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Operation Rolling Thunder
Inside America’s Air War Over Vietnam (Zentara Cold War Operations Revealed)
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Narrado por:
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Christopher Suhar
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De:
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Miles Dunsford
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Operation Rolling Thunder was meant to be controlled. It was designed as a measured use of air power, a campaign that could pressure North Vietnam without triggering a wider war and without requiring the United States to commit to an all-consuming ground conflict. On paper, it looked like a modern solution to a Cold War problem: apply force from the air, send a message, disrupt supply, and persuade an opponent to change course. In practice, it became one of the most complex, costly, and contested air campaigns in American history, a grinding struggle where technology met weather, discipline met adaptation, and strategy collided with politics.
This book takes you inside that air war, not as a list of aircraft and missions, but as a clear, human story of how Rolling Thunder unfolded and what it revealed. It begins with the decision to bomb, showing how political aims shaped military plans from the start. Targets were chosen, delayed, and restricted because Washington was trying to fight two wars at once: one against North Vietnam, and one against the fear of escalation with China and the Soviet Union. The target list itself became a map of American hopes and anxieties, revealing how leaders tried to balance punishment with restraint and intimidation with diplomacy.
From there, the narrative moves into the first raids, where theory met cockpit reality. Pilots flew into hostile skies under shifting rules, often facing uncertainty about what could be hit, when, and how hard. The environment became an enemy of its own. Monsoons, cloud cover, and jungle terrain punished planning and made precision difficult. Weather could erase targets, scatter formations, and force aircraft into dangerous altitudes where guns and missiles waited. Vietnam was not a battlefield that cooperated with schedules, and Rolling
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