Readings Newsletter
Become a Readings Member to make your shopping experience even easier.
Sign in or sign up for free!
You’re not far away from qualifying for FREE standard shipping within Australia
You’ve qualified for FREE standard shipping within Australia
The cart is loading…
Forging A Fateful Alliance is an important study of the Vietnam War and American higher education - revealing how secret and semi-secret institutional involvement in that conflict led to public disclosures that undermined the integrity of academe. After Indochina’s de facto division in 1954, Michigan State University offered South Vietnam an array of technical support as part of the nation-building program. This support included developing a viable national public administrative structure and, at the same time, training South Vietnam’s notorious military police. In return for these services, the U.S. government provided the university with generous clandestine and open financial remuneration - money that the university would use to expand academic programs, construct new facilities, and fuel its dramatic growth.
In the end, however, the arrangement proved to be a Faustian bargain. Like many universities, MSU was accused of being a tool of Cold War foreign policy, of sending professors abroad to staff grandiose outreach programs that were based more on ideology than on scholarship or research. Ultimately, flaws inherent in the nation- building scheme, including its failure to address cultural differences or recognize the massive corruption in South Vietnam’s government, foreshadowed the enormity of the tragedy that occurred in Southeast Asia after 1965.
$9.00 standard shipping within Australia
FREE standard shipping within Australia for orders over $100.00
Express & International shipping calculated at checkout
Forging A Fateful Alliance is an important study of the Vietnam War and American higher education - revealing how secret and semi-secret institutional involvement in that conflict led to public disclosures that undermined the integrity of academe. After Indochina’s de facto division in 1954, Michigan State University offered South Vietnam an array of technical support as part of the nation-building program. This support included developing a viable national public administrative structure and, at the same time, training South Vietnam’s notorious military police. In return for these services, the U.S. government provided the university with generous clandestine and open financial remuneration - money that the university would use to expand academic programs, construct new facilities, and fuel its dramatic growth.
In the end, however, the arrangement proved to be a Faustian bargain. Like many universities, MSU was accused of being a tool of Cold War foreign policy, of sending professors abroad to staff grandiose outreach programs that were based more on ideology than on scholarship or research. Ultimately, flaws inherent in the nation- building scheme, including its failure to address cultural differences or recognize the massive corruption in South Vietnam’s government, foreshadowed the enormity of the tragedy that occurred in Southeast Asia after 1965.