Book contents
- The Cambridge History of the Vietnam War
- The Cambridge History of the Vietnam War
- The Cambridge History of the Vietnam War
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Maps
- Contributors to Volume III
- General Introduction
- Introduction
- Part I The Late Vietnam War
- Part II The Postwar Era
- 13 Vietnam after “Liberation”
- 14 The Third World and the Communist Triumph in Vietnam
- 15 The Third Indochina War
- 16 Vietnam in the Reform Era
- 17 Postwar US–Vietnam Relations
- 18 Refugees and US–Vietnam Relations
- 19 The US POW Experience, American Veterans, and the War
- Part III Legacies
- Index
19 - The US POW Experience, American Veterans, and the War
from Part II - The Postwar Era
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 January 2025
- The Cambridge History of the Vietnam War
- The Cambridge History of the Vietnam War
- The Cambridge History of the Vietnam War
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Maps
- Contributors to Volume III
- General Introduction
- Introduction
- Part I The Late Vietnam War
- Part II The Postwar Era
- 13 Vietnam after “Liberation”
- 14 The Third World and the Communist Triumph in Vietnam
- 15 The Third Indochina War
- 16 Vietnam in the Reform Era
- 17 Postwar US–Vietnam Relations
- 18 Refugees and US–Vietnam Relations
- 19 The US POW Experience, American Veterans, and the War
- Part III Legacies
- Index
Summary
Though their experience was in no way typical of American service in the Vietnam War, American prisoners of war have dominated American perceptions of the conflict. A small, strikingly homogenous group, the POWs were important because of, not despite, their unusual character. As most were pilots captured while waging air war against North Vietnam, they were subjected to harsh treatment by Vietnamese authorities, who sought to make them confess and repent their aggression against the Vietnamese people. But because aviators tended to be older, well-educated, white, career officers who identified deeply with the United States and its mission in Vietnam, American POWs were determined to resist Vietnamese coercion. In enduring torture rather than admit guilt, they inverted the wars moral framework, representing themselves as victims of Vietnamese aggression. Because they so neatly embodied the nation as its white majority wished to imagine it, their suffering and sacrifice worked to redeem the American cause in Vietnam and restore national honor. This chapter explains this phenomenon through close attention to the POW experience in North Vietnams prisons.
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- Information
- The Cambridge History of the Vietnam War , pp. 424 - 442Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2024