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We were Soldiers Once...And Young: Ia Drang--The Battle That Changed The War In Vietnam

We were Soldiers Once...And Young: Ia Drang--The Battle That Changed The War In Vietnam

List Price: $26.95
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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Excellent Tribute from a Commander to his Soldiers
Review: Lieutenant General Harold Moore and Joseph Galloway have written what is probably the definitive book on the soldier's experience in Vietnam. Covering the American campaign in the Ia Drang Valley in 1965, the book focuses in on two battles: the Battle of LZ X-Ray, where an American battalion held off attacks by a People's Army of Vietnam division, and the Battle of LZ Albany, where another American battalion was decimated by other elements of the same PAVN division.

The Ia Drang campaign set the tone for Vietnam, demonstrating both American solders' fighting abilities and the strategic failure of American planners who could never take the initiative away from the enemy. When the battle was joined, the Americans would fight well and inflict devastating losses on PAVN forces, but the battles were almost always fought on their terms, at times and places of their choosing. American willingness to fight the war on their terms ensured the North Vietnamese would win in the end, as long as their will to fight persisted.

But while Moore and Galloway touch on these factors, their focus is firmly on the young men who fought and died in the Ia Drang. Moore, the battalion commander at LZ X-Ray, and Galloway, a UPI reporter who rode into LZ X-Ray to cover the battle, have done meticulous research to produce a well-written, easy to read account of the two battles that drags the reader headlong into the terror and tension of the fighting. We are introduced to each soldier in turn, and the book is careful to note the circumstances of each American death as best it can. The result is a gripping read, impossible to put down.

Moore and Galloway are to be commended for their hard work and dedication in writing this book. There's no way to understand how it truly feels to be trapped in a desperate firefight when people you love are dying all around you, but this comes as close as humanly possible. After decades of propaganda calling Vietnam veterans either emotional wrecks or horrible baby killers, "We Were Soldiers Once...and Young" finally puts out the truth about the Americans who fought and died for their country in a war few cared about. It is a fitting tribute to all those men.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Overlooked Valor
Review: American soldiers in Vietnam were similar to American soldiers in wars prior and since. They fought with dedication, loyalty and skill. They were motivated, well led and informed. They knew for what they were fighting and why and recognized the importance of their contribution and sacrifice. Yet the popular mythology is very different.
General Moore and correspondent Galloway have made an invaluable contribution to the truth by publishing this most unusual joint memoir - how often do soldiers and journalists team up? Together they have produced one of the classic battle books of all times. Though written in a self-deprecating manner it is impossible to read this excellent book and not be completely in awe of the leadership abilities and dedication of then Lieutenant Colonel Hal Moore.
Moore took his new battalion - then an experimental airmobile unit - into what turned out to be an incredibly one-sided battle against seasoned, tough North Vietnamese regular forces. The Americans won that battle due in part to their supporting air and artillery but mostly on the shoulders of the soldiers and their leaders, from Colonel Moore all the way down to the squad and fire teams.
We Were Soldiers goes a long way to restoring the rightful pride that Americans ought to feel about our soldiers in Vietnam. This is a book that belongs on every American's shelf and is one that you will want to go back to and contemplate from time to time. It is an absolute must read.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Superb Work
Review: I own 20-30 books written about the Veitnam War. This is without a doubt one of best I have ever had the pleasure of reading.
I got the true feeling of what it must have been like to be completly surrounded by NVA soldiers on LZ's X-Ray and Albany.
The many interviews and first hand accounts of the fierce fighting in these two battles really helps the reader get an understanding of just what these men went through.
Harold Moore and Joe Galloway have written a superb book.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Superb
Review: Without doubt, this is one of the best accounts of military history that I have ever read.

'We Were Soldiers' describes two separate engagements between the NVA and American forces in the Ia Drang valley in Vietnam. This battle, fought in 1965, was one of the first 'real' encounters between US and NVA forces, and it changed the Vietnam War from a political exercise to full fledged conflict.

Essentially, the book is divided into two stories, that of the soldiers that fought at Landing Zone (LZ) X-Ray, and that of the soldiers that fought at LZ Albany, two locations in the Ia Drang valley.

The book is frighteningly honest about the harsh realities of war, and does an excellent job at showing the human cost of war. Lt. General Harold 'Hal' Moore writes in a very forthright and honest manner, and it is obvious he is someone that does not mince words, and I believe that every word in this book is truth.

The book isn't easy to read, and it certainly isn't a light, entertaining story. If anything, the book is closer to a history text, rich in detail and thoroughly referenced, but that doesn't mean it isn't a fascinating read.

