Bios Mark Pavlick is an independent editor. He was active in the U.S. movement against the Indochina wars in volunteer work with the Indochina Mobile Education Project and the Indochina Resource Center in Washington, D.C.
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Publication date: June 11, 2019

Table of Contents
CONTENTS


ContributorsXX

Acknowledgments and PermissionsXX

MessageXX

IntroductionXX
Richard Falk

1War Crimes in Indochina and Our Troubled National SoulXX
Fred Branfman

2Excerpts from Voices from the Plain of JarsXX
Collected by Fred Branfman

3Legacies of War: Cluster Bombs in LaosXX
Channapha Khamvongsa and Elaine Russell

4Agent Orange in VietnamXX
Tuan V. Nguyen

5Iraq, Another Vietnam? Consider CambodiaXX
Ben Kiernan and Taylor Owen

6Who Was Responsible for My Lai?
The Peers Commission and the American Way of War CrimesXX
Gareth Porter

7Thailand in the Era of the Cold War and Rama IXXX
Jim Glassman

8Concealing War CrimesXX
Nick Turse

9Bloodbaths in Indochina:
Constructive, Nefarious, and MythicalXX
Noam Chomsky and Edward Herman

10From Mad Jack to Mad Henry:
The United States in VietnamXX
Noam Chomsky

11After “Mad Henry”: U.S. Policy Toward Indochina Since 1975XX
Ngo Vinh Long

12My Experiences with Laos and the Indochina Wars:
Interview with Fred BranfmanXX

13Interview with Noam ChomskyXX


Glossary of Selected TermsXX

Further ActionXX

Recommended ReadingXX

NotesXX

IndexXX

Reviews

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