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AUTHOR: Conboy, K
FORMAT: 464pp Bw/col 280x216 Pb
The CIA's secret war in Laos. The largest paramilitary operations ever
undertaken by the CIA took place in the small Southeast Asian Kingdom of Laos.
For more than thirteen years, the Agency directed native forces that fought
major North Vietnamese units to a standstill. Although the country eventually
fell to the Communists, the CIA remained proud of its accomplishments in Laos.
As Director of Central Intelligence (DCI) Richard Helms later observed: "This
was a major operation for the Agency.... It took manpower; it took specially
qualified manpower; it was dangerous; it was difficult." The CIA, he contended,
did "a superb job." This is the first comprehensive history of the CIA's largest
paramilitary operation of the cold war. It took ten years to write and
involved interviews with 650 CIA case officers, US military officials, and
senior Lao, Thai and North Vietnamese officers. Includes outstanding photographs
and maps and never-before-reported details on the secret war in
Laos.
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