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Clarke - Honorable Exit

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Clarke Honorable Exit
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A groundbreaking revisionist history of the last days of the Vietnam War that reveals the acts of American heroism that saved more than one hundred thousand South Vietnamese from communist revenge
In 1973 U.S. participation in the Vietnam War ended in a cease-fire and a withdrawal that included promises by President Nixon to assist the South in the event of invasion by the North. But in early 1975, when North Vietnamese forces began a full-scale assault, Congress refused to send arms or aid. By early April that year, the South was on the brink of a defeat that threatened execution or years in a concentration camp for the untold number of South Vietnamese who had supported the government in Saigon or worked with Americans.
Thurston Clarke begins Honorable Exit by describing the iconic photograph of the Fall of Saigon: desperate Vietnamese scrambling to board a helicopter evacuating the last American personnel from Vietnam. It is an image of U.S. failure and...

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Also by Thurston Clarke JFKs Last Hundred Days The Last Campaign Ask Not - photo 1
Also by Thurston Clarke

JFKs Last Hundred Days

The Last Campaign

Ask Not

Searching for Crusoe

California Fault

Pearl Harbor Ghosts

Equator

Thirteen OClock

Lost Hero

By Blood and Fire

The Last Caravan

Dirty Money

Copyright 2019 by Thurston Clarke All rights reserved Published in the United - photo 2

Copyright 2019 by Thurston Clarke

All rights reserved. Published in the United States by Doubleday, a division of Penguin Random House LLC, New York, and distributed in Canada by Random House of Canada, a division of Penguin Random House Canada Limited, Toronto.

www.doubleday.com

DOUBLEDAY and the portrayal of an anchor with a dolphin are registered trademarks of Penguin Random House LLC.

Map designed by Jeffrey L. Ward

Cover design by Emily Mahon

Cover photograph Dirck Halstead/The LIFE Images Collection/Getty Images

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

Names: Clarke, Thurston, author.

Title: Honorable exit : how a few brave Americans risked all to save our Vietnamese allies at the end of the war / Thurston Clarke.

Other titles: How a few brave Americans risked all to save our Vietnamese allies at the end of the war

Description: First edition. | New York : Doubleday, [2019] | Includes bibliographical references and index.

Identifiers: LCCN 2018029232 (print) | LCCN 2018042953 (ebook) | ISBN 9780385539654 (ebook) | ISBN 9780385539647 (hardcover)

Subjects: LCSH: Vietnam War, 19611975Evacuation of civiliansVietnam (Republic) | Vietnam War, 19611975Campaigns. | Vietnam War, 19611975Diplomatic history. | Vietnam (Republic)Foreign relationsUnited States. | United StatesForeign relationsVietnam (Republic)

Classification: LCC DS557.7 (ebook) | LCC DS557.7 .C53 2019 (print) | DDC 959.704/31dc23

LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2018029232

Ebook ISBN9780385539654

v5.4_r1

ep

FOR TOM GILLILAND AND BEN WEIR

Contents

South VietnamApril 1975

Principal Characters WASHINGTON DC P RESIDENT G ERALD F ORD H ENRY - photo 3
Principal Characters
WASHINGTON, D.C.
  • P RESIDENT G ERALD F ORD

  • H ENRY K ISSINGER: secretary of state and national security adviser

  • J AMES S CHLESINGER: secretary of defense

  • B RENT S COWCROFT: National Security Council deputy adviser

  • D AVID K ENNERLY: President Fords personal photographer

  • K ENNETH Q UINN: National Security Council staff member

  • C RAIG J OHNSTONE and L IONEL R OSENBLATT: Foreign Service officers who return to Saigon to rescue their Vietnamese friends

SOUTH VIETNAM
State Department
  • G RAHAM M ARTIN: U.S. ambassador to South Vietnam

