Book Read Free

The Generals

Page 61

by Thomas E. Ricks


  Strachan, Hew, 345–46, 521n

  strategy, 47–48

  corporate culture and, 205

  of gradual escalation, 205–6

  limited war and, 205–6

  see also generalship

  Stroh, Donald, 185

  Strong, Kenneth, 50, 474n, 475n

  Strong, LeRoy, 311

  Struggle for Europe, The (Montgomery), 82

  Stryker armored vehicles, 390

  Stuart, J. E. B., 26

  Study on Military Professionalism, 390

  Sullivan, Gordon, 227

  Sulzberger, C. L., 199, 498n

  Summersby, Kay, 82, 480n, 481n

  Sunnis, 402, 430, 436–38

  Sun Tzu, 357

  Supreme Command (Cohen), 448

  Sutherland, Richard, 47

  Swain, Richard, 346, 381, 519n, 525n

  Syria, 413

  Taaffe, Stephen, 100, 468n, 483n

  Taft, Robert, 198–99

  Taiwan, see China, Nationalist

  Taliban, 439

  Tan, Michelle, 532n

  Tarawa, Battle of, 173

  Taylor, Maxwell, 8, 191, 202–3, 211, 215, 217–22, 231, 236, 240, 253, 261, 262, 266, 267, 332, 435, 500n, 503n

