The Us Air Force After Vietnam:  Postwar Challenges and Potential for Responses - Donald J. Mrozek - Books - CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platf - 9781478384717 - August 7, 2012
In case cover and title do not match, the title is correct

The Us Air Force After Vietnam: Postwar Challenges and Potential for Responses

Donald J. Mrozek

Price
A$ 29.99

Ordered from remote warehouse

Expected delivery Jan 15 - 28, 2025
Christmas presents can be returned until 31 January
Add to your iMusic wish list

The Us Air Force After Vietnam: Postwar Challenges and Potential for Responses

The Vietnam War stands uneasily on the edge of public memory ? slipping into the past and becoming part of our national history, yet still too recent to be forgotten by those who lived through its trials. But history seeks a meaning in its clouded events, a retrospective order and pattern that could instruct, and sometimes even inspire, successive generations. At present, then, Americans face the peculiar dilemma of having to respond to the impact of a war for which there is still no comprehensively shared vision. One cannot expect broad enthusiasm for a vision of the past whose primary purpose is to justify current policies, acquisitions, deployment, and research. Americans have thought of themselves as individualistic and unruly people ? a flattering self-image, though in some ways a false one. Indeed, during the Vietnam War it was the patience and long-suffering of the American people that most deserved comment. This was not the first war to fact great protest and challenge from Americans. Opposition to a massive commitment that was killing young Americans, as well as many Southeast Asians, should hardly have seemed surprising. What should have caused real surprise was how long it took for opposition to coalesce. In the end, the Vietnam experience ought to remind us of how well Americans can rally to a cause, even when it is poorly conceived and executed. But these are not the lessons of Vietnam. They are only illustrations of how we may come to different understandings of the Vietnam experience. The central lesson is that even when we cannot control the circumstances around us, we can still control ourselves. The use of military and political resources to have our way is not only a practical and technical issue, it is also a philosophical and moral one. It may be worth asking if we have ever won a war by betraying our own traditions and values. In this study, Dr. Donald J. Mrozek probes various groups of Americans as they come to grips with the consequences of the Vietnam War. He poses far more questions that he answers, and some of what he says may invite strong dissent. Yet it will serve its purpose if something here provokes creative thinking and critical reexamination, even of some long-cherished ideas. Viewing the Vietnam War as a logical outcome of American defense thinking has challenging implications, as does seeing the ?cold war consensus? on foreign affairs as an oddity. Yet this is not a litany of objection and protest. Doctor Mrozek raises serious questions about how the contemporary notion of deterrence has emerged; and dealing with such questions forthrightly could make deterrence more effective. So, too, questions the past relationship of military professionals with the mass media is not an assignment of guilt but an invitation to develop a beneficial and cooperative relationship. Nor is this study a tale of gloom and despair; it is rather an appeal for self-consciousness and self-awareness. It is a plea for us to take command of the problems that beset us by taking control of ourselves first.

Media Books     Paperback Book   (Book with soft cover and glued back)
Released August 7, 2012
ISBN13 9781478384717
Publishers CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platf
Pages 140
Dimensions 152 × 229 × 8 mm   ·   199 g
Language English  

Show all

More by Donald J. Mrozek