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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
3 pages in length. The fundamental objective of "The Cold War Blinders and the Tragedy of Vietnam" as found in Major Problems in American History, volume 2 speaks to man's inability - or outright refusal - to learn from his political mistakes. Authors Robert McNamara, James Blight and Robert Brigham seek to illustrate just how little America gleaned from such tragic episodes as the Cold War and Vietnam as being instrumental in the quest to avoid perpetuation of similar events. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
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3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCColdWarBlnd.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
in American History, volume 2 speaks to mans inability - or outright refusal - to learn from his political mistakes. Authors Robert McNamara, James Blight and Robert Brigham seek
to illustrate just how little America gleaned from such tragic episodes as the Cold War and Vietnam as being instrumental in the quest to avoid perpetuation of similar events.
II. THESIS The authors thesis is simple and straightforward: Learn from the past so as to eliminate reliving the same global battles that
existed throughout the twentieth century. While the objective is not to gloss over the importance of such past lessons, it is meant to use them as examples of how
not to progress into the twenty-first century with the same mindset and/or approach to longstanding global issues. The interpretation of these particular historical
events is to examine why Vietnam ever occurred in the first place when the Cold War provided an especially vital example of how not to proceed in the political arena.
Key elements of the authors argument why the reader should accept this interpretation are found in the assertion that America has brought about much of its own global discord
by virtue of its imperialistic mindset. While opinions about why Vietnam occurred are as vast and varied as the number of soldiers killed in combat; the authors illustrate how
certain accounts try to hide the truth behind a fa?ade of political responsibility. III. EVIDENCE The authors, who provide specific examples in their qualitative evidence drawn from interviews, provide
this by way of bulleted lists of factual reasons why the United States "was an implacable enemy whose goal, in some fashion, was victory over [Vietnam]" (McNamara et al, 2002,
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