  Bay of Pigs fiasco and, 219–20

  as chairman of Joint Chiefs of Staff, 220–22

  civil-military relations and, 254–55

  JFK’s relationship with, 219–20, 227

  named ambassador to South Vietnam, 220

  Pentomic Army and, 208–9, 219

  U.S. role in Vietnam and, 228–29

  Taylor, William, 398, 527n

  Taylor, Zachary, 114

  Teasley, Mack, 502n

  Tenet, George, 395

  Tet Offensive, 260, 265, 285–92, 429

  aftermath of, 315–16, 320, 323

  DePuy on, 290

  Khe Sanh siege in, 288

  onset of, 285

  planning of, 286

  purpose of, 285–86

  as strategic victory, 289

  as tactical failure, 289

  targets in, 286–87

  U.S. public and political reaction to, 289–90

  Viet Cong in aftermath of, 315–16, 320, 323

  Westmoreland and, 285, 288–89

  Weyand’s defense of Saigon in, 288

  Thayer, Thomas, 261, 265, 270–71, 279, 496n, 507n, 508n, 509n, 510n, 518n

  Theiss, Ronald, 245

  Theobald, Robert “Fuzzy,” 38

  Thie, Harry, 530n

  3rd Armored Cavalry Regiment, U.S., 413, 441

  3rd Armored Division, U.S., 110–11

  Third Army, U.S., 86, 107

  Patton removed as commander of, 111–12

  III Corps, U.S., 187

  3rd Infantry Division, U.S., 22, 132

  III Marine Amphibious Force, U.S., 269

  3rd Marine Division, U.S., 271

  31st Infantry Regiment, U.S., 138–39, 148

  31st Regimental Combat Team, U.S., 148, 169

  32nd Infantry Division, U.S., 17

  32nd Infantry Regiment, U.S., 136, 138, 370

  34th Infantry Division, U.S., 54

  34th Infantry Regiment, U.S., 123

  35th Engineer Group, U.S., 326–27

  36th Infantry Division, U.S., 67

  Thomas, Gerald, 168

  Thompson, Hugh, 294–95, 299, 301

  Thompson, James, 528n

  Thompson, Julian, 70, 478n

  Thompson, W. Scott, 510n, 517n

  Thucydides, 50

  Thurman, Maxwell, 362, 447

  Time, 77, 202, 247

  Tinian, Battle of, 174

  Toai, Doan Van, 511n, 517n

  Tomahawk cruise missile, 375

  Tompkins, Rathvon, 271

  Toolan, John, 408

  Top Gun (Navy’s Fighter Weapons School), 338

  Tora Bora, Battle of, 398–99, 403

  Torch, Operation, 49, 51–52

  Training and Doctrine Command (TRADOC), 337–38, 344, 348–49, 357

  Trainor, Bernard, 376, 380–81, 524n, 525n

  Tran Dinh Tho, 226, 503n

  Tran Van Don, 265

  Treuenfels, Rudolph, 475n

  Trieste, Italy, 119

  Trinh Duc, 323

  True Glory, The (film), 117

  Truman, Harry S., 105, 115, 125–26, 153, 223, 498n

  attempted assassination of, 487n

  MacArthur fired by, 105, 196–97

  MacArthur’s conflict with, 127–30, 180, 191, 192–93

  Truman Administration, 122, 128, 175, 195, 196, 201, 236

  Truong Nhu Tang, 262, 265, 280, 324, 507n, 508n, 517n

  Truscott, Lucian, 67, 69–70, 71, 110, 477n, 478n, 501n

  Tugwell, Rexford, 483n

  Tunisia, 18, 51, 57, 75

  Tunner, William, 162

  Turkey, 387

  Tuttle, William, 505n

  20th Armored Division, U.S., 56

  20th Infantry Regiment, U.S., 294

  23rd Infantry “Americal” Division, U.S., 293, 296, 300, 325, 329, 331, 367, 370

  deactivation of, 330

  24th Infantry Division, U.S., 115, 122, 186

  24th Infantry Regiment, U.S., 125

  25th Infantry Division, U.S., 5, 187, 239, 246, 253, 261, 316, 325

  26th Infantry “Yankee” Division, U.S., 21, 133

  27th Infantry Division, U.S., 38

  29th Infantry Division, U.S., 53

  Twining, Nathan, 221–22, 501n

  Ulmer, Walter, 234, 277, 311, 360, 392–93, 523n, 527n

  Ultra intercepts, 54

  Uncertain Trumpet, The (Taylor), 219

  Underwood, Richard, 84–85

  United Nations, 190

  Powell’s speech at, 394–96

  United States, 17, 83, 196

  corporate culture of, 203–4

  outcome of Chosin campaign and, 167

  reaction to Tet Offensive in, 289–90

  space program of, 218

  in World War I, 19–20

  U.S. News & World Report, 174

  Vance, Cyrus, 232

  Van Creveld, Martin, 475n

  Vandenberg, Arthur, 103

  Vandenberg, Hoyt, 175

  Vandergriff, Donald, 510n

  Van Fleet, James, 23, 188, 470n

  Vann, John Paul, 262, 288

  Varljen, Peter, 353, 392, 522n, 527n

  Venzon, Anne Cipriano, 470n

  Vernon, Edwin, 468n, 503n, 505n, 506n, 509n, 516n

  Veterans of Foreign Wars, 128

  Viet Cong, 225, 239, 249, 259–62, 263, 268, 270, 271, 294, 296

  infiltration program of, 281–82

  Phoenix Program and, 248, 324–25

  in Tet aftermath, 315–16, 320, 323

  in Tet Offensive, 286–87, 289

  U.S. Army weaknesses exploited by, 280–84

  Viet Minh, 224–25

  Vietnam, Democratic Republic of (North Vietnam), 202, 205, 223–24, 225, 227–28, 237, 256, 258, 274

  Vietnam, Republic of (South Vietnam), 223–24, 225, 229, 256, 259, 272, 273

  Taylor named ambassador to, 220

  Vietnam Veterans Memorial, 45

  Vietnam War, 5, 6, 11, 12, 13, 58, 95, 96, 105, 110, 118, 121, 185, 209, 212, 237, 372, 384, 401, 416, 434, 438, 442, 449, 459, 461