But overall, what I admired so much about this book was the honesty of it. Nothing is withheld, all is told, typical of 'Hal' Moore. After reading this book, it is obvious to me that Hal is a man of the highest integrity and earned every star on his shoulder.

I am an Australian, and although the men at Ia Drang weren't from my country, I was still deeply moved after reading this book. Every man that served in that valley was a hero, and I admire them greatly. I recommend all Americans read this book, young and old.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Life is nothing much to lose, but young men think it is ...
Review: This outstanding account of the first major battle between American and North Vietnamese forces in the Vietnam War tells in gut-wrenching, eye-watering detail what close combat is all about. Authors Hal Moore and Joseph Galloway (Moore commanded the 1st Sqdn., 7th Cav., one of the two squadrons involved; Galloway was a journalist on the ground with Moore) have prepared a carefully researched, well documented account of U.S. and North Vietnamese actions at Ia Drang Valley in the fall of 1965. Importantly, they have drawn not just on American sources and their own experiences, but on official and personal accounts of their former enemies.

Ia Drang featured the new U.S. battlefield concept of airmobility and the North Vietnamese decided to give battle in a desperate attempt to find out the best way to deal with American helicopters and fire power. When Lt. Col. Moore and the 450 troopers of his 1/7th Cav. air assaulted into a small clearning in the Ia Drang Valley they were immediately surrounded by 2,000 North Vietnamese regulars. The fighting that ensued consumed Moore's squadron. The enemy increased his forces and applied even greater pressure on the Americans, and a sister unit, the 2/7th Cav., was chopped to ribbons. Enemy losses were extraordinarily high ... a price they were willing to pay to learn the lessons that would serve them on future battlefields.

The North Vietnamese did learn. They adjusted their tactics and modernized and increased the number of rocket propelled grenade launchers carried by infantry units. Additional heavy machine guns and anti-aircraft weapons were laboriously brought down the Ho Chi Minh Trail to beef up defenses in future operations. By summer 1970, when a division of North Vietnamese soldiers surrounded airmobile troopers of the 101st Airborne Division at Fire Support Base Ripcord, they were a different enemy.

By 1970 the Vietnam War was a different war as well. In 1965 there was support for the war at home and Moore's men went into Ia Drang to win, and win they did. By 1970 U.S. forces were being withdrawn and the ground war was being turned over to an increasingly capable South Vietnamese military. At home, support for the war effort had waned terribly and political will was lacking. U.S. units increasingly became casualty-shy. Even so, the battle for FSB Ripcord (see Keith Nolan's "Ripcord: Screaming Eagles Under Siege, Vietnam 1970") was as complex and deadly as that at Ia Drang. But in the end, the 1st Cavalry Division held their ground and the 101st did not. A clear sign that the war was, for all practical purposes, over.

Read Moore's and Galloway's book ... give copies to friends and relatives ... it's a classic that will stand the test of time. Then remember the words of A. E. Houseman after the bloody struggles of World War One: "Life is nothing much to lose, but young men think it is ... and we were young."

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Dry Yet Accurate
Review: Well I have to say this book definately was an accurate account
of what occured in Vietnam. The brutality and anguish the soldiers went through was accurately told but was dry as the Sahara desert. For a true war lover, or for somebody who wants an accurate account of war in Vietnam from people who were there it's good, otherwise I suggest the movie or a book that doesn't drag on.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Excellent
Review: Joe Galloway and Hal Moore have written a wonderful book. Anyone remotely interested in military history should read it.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The Image Of Vietnam
Review: We Were Soldiers is the best book on Vietnam. The story of LT./COL. Harold Moore and a group of Air-Cavalry troops that went into the IA Drang Valley and desimated a large number of PAVN troops. The book is well written with maps and photos do draw in the reaader. Anyone who is American should read this book

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Intense Reading
Review: I saw the movie first before reading the book. However, I found the book is full of details that the movie couldn't bring. You will feel the elephant grass around you as you read this book and truly appreciate those who have served in order protect our freedom.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Definitive account of Ia Drang, albeit heart wrenching
Review: I read the book twice and saw the movie twice. The movie does not do justice to the book. It is the best historical record of a brutal battle in Vietnam in 1965. However, the book does not flow easily. Nonetheless, it is painful to imagine the staggering losses on both sides with the Americans having a 5 to 1 kill advantage. But 200 troopers killed in this battle from Custer's old 7th Cav made me reflect that history repeated itself somewhat because Custer lost about 200 troopers too. Hal Moore had high technology to back him up in the way of air support and artillery. Custer had neither. And yet the losses are the same. Politicians should read this book rather than us military histry buffs to learn what the human cost is to wage war. Like Fredericksburg, Ia Drang drives home the old saying that war never decides who is right, only who is left.


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