Logistics in the Vietnam Wars, 1945 1975
By (Author) Nash
Pen & Sword Books Ltd
Pen & Sword Military
2nd February 2022
28th February 2022
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
959.70438
Paperback
320
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
The combatants in the three Vietnam wars from 1945 to 1975 employed widely contrasting supply methods. This fascinating book reveals that basic traditional techniques proved superior to expensive state of the art systems. During the Indochina or French' war, France's initial use of wheeled transport and finally air supply proved vulnerable given the terrain, climate and communist adaptability . The colonial power gave up the unequal struggle after the catastrophic defeat at Dien Bien Phu. To stem the advance of Communism throughout the region, the Americans stepped in to support the pro-Western South Vietnam regime and threw vast quantities of manpower and money at the problem. The cost became increasingly unpopular at home. General Giap's and Ho Chi Minh's ruthless use of coolies most famously on the Ho Chi Minh Trail proved resistant to carpet-bombing and Agent Orange defoliation. The outcome of the final war between the Communist North Vietnam and the corrupt Southern leadership, now with minimal US support, was almost a forgone conclusion. The Author is superbly qualified to examine these three wars from the logistic perspective. His conclusions make for compelling reading and will be instructive to acting practitioners and enquiring minds. AUTHOR: NS Tank' Nash CBE was educated at Latymer Upper School before entering the catering industry with J Lyons and Co Ltd. He enlisted in the Honourable Artillery Company in 1957 and served until conscripted for National Service in 1960. Briefly a Royal Fusilier, he was a member of the Army Catering Corps for thirty years, rising to the rank of Brigadier. He resigned his commission in 1991. For thirty-three years, from 1973, he wrote humour under the pen name Sustainer' and his work was published internationally in a variety of military journals. There are three anthologies of his column: Reveille & Retribution, (1997), Spit & Polish (1999) and Friend & Foe (2001). His books for Pen and Sword include K Boat Catastrophe, Strafer' Gott -Desert General, Chitral Charlie -The Rise and Fall of Major General Charles Townshend, Valour in the Trenches and Betrayal of an Army - Mesopotamia 1914 -1916. 113 b/w illustrations
"[Nash] excels at comparing and contrasting logistical systems of North Vietnam vs French and then US."-- "Historical Miniatures Gaming Society"
"Nash presents this work in an accessible, colloquial manner, often employing derision and sarcasm while analyzing the actions of French and American military and political leaders."-- "The VVA Veteran"
NS Tank' Nash CBE was educated at Latymer Upper School before entering the catering industry with J Lyons and Co Ltd. He enlisted in the Honourable Artillery Company in 1957 and served until conscripted for National Service in 1960\. Briefly a Royal Fusilier, he was a member of the Army Catering Corps for thirty years, rising to the rank of Brigadier. He resigned his commission in 1991. For thirty-three years, from 1973, he wrote humour under the pen name Sustainer' and his work was published internationally in a variety of military journals. There are three anthologies of his column: Reveille & Retribution, (1997), Spit & Polish (1999) and Friend & Foe (2001). His books for Pen and Sword include K Boat Catastrophe, Strafer' Gott -Desert General, Chitral Charlie -The Rise and Fall of Major General Charles Townshend, Valour in the Trenches and Betrayal of an Army - Mesopotamia 1914 -1916.