Why the senate slept

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172 pages 1999

About This Book

Siff provides the first accurate account of how the political processes, in the U.S. Senate, allowed the executive branch to launch a major war, with basically no accountability to Congress. He reveals the heretofore untold personal and public roles of key Senators, as well as those of lesser stature, whose actions and failures to act resulted in a bloody and costly conflict that divided a nation and scarred its politics and armed forces.

The ambition and significant weaknesses of key figures - President Johnson, Secretary of Defense McNamara, Senators Russell (Georgia), Fulbright (Arkansas), Nelson (Wisconsin), McGovern (South Dakota), Gruening (Alaska), and Church (Idaho) - who, from the onset, fought to prevent or limit the Americanization of the Vietnam War are examined and judged. This is an important work for students of American politics, the war making powers of the president, and the Vietnam War.

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