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Peter Arnett

    November 13, 1934

    Peter Arnett is a New Zealand-American journalist renowned for his war zone reporting. His work is characterized by its depth and presence at the heart of conflicts such as the Vietnam War and the Gulf War. Arnett focuses on the raw reality of wars and their impact on human lives. His dispatches offer readers and viewers a unique perspective from the front lines where history unfolds through conflict.

    Peter Arnett
    Flash! : the Associated Press covers the world
    Il mio Vietnam
    Unter Einsatz des Lebens
    We're Taking Fire: A Reporter's View of the Vietnam War, Tet and the Fall of LBJ
    • 2018

      On the 50th anniversary of the Tet Offensive comes "We're Taking Fire," a powerful examination by Pulitzer Prize-winning war correspondent Peter Arnett of what led to that pivotal moment of the Vietnam War in 1968 and the tumultuous aftermath. Through his reports for The Associated Press from the early 1960s to the fall of Saigon in 1975, and interviews conducted during and after the war, Arnett explains the complexities that drove the decisions made by the Eisenhower, Kennedy, Johnson and Nixon administrations and how each was unable to achieve a winning strategy that would put an end to the unpopular and controversial conflict. As an eyewitness to the battles, maneuvers and cultural challenges that prevented a definitive victory, Arnett provides unique insights that only one who was on the ground can share as well as perspectives shaped by decades of observing America and Vietnam since the war. Illustrating Arnett's compelling story are more than 50 images from AP's Photo Archives and his personal collection. "We're Taking Fire," which deciphers the war and its toll on Lyndon B. Johnson's presidency, is a must-read about lessons learned and lessons forgotten

      We're Taking Fire: A Reporter's View of the Vietnam War, Tet and the Fall of LBJ