Truong Nhu Tang, a founder of the National Liberation Front and
Minister of Justice in the Vietcong's Provisional Revolutionary
Government, was one of the most determined adversaries of the
United States during the war. Living a double, at times a triple,
life in Saigon, he was a high-level economics official for the
South Vietnamese government who simultaneously worked as one of the
revolution's most effective urban organizers. Captured and tortured
by the Thieu police, in 1968 he was traded in a secret U.S.-Viet
Cong prisoner exchange and spent the rest of the war in the
resistance strongholds on the Cambodian border.
A revolutionary for almost thirty years, after liberation Tang
fought a losing battle on behalf of the policy of national
reconciliation and concord which he had helped design. In the end,
profoundly disillusioned by the massive political repression and
economic chaos the new government brought with it, he carried out a
dramatic escape by boat to a U.N. refugee camp in the South China
Sea. He now lives in exile in Paris, France.
"Beautifully written." -- William Shawcross, front page, Washington
Post Book World
"By showing the nature and hidden strength of our opponents, this
account goes a long way toward explaining why America failed in
Vietnam despite its greatly superior military power. But A Vietcong
Memoir is more than just an exposition of the revolutionaries' side
of the war. It is also an absorbing and moving autobiography...An
important addition not only to the literature of Vietnam but to the
larger human story of hope, violence and disillusion in the
political life of our era."
-- Arnold R. Isaacs, Chicago Tribune
"Literate, mercifully free of the stridencies and banalities that
characterize the Communists' agitprop prose. The prose gives off an
aura of authenticity and reasonableness."
-- Robert Manning, The New York Times Book Review
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