  • W OLFGANG L EHMANN: deputy chief of mission

  • D ON H AYS: Foreign Service officer whom Martin expels from South Vietnam

  • J OE M C B RIDE: Foreign Service officer

  • F RANCIS T ERRY M C N AMARA: consul general in Can Tho

  • W ALTER M ARTINDALE: Foreign Service officer in Quang Duc province

  • K EN M OOREFIELD: Foreign Service officer, former special assistant to Ambassador Martin

  • T HERESA T ULL: acting consul general in Da Nang

Defense Attach Office
  • M AJOR G ENERAL H OMER S MITH: U.S. defense attach

  • B RIGADIER G ENERAL R ICHARD B AUGHN: deputy defense attach

  • A NDREW G EMBARA: plainclothes military intelligence officer at Defense Attach Office

Department of Defense and U.S. Military
  • E RICH VON M ARBOD: deputy assistant secretary of defense

  • R ICHARD A RMITAGE: former naval officer with extensive experience in South Vietnam

  • C OLONEL A L G RAY: Marine Corps officer in charge of the ground security force at Tan Son Nhut on April 29

  • L IEUTENANT G ENERAL R ICHARD C AREY: commander of the Ninth Marine Amphibious Brigade

U.S. Delegation to the Four-Party Joint Military Team
  • C OLONEL J OHN M ADISON: head of U.S. delegation

  • L IEUTENANT C OLONEL H ARRY S UMMERS

  • C APTAIN S TUART H ERRINGTON

  • S PECIALIST G ARRETT B ILL B ELL

Central Intelligence Agency
  • T HOMAS P OLGAR: Saigon chief of station

  • J AMES D ELANEY: base chief in Can Tho

  • O . B . H ARNAGE: U.S. embassy deputy air operations officer

  • J AMES P ARKER: CIA agent in the Mekong delta

National Security Agency
  • T OM G LENN: senior NSA official in South Vietnam

Civilians
  • M ARIUS B URKE: pilot who helps prepare rooftop helipads in Saigon

  • E D D ALY: president of World Airways

  • B RIAN E LLIS: CBS Saigon bureau chief

  • R OSS M EADOR: program director for Friends of the Children of Vietnam

  • B ILL R YDER: deputy chief of the U.S. Military Sealift Command

  • A L T OPPING: Pan Am station manager

Prologue The Man in the White Shirt On the afternoon of April 29 1975 - photo 4
Prologue: The Man in the White Shirt
On the afternoon of April 29 1975 Dutch photojournalist Hubert Hugh Van Es - photo 5

On the afternoon of April 29, 1975, Dutch photojournalist Hubert Hugh Van Es looked out the window at the United Press International (UPI) office in downtown Saigon and saw a helicopter landing on an elevator shaft rising from the roof of 22 Gia Long Street. Van Es grabbed his camera and a 300 mm lens and hurried onto the balcony. As a man in a white shirt was reaching down to help a person at the top of a staircase board the helicopter, Van Es took the last great iconic photograph of the Vietnam War. A UPI editor in Tokyo misidentified the building as the American embassy, and despite later corrections the mistake has survived in books, in articles, and on the internet, perhaps because placing the helicopter on the roof of the embassy makes the photograph a more potent symbol for Americas first lost war.

Compare the Van Es photograph with the even more iconic one that Associated Press (AP) reporter Joe Rosenthal shot of six U.S. servicemen raising an American flag on the summit of Mount Suribachi during the World War II battle for Iwo Jima. Both were taken near the end of a war, and both show Americans framed against an open skyreaching up to plant a flag or down to grab a refugee. Otherwise, they seem to have nothing in common. One symbolizes victory in a war Americans have spent decades celebrating; the other, defeat in a war they have spent decades trying to forget. One represents courage and sacrifice; the other, catastrophe and disgrace. But the more one learns about the staircase on the roof of 22 Gia Long Street, the people standing on it, the pilots of that helicopter, and the man in the white shirt, the more apparent it becomes that Van Es had also memorialized a moment of stirring heroism.

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