  Abrams in, 319–20

  amnesty project in, 270

  attrition strategy
in, 233, 254–55, 264–65, 268, 272–74, 320, 385–86

  blame for U.S. failure in, 265–66

  bombing of North Vietnam in, 227–29, 253

  CAPS program in, 268–69, 272–73

  civilian population and, 249, 261–64, 268

  civil-military relations in, 252–55, 487n

  combat refusals in, 328–29, 517n

  counterinsurgency operations in, 225–27, 260–61, 263, 265, 267–69, 271, 273

  decline of U.S. Army in, 317–19

  decorations awarded in, 327

  DePuy’s approach to, 238–39

  and distrust of military, 330–31

  drug problem in, 326–29, 330, 332, 518n

  dysfunctional U.S. Army after, 330–32

  escalation strategy in, 205–6

  firepower in, 242, 247–50, 263, 265, 271–72

  Fire Support Base Mary Ann massacre in, 329–30

  “fragging” in, 328

  Gulf of Tonkin incident and, 256

  JFK-Taylor relationship and, 221–22

  Joint Chiefs of Staff and, 222, 227–29

  Junction City operation in, 270

  LBJ’s Reserves decision in, 317

  LBJ-Westmoreland Hawaii meeting in, 238

  MacArthur’s influences on, 202, 214, 237

  micromanagement in, 278

  mutinous insubordination in, 326, 327–29

  North Vietnam’s official history of pacification program in, 321–23

  pacification program in, 265, 272, 319–25

  personnel program in, 274–79

  Phoenix Program in, 248, 324–25

  racial tension in, 327, 332

  relief policy in, 266–67, 278

  Ridgway’s opposition to, 222–23

  risk aversion in, 277–78, 280

  Rolling Thunder campaign in, 373

  rotation program in, 275–79, 318, 456

  “sandbagging” of patrols in, 328

  search-and-destroy strategy in, 253–54, 264, 271, 273, 324

  seasonal pattern of fighting in, 279

  South Vietnamese military in, 272, 316–17

  Taylor and U.S. role in, 228–29, 240

  after Tet, 315–16, 320, 323

  Tet Offensive in, see Tet Offensive

  threat perception and, 223–24

  “ticket punching” in, 278, 280

  U.S. Army’s failure in, 260–66

  U.S. combat ineffectiveness in, 280–81

  U.S. public opinion and, 321, 325

  Viet Cong infiltration program in, 281–82

  Vietnamization of, 321, 325

  World War II commanders in, 217–18

  Villa, Pancho, 107

  Villahermosa, Gilberto N., 510n

  Villard, Erik, 507n, 511n

  Vines, John, 440

  Virginia Military Institute (VMI), 19, 38, 153, 157, 490n

  Vo Nguyen Giap, 260

  Wade, Gary, 468n

  Wainwright, Jonathan, 100, 483n

  Wake Island, 128–30, 193, 198

  Walker, Edwin, 115

  Walker, Fred, 67, 477n

  Walker, Walton, 4, 125, 133, 176, 179, 431, 432

  Wallace, George, 115

  Wangenheim, Freiherr von, 63

  Ward, Orlando, 37, 55–56, 57, 76

  War Department, U.S., 29, 40

  War Managers, The (Kinnard), 240

  War Plan Orange, 46

  Warren Commission, 115

  Warsaw Pact, 346–47

  Washington, George, 114

  Washington Post, 97, 374

  Washington Post Company, 248

  Wass de Czege, Huba, 354–58, 388–89, 420, 522n, 526n, 529n

  Watke, Frederic, 299–300

  Watson, Leroy, 37, 110

  Watson, Mark Skinner, 472n

  Wayne, John, 224

  Wedemeyer, Albert, 18, 63, 95, 469n

  Weigley, Russell, 36, 85, 116, 118, 235, 469n, 472n, 481n, 482n, 485n, 486n, 500n, 504n, 509n, 516n

  Weinberger, Caspar, 202, 369

  Weinberger Doctrine, 372–73

  Weiner, Tim, 505n

  Wells, Anne Sharp, 491n

  Wermuth, Anthony, 266, 508n

  West, Francis J. “Bing,” 262, 427, 507n, 508n

  Westermeyer, Paul, 524n

  Westmoreland, William, 8–9, 53, 55, 77, 105, 115, 202, 248, 252, 262, 264–65, 267, 283, 295, 319, 320, 321, 326, 331, 332, 335, 342, 350, 400, 403, 499n, 502n, 504n, 505n, 506n, 508n, 509n, 519n

