- Description
- Praise
- About the Author
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During the presidency of Lyndon Johnson, the British government sought to avoid escalation of the war in Vietnam and to help bring about peace. The thinking that lay behind these endeavours was often insightful and it is hard to argue that the attempt was not worth making, but the British government was able to exert little, if any, influence on a power with which it believed it had, and needed, a special relationship. Drawing on little-used papers in the British archives, Nicholas Tarling describes the making of Britain’s Vietnam policy during a period when any compromise proposed by London was likely to be seen in Washington as suggestive of defeat, and attempts to involve Moscow in the process over-estimated the USSR’s influence on a Hanoi determined on reunification.
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“The British and the Vietnam War completes Nicholas Tarling's trilogy on the Second Indochina War seen from a British perspective, following his Britain and the Neutralisation of Laos, and Britain and Sihanouk¹s Cambodia. Meticulously researched and written, it provides an alternative to overwhelmingly American focus of much of the existing literature, and is an indispensable source of information for anyone interested in the international politics of the Second Indochina War."
— Ang Cheng Guan, Nanyang Techological University -
Nicholas Tarling (1931–2017) was Professor of History at the University of Auckland (1968–97) and a Fellow of its New Zealand Asia Institute. He was the editor of The Cambridge History of Southeast Asia and wrote nearly 50 books and a large number of articles on the region. His recent publications include Britain, Southeast Asia and the Impact of the Korean War, a cold war trilogy (The British and the Vietnam War: Their Way with LBJ, Britain and the Neutralisation of Laos, Britain and Sihanouk's Cambodia), and Orientalism and the Operatic World.
Cover Type: Paperback
Page Count: 462
Year Published: 2017
Size: 229mm x 152mm