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Vietnam: Anatomy of a Peace
 
 

Vietnam: Anatomy of a Peace [Paperback]

Gabriel Kolko
3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
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The Vietnam War was the longest-running international conflict of the 20th century. Gabriel Kolko, a Canadian scholar, argues that although the eventual victor had plenty of time to prepare for rule, the end of the war caught the Communists "unprepared for peace." Faced with the daunting task of rebuilding two ruined economies and forging a single nation, the Vietnamese Communist Party began to abandon some of the doctrinal tenets over which the war was, in some measure, fought. In time, it even adopted a market philosophy, which has caused disillusionment among some of its older cadres; in the near future, Kolko writes, "socialism's lingering institutional residues are likely to be eroded even further." Kolko provides a fine account of that sad war's denouement.

Review

...the book is complex in argument, more complex than its over-heated rhetoric would at first suggest, and indefatigably researched. Challenging and advancing the discussion of renovation...The Journal of Asian Studies.
Because Kolko gives such serious consideration to the question of social equity, anyone who dismisses him out of hand is probably saying more about themselves than about this book. Unsparing and brilliant, Vietnam: Anatomy of a Peace should be read by anyone who ever cared about Vietnam.
The Nation, 11/97

Gabriel Kolko, an academic and an activist involved in the `60s anti-war movement, wrestles in the most eloquent passages of his new book with historical ironies.
Word Quarterly

This is an important, if depressing, book.
The Globe and Mail, 8/97

[A] fine book by one of the wisest independent chroniclers of the century.
The Guardian

Inside This Book (Learn More)
First Sentence
When the war ended in 1975, Vietnam's leaders had no coherent plan for dealing with the southern economy, much less the skills and organization that the immense challenge demanded. Read the first page
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Concordance
Browse Sample Pages
Front Cover | Copyright | Table of Contents | Excerpt | Index | Back Cover
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Customer Reviews

3 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
3.7 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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3.0 out of 5 stars personal regrets interfere with objectivity, Jun 4 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Vietnam: Anatomy of a Peace (Paperback)
The author is definitely very knowledgeable about the subject but his personal regret at how the communists have really screwed things up is almost always apparent. A lot of what he claims to be fact just isn't so: the author's last visit to VN was in 87. Having lived there from 92 to 97, and having worked for the local press, I am sure that things are not as apocalyptic as he makes them seem-- for the party or people of VN. Taken with the usual grain of salt required for this subject, it is nonetheless a fascinating work for the VN political junkie.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Tragedy in Perspective, July 22 1998
By A Customer
This review is from: Vietnam: Anatomy of a Peace (Paperback)
Kolko reminds us that the Vietnamese were fighting _for_ something, not just against the U.S. in their tragic and destructive war. While the goal of _de jure_ independence was achieved, the dream of a just society languished. Kolko illustrates how this goal was destroyed by Communist authoritarianism, a costly war against Pol Pot, Western (and IMF) pressures, and the greed for power and money of Vietnam's new elite. In Vietnam's uncertain future, Kolko argues, only democracy and a renewed commitment to establishing social justice can win back the peace.

The book concludes with a deeply moving epilogue on the necessity and risks of resisting injustice, that everyone alive should read.

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3.0 out of 5 stars Kolko's Shortcoming, Jun 11 1998
By A Customer
This review is from: Vietnam: Anatomy of a Peace (Paperback)
In an otherwise excellent work, Kolko fails to understand the fundamental purpose of the Vietnam War. It was not a war for an ideology, communism, as he implies but a War of National Liberation against the Japanese, the French and in its final stage the Americans. In the context of Cold War foreign aid patterns, a war against American imperialism had some communist overtones but these were not central to the movement. Kolko, a communist sympathizer, decries Vietnam's government abandoning communist economic policy arguing this hurts those who fought in the war the most. This is mere adaptation to a changing global context. Ho Chi Minh was first and foremost a nationalist.
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