"Laws are silent in times of war."
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Arnold Isaacs reviews Viet Thanh Nguyen's book on how the Vietnam War and its spillover conflicts are remembered by different sides.

Arnold Isaacs reviews The Sympathizer by Viet Thanh Nguyen and Michael Putzel's The Price They Paid, two stories of the Vietnam War from two different sides, both retelling the personal costs each had to pay.

Vietnam veteran David Rickert on the shameful U.S. government bureaucracy involved in recovering a squad-mate killed in action over Vietnam in 1968 and his sister's brave 47-year fight to bring back her brother.

Nicolaus Mills on his book, Every Army Man is With You, and the story of the 1964 Army football team that defeated Navy, but went on to fight less certain and more costly battles as officers in the Vietnam War.

Lieutenant Colonel Douglas A. Pryer calls Charles Krohn’s "The Lost Battalion of TET: Breakout of the 2/12 Cavalry at Hue" an Army "classic."

Joseph Hammond reviews Robert Sander's book, Invasion of Laos, 1971: Lam Son 719.

Arnold Isaacs reviews Frank Scotton's Uphill Battle: Reflections on Viet Nam Counterinsurgency and finds the author's first-hand account of who lost the war convincing.

Dan Southerland, who was a war reporter aboard the last helicopters out of Saigon in 1975, reviews Rory Kennedy's new documentary about the event, "Last Days in Vietnam."