Description
About the Author
Nathaniel L. Moir is a research associate in the Applied History Project at the John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University. He is a veteran of the war in Afghanistan, a former senior research fellow at the Naval Postgraduate School, and a former Ernest May Postdoctoral Fellow in History and Policy at the Kennedy School.
Reviews
'More than a biography, this is a meticulous, painstaking, deeply detailed account of 30 years of Vietnam's agony at the hands of both the French and the Americans.' -- Asia Sentinel
'Moir has done the field of Vietnam War history a service by providing such a thorough treatment of Fall's important and fascinating life ... Soldiers and scholars can better understand the capabilities needed to succeed in these kinds of wars by reading this book.' -- Strategic Studies Institute
'Moir shines with this timely, relevant appraisal of Bernard Fall, the most perceptive critic of French and American political-military operations in Southeast Asia during the Cold War era. A superb evaluation of Fall and his influential scholarship on revolutionary warfare.' -- Gregory A. Daddis, USS Midway Chair in Modern U.S. Military History, San Diego State University
'Original and exceptionally well-researched, this will be popular amongst scholars and readers of the Second World War and the Cold War.' -- Craig Whiteside, Associate Professor of National Security Affairs, U.S. Naval War College, and a co-author of The ISIS Reader
'Moir's book illuminates the contributions of a very influential figure and fills a major gap in the historiography of the Vietnam War, the history of military thinking on Revolutionary Warfare. Enlightening.' -- Sophie Quinn-Judge, author of Ho Chi Minh and The Third Force in the Vietnam War
'Bernard Fall remains one of our foremost up-close analysts of the long struggle for Vietnam. In this superb study he gets the nuanced and incisive treatment he deserves.' -- Fredrik Logevall, Professor of History, Harvard University
'"To win the military battle but lose the political war could well become the U.S. fate in Vietnam," observed Bernard Fall in 1962. In Number One Realist, Nathaniel Moir gives us a superbly rich biography, combined with an illuminating history of irregular and revolutionary warfare, subjects on which Fall was one of the twentieth century's pioneering authorities. This is much more than a contribution to the history of that long and complex war in Indochina, the end of which Fall did not live to see. It is a profound study of war as a perennial human phenomenon and how best to think and write about it.' -- Niall Ferguson, Milbank Family Senior Fellow, Hoover Institution, Stanford, and author of Kissinger, 1923-1968: The Idealist
Book Information
ISBN 9781787384804
Author Nathaniel L. Moir
Format Hardback
Page Count 376
Imprint C Hurst & Co Publishers Ltd
Publisher C Hurst & Co Publishers Ltd