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The Battle of Long Tan

The Battle of Long Tan 1

by David W. Cameron
Paperback
Publication Date: 14/08/2017
4/5 Rating 1 Review

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A compelling account of Australia's bloodiest and most significant battle of the Vietnam War, in time for the battle's 50th anniversary, by critically-acclaimed war writer David Cameron.

On the afternoon of 18 August 1966, a rubber plantation in Phuoc Tuy Province, South Vietnam, Australian troops fought one of their bloodiest, most significant battles of the Vietnam War.

The Australians had arrived at Nui Dat four months earlier to open up the province. While out on patrol, Delta Company of 6RAR, originally numbering just 105 Australians and three New Zealanders, collided with Viet Cong forces numbering around 2500 troops, ahead of a planned Vietnamese ambush.

Under heavy fire and short on ammunition, the Australians could only guess at the enemy's strength and number. Morning light revealed a shattered woodland, trees bleeding latex - and hundreds of dead enemy soldiers who had fallen in the numerous assaults against the small Anzac force. What was first thought by the Australians to be a significant defeat quickly turned out to be a major victory.

Marking the battle's 50th anniversary, and drawing on unpublished first-hand accounts, David Cameron brings to life the events of this famous battle as it unfolded - minute by minute, hour by hour - and reveals the deeds of heroism and mateship now part of Australia's Vietnam War story. His compelling account commemorates the men who fought in the rubber plantation of Long Tan - and those who did not come home.

Praise for David Cameron's The Battle for Lone Pine-
ISBN:
9780143786399
9780143786399
Category:
True war & combat stories
Format:
Paperback
Publication Date:
14-08-2017
Publisher:
Penguin Random House Australia
Country of origin:
Australia
Pages:
416
Dimensions (mm):
196x130x26mm
Weight:
0.3kg
David W. Cameron

David W. Cameron is a Canberra-based author who has written several books on Australian military and convict history, as well as human and primate evolution, including over 60 internationally peer-reviewed papers for various journals and book chapters.

He received 1st Class Honours in Prehistoric Archaeology at the University of Sydney and later went on to complete his PhD in palaeoanthropology at the Australian National University. He is a former Australian Research Council (ARC) Post Doctorial Fellow at the Australian National University (School of Archaeology) and an ARC QEII Fellow at the University of Sydney (Department of Anatomy and Histology).

He has participated and led several international fieldwork teams in Australia, the Middle East (Turkey, Jordan, Israel, and the United Arab Emirates), Europe (Hungary) and Asia (Japan, Vietnam and India) and has participated in many conferences and museum studies throughout the world.

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Obviously the result of much research, this is a very readable, compelling and comprehensive account of the battle of Long Tan. Most readers will find it thoroughly absorbing. Unfortunately however, it does contain some irritating technical flaws that might be seen as detracting somewhat from the reliability of the general narrative. For instance, there is reference to a 7.62 mm "heavy" machine gun. Whilst the M60 may have been heavy to carry, it would hardly qualify as a heavy machine gun in the usual sense of the term. (A heavy machine gun is more in the size of 12.7 mm or .50 calibre.) As a further example of this sort of incongruity, when ammunition supply was short, there is the account of a soldier taking cartridges from a disintegrating link belt (presumably an M60 belt and therefore in 7.62 mm) in order to fill his Armalite magazine - a quite impossible undertaking since the ArmaLite (technically, the military version is an M16) is a 5.56 mm or .223 calibre weapon (such an exercise therefore, being rather akin to putting a square peg in a round hole – it simply could not be done). Flaws such as these aside, this is nevertheless a very readable and informative account of the battle and one that should give the general reader an important understanding of what it was like to have been a soldier on the ground during the action. In addition, it provides a very real insight into the difficulties and perils of command and control in a battle situation, which in itself, perhaps helps us to better understand why there has been so much controversy in this area of the Long Tan action as the history unfolds.

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