VERY RARE! Original "REFLECTIONS ON THE VIETNAM WAR" U.S. Army Vietnam War “Indochina Monographs” Operational Report - From Brigadier General George E. Barker Collection
VERY RARE! Original "REFLECTIONS ON THE VIETNAM WAR" U.S. Army Vietnam War “Indochina Monographs” Operational Report - From Brigadier General George E. Barker Collection
Comes with a hand-signed C.O.A.
*Once-in-a-lifetime chance to own an original and very limited U.S. Army print of the Vietnam War “Indochina Monographs” series directly from the private collection of Brigadier General George E. Barker.
Title: REFLECTIONS ON THE VIETNAM WAR
Nation Building and Insurgency 1954-1963, Americanization of the War 1964-1967, Vietnamization 1968-1972, The Struggle for Survival 1973-1975, Conclusions.
Page Total: 165
This extremely rare and museum-grade artifact is an original very limited early printing of the Vietnam War “Indochina Monographs” operational reports published by the U.S. Army Center of Military History (Washington D.C.).
Titled “REFLECTIONS ON THE VIETNAM WAR - General Cao Van Vien and Lt. Gen. Dong Van Khuyen” this Indochina Monograph report was written by officers who held positions in the Cambodia, Laotian, and South Vietnamese armed forces during the Vietnam War in Indochina.
This specific report of the Indochina Monographs was written with intelligence and dual first-hand accounts from General Cao Van Vien and Lt. Gen. Dong Van Khuyen.
This original Vietnam War “Indochina Monographs” operational report series was produced in very limited quantities, however, what makes this particular report even rarer is that this report comes directly from the private collection of Brigadier General George E. Barker when he was issued this report during his command of the 407th Civil Affairs Battalion.
As noted in the Monograph series by Brigadier General Douglas Kinnard (Chief of Military History) the Vietnam War “Indochina Monographs” operational report series show one of the most extensive and detailed views of the Vietnam War as it was not edited or altered to reflect the view of the U.S. Army or the Department of Defense.