  careerism of, 204

  CBS News lawsuit of, 234

  as chief of staff, 234–35, 319

  civilian overseers and, 236–38

  corporate approach of, 232–33, 235–36

  counterinsurgency operations opposed by, 269–71

  LBJ’s relationship with, 237, 290–91

  memoirs of, 233, 236

  mendacity of, 233–34

  micromanaging of, 204

  military career of, 231–32, 233

  military education lacking in, 235

  in modern memory, 239–40

  My Lai massacre and, 303, 307, 309–10

  officer corps’s reputation and, 311–14

  Peers’s My Lai memo to, 309–11

  search-and-destroy approach of, 253, 255

  shortcomings of, 232

  Tet Offensive and, 285, 288–89

  West Point, 96, 177, 202, 213, 231–32, 304, 307, 349, 391, 422, 429, 442

  West Wall, 116

  Weyand, Frederick, 239, 246–47, 253–54, 261, 348, 505n, 506n, 512n

  defense of Saigon and, 287–88

  Wheeler, Earle, 220, 228, 256–57, 258, 262, 289–90, 332

  White, Jeffrey, 413, 529n

  White, M. G., 480n

  Whitney, Courtney, 484n

  Whyte, William, 203–4, 499n

  Why We Fight (film), 113

  Wichman, John, 473n

  Wickham, John, 353, 520n, 522n

  Wilbur, William, 477n, 483n

  Wilhelmina, queen of the Netherlands, 29

  Willbanks, James, 264, 287, 508n, 511n, 519n

  Willenson, Kim, 507n, 508n, 512n

  Williams, Gregon, 135

  Williams, Sam, 1, 3–4, 224–25, 502n

  Williams, T. Harry, 483n

  Willkie, Wendell, 103

  Willoughby, Charles, 139, 149, 196, 198–99, 270, 484n, 488n, 497n, 498n

  fascism of, 140–41

  Wilmot, Chester, 82, 480n, 481n

  Wilson, Charles, 203

  Wilson, Erik, 454

  Wilson, Hack, 147

  Wilson, William, 302–3, 514n

  Winn, Aidan Kirby, 532n

  Winton, Harold R., 356, 495n

  Winton, Walter, 182, 495n, 496n

  Woerner, Frederick, 362, 462

  Wolfowitz, Paul, 375–76

  Wong, Leonard, 468n

  Woodring, Harry, 30

  Woods, Kevin, 524n, 525n, 526n

  Woodward, Bob, 531n

  Woolley, John, 516n

  Worden, William, 486n

  World War I, 32, 58, 73, 96, 107, 114, 151, 410, 444, 454

  commanders in, 26–27

  Gallipoli battle in, 69

  Marshall in, 19–20, 23

  Meuse-Argonne offensive in, 23

  relief policy in, 21–23, 185

  Saint-Mihiel offensive in, 23

  World War II, 7, 11, 12, 107, 114, 119, 126, 151, 153, 171, 178, 197, 217, 237, 309, 420, 444
/>
  Bradley in, 116–17

  DePuy’s experience in, 2, 5–6, 244

  draft in, 113

  Eisenhower’s proposed strategy for, 45–47

  Eisenhower’s war aims in, 48–49

  end of, 111–12

  Falaise pocket in, 362–63

  firepower in, 245

  growth of U.S. armed forces in, 15, 35–36

  high-command mistakes in, 50–51

  Japanese surrender in, 384

  military drawdown after, 389–90

  Phony War in, 29

  promotion from the ranks in, 113

  relief policy in, 11–12, 17–19, 38–39, 69–71, 110, 112, 185, 187, 188, 251, 381

  World War I commanders and, 26–27

  see also Sicily campaign

  Wunderlin, Clarence E., Jr., 469

  X Corps, U.S., 132, 154–56, 170

  XVIII Airborne Corps, U.S., 357

  Yeosock, John, 381

  Yingling, Paul, 8, 349, 441–44, 460, 468n, 531n, 532n

  Yom Kippur War, 337–38

  Young, Brigham, 19

  Young, Stephen, 509n

  Zelikow, Philip, 410, 418, 437, 448

  PHOTOGRAPH CREDITS

  1 (left): Courtesy National Archives, Army Signal Corps photo #16150-41-4788

  2 (right): Frank Scherschel / Time & Life Pictures / Getty Images

  3 (left): Courtesy of the George C. Marshall Foundation

  4 (right): Courtesy National Archives, Official Military Personnel Files, ARC 2595210

  5: © Bettmann / Corbis

  6: Courtesy National Archives, Army Signal Corps

  7: © Bettmann / Corbis

  8 (top): Courtesy National Archives, Still Pictures Records Section, ARC 5891326

  9 (bottom): Courtesy National Archives, photo 127-GR-213 B-A 5415

  10 (top): Courtesy National Archives, Harry S. Truman Library, ARC 201516

  11 (bottom): Courtesy National Archives, Still Pictures Records Section, ARC 541955

  12: Photo: U.S. Army. Source: D. M. Giangreco, War in Korea, 1950–1953 (Presidio Press)

  13: John Dominis / Time & Life Pictures / Getty Images

  14: John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum, photo KN26284

  15: Courtesy National Archives, White House Photo Office Collection, ARC 192566

  16: Source: U.S. Marines in Vietnam: The Defining Year, 1968 by Jack Shulimson, Leonard A. Balsiol, Charles R. Smith, and David A. Dawson. Credited to the Center of Military History

  17: Courtesy of the First Division Museum at Cantigny

  18 (top): Time & Life Pictures / Getty Images

  19 (bottom): Acey Harper / Time & Life Pictures / Getty Images

  20 (top): © Thierry Orban / Sygma / Corbis

  21 (bottom): AP Photo / Tannen Maury

  22: Courtesy National Archives, George H. W. Bush Presidential Library and Museum

 

‹ Prev