Benjamin F. Martin:France in 1938
- Paperback 2012, ISBN: 9780807131954
Hardcover
Koehler Verlag, 1955. , 1955. Two sided flier for this book. Photograph of Gen Beck on the front. His printed signature below. In serving as Chief of Staff of the German Army between 1935… More...
Koehler Verlag, 1955. , 1955. Two sided flier for this book. Photograph of Gen Beck on the front. His printed signature below. In serving as Chief of Staff of the German Army between 1935 and 1938, Beck became increasingly disillusioned, standing in opposition to the increasing totalitarianism of the Nazi regime and to Hitler's aggressive foreign policy. Due to public foreign-policy disagreements with Hitler, Beck resigned as Chief of Staff in August 1938. From this point Beck came to believe that Hitler could not be influenced for good, and that both Hitler and the Nazi party needed to be removed from government. He became a major leader within the conspiracy against Hitler, and would have served as head of statewith the title of either President or regent ("Reichsverweser"), depending on the sourcehad the 20 July plot succeeded. Folded as issued. Rubber stamp of dealer under the signature. Ephemera. Near Fine Copy. Hardcover. Near Fine. Ephemera. ., Koehler Verlag, 1955., 1955, 4, Washington, DC: Indochina Resource Center, 1974. Wraps. Good.. 18 pages. 28 cm. Illustrations. Map. Footnotes. From Wikipedia: "Gareth Porter (born 18 June 1942, Independence, Kansas is an American historian, investigative journalist and policy analyst on U.S. foreign and military policy. A strong opponent of U.S. wars in Southeast Asia, and the Middle East, he has also written on the potential for diplomatic compromise to end or avoid wars in Korea, Vietnam, Cambodia, the Philippines, Iraq and Iran. He is the author of a history of the origins of the Vietnam War, Perils of Dominance: Imbalance of Power and the Road to War in Vietnam. In 2012 Porter was awarded the Martha Gellhorn Prize for Journalism that "challenges secrecy and mendacity in public affairs....Gareth Porter challenged the main rationale offered by U.S. President Richard Nixon in 1969 for continuing the Vietnam War, and argued that there would not be a communist "bloodbath" in South Vietnam after the U.S. withdrew its forces from Vietnam. He wrote a series of articles and monographs on the bloodbath argument. His first monograph was The Myth of the Bloodbath: North Vietnam s Land Reform Reconsidered in 1973. He challenged the account of mass killings in North Vietnam's land reform (see Land reform in Vietnam) by Hoang Van Chi, Bernard Fall and others. Instead of tens or hundreds of thousands killed, Gareth Porter suggested that 800 to 2, 500 would be a more realistic estimate. His analysis was disputed by a non-academic critic, Daniel Teodoru, whose critique was entered into a hearing record and published by the Internal Security Subcommittee of the United States Senate. Porter replied to Teodoru point by point, and his response was entered into a separate hearing record published by the subcommittee. Porter was also criticized by historian Robert F. Turner and Hoang Van Chi. Porter wrote a detailed expose in 1974 of an account by U.S. Information Agency official Douglas Pike on what has been called the "Hue Massacre" by Vietnamese communists during the Tet Offensive of 1968. Porter alleged that Pike manipulated the official figures for civilian deaths in the destruction of Hue during Tet, primarily by U.S. bombing and artillery, to arrive at his figure of nearly 4, 000 civilians murdered by the Viet Cong, and that Pike s hypothesis about the Communist policy during the occupation of Hue was contradicted by captured Communist documents and other evidence. In 1976-77, continuing his challenge to the bloodbath argument, Gareth Porter rejected early accounts of the mass killings by the Pol Pot regime in Cambodia. With George Hildebrand he wrote a book, Cambodia: Starvation and Revolution, which documented the deaths from starvation of thousands of people in Phnom Penh in the last months of the war in Cambodia and argued that there was a legitimate basis for sending most of the population of Phnom Penh much of which had been refugees from rural areas back to rural areas. Critics have argued that the book's sources included official statements from Khmer Rouge media about the availability of food in rural areas. Testifying before Congress in May 1977, Gareth Porter said that "the notion that the leadership of Democratic Kampuchea adopted a policy of physically eliminating whole classes of people" was "a myth fostered primarily by the authors of a Readers Digest book." Congressman Stephen J. Solarz compared Gareth Porter to those who denied the murder of 6 million Jews in the Nazi Holocaust. Gareth Porter rejected this comparison and cited reporting by reputable news outlets in support of this position.", Indochina Resource Center, 1974, 2.5, Paperback / softback. New. When Benjamin Martin's latest report from the front of French fallibility does not read like a tragedy, whose end is foreordained, it reads like a melodrama: sensational doings punctuated by catchy melodies like 'L'Internationale' and 'La Marseillaise.' In both cases it reads well.... French life in the run-up to World War II was a gangrenous decomposition, to be followed by still worse. The country's leaders found nary a pratfall that they could avoid. They chose a semblance of peace above honor and ended up with neither.... In spite of a masterful prologue, successful synthesis, elegant concision and lucid presentation (or perhaps thanks to them), the reader can't help sharing the nation's shames. A tribute to the historian's talent."" -- Eugen Weber, Phi Beta Kappa Key Reporter. At the beginning of 1938, containment of Nazi Germany by a coalition of eastern and western democracies without resorting to war was still a distinct possibility. By the end of 1938, however, Germany was much stronger, the western democracies stood alone, and war was all but certain. The primary cause for these developments, argues Benjamin F. Martin, was the foreign and domestic policies adopted by the French government and embraced by the French people. In a riveting account of the dark days leading up to France's defeat and occupation, Martin reveals a great and civilized nation committing a kind of suicide in 1938. Using movies, novels, newspapers, and sensational court cases, Martin weaves an absorbing tale of France's collective fear and melancholy during this troubled prewar period., 6<