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No Glory in the Jungle. Discovering Brutal War Realities behind Patriotic Adventures
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- Nombre de pages184
- FormatePub
- ISBN978-3-565-40726-2
- EAN9783565407262
- Date de parution13/04/2026
- Protection num.pas de protection
- Taille2 Mo
- Infos supplémentairesepub
- ÉditeurEmphaloz Publishing House
Résumé
They came with flags in their hearts. Young men raised on the clean narratives of World War II - of clear enemies, righteous causes, and homecoming parades - arrived in the jungles of Vietnam to find a war that refused every category they had been given to understand it. There was no front line. There was no liberated city to march through. There was only heat, rot, fear, and the maddening impossibility of distinguishing the landscape from the enemy within it.
The patriotic adventure promised by recruitment posters dissolved within weeks of arrival - replaced by something rawer, more disorienting, and far more permanent than any briefing had prepared them for. The Vietnam War claimed over 58, 000 American lives and an estimated two million Vietnamese civilians, yet its most enduring wounds were not counted in casualty reports. Veterans returned home to a country that had grown hostile to the war they had fought, offered neither the dignity of welcome nor the infrastructure of genuine healing.
Post-traumatic stress disorder - not yet named, barely understood - moved through an entire generation of men who had been trained to suppress fear and had no language for what the jungle had done to them. Agent Orange poisoned bodies across decades and generations. The My Lai massacre, the systematic burning of villages, the use of napalm on civilian populations - atrocities that the chain of command either ordered or deliberately ignored - shattered the self-image of a military that had defined itself through the moral clarity of the Second World War.
The patriotic adventure promised by recruitment posters dissolved within weeks of arrival - replaced by something rawer, more disorienting, and far more permanent than any briefing had prepared them for. The Vietnam War claimed over 58, 000 American lives and an estimated two million Vietnamese civilians, yet its most enduring wounds were not counted in casualty reports. Veterans returned home to a country that had grown hostile to the war they had fought, offered neither the dignity of welcome nor the infrastructure of genuine healing.
Post-traumatic stress disorder - not yet named, barely understood - moved through an entire generation of men who had been trained to suppress fear and had no language for what the jungle had done to them. Agent Orange poisoned bodies across decades and generations. The My Lai massacre, the systematic burning of villages, the use of napalm on civilian populations - atrocities that the chain of command either ordered or deliberately ignored - shattered the self-image of a military that had defined itself through the moral clarity of the Second World War.



















