"On the one hand, you can't help but like the troops, in the sense that they are trying hard, with the wrong tools, to do something they weren't trained for in a culture they don't know," she says. "They don't want to be doing it, and yet they have this very American can-do spirit about them so they're not going to sit around and do nothing."
I'm not going to comment...it would be pulled.
Check out post 1508. Her hubby looks like a communist to me.
I need someone with a military background to explain this to me.
William Goodfellow [Director of the Center for International Studies], "Starvation In
Cambodia," Op-Ed, New York Times, July 14, 1975, p. 25. An excerpt:
The evacuation of Cambodia's larger cities has been sensationalized in the
Western press as a "death march." In fact, it was a journey away from certain death
by starvation, for at the time the former Phnom Penh Government surrendered,
starvation was already a reality in the urban centers, and widespread famine only a
matter of weeks away, while in the countryside there was a sizable food surplus. . . .
The coup d'état of 1970 was followed by five years of death, suffering and
destruction, with 600,000 Cambodians on both sides killed. Primarily because of a
large-scale United States bombing campaign in which 539,129 tons of bombs were
dropped on the Cambodian countryside, the agrarian economy was shattered. . . .
Last March, the director of the United States Agency for International Development in
Cambodia, Norman Sweet, estimated that in Phnom Penh alone 1.2 million people
were in "desperate need" of United States food. . . . A.I.D. officials reported that
stockpiles of rice in Phnom Pehn could last for six days.
http://72.14.203.104/search?q=cache:wYomZLIHMasJ:www.understandingpower.com/Chapter3.pdf+William+Goodfellow++subcommittee+on+Asia+++Cambodia+1976&hl=en&gl=us&ct=clnk&cd=4&client=firefox-a