War of Whispers

John Willheim
Not yet available - taking advance orders
£50.00
This book tells the extraordinary story of what later became known as the “CIA’s Secret War” in the Asian country of Laos in the 1960s and 1970s. It was the largest clandestine CIA operation to this day. A guerrilla army of Hmong people fought against the North Vietnamese communist-supported Pathet Lao. While the war in next-door Vietnam was widely covered by the media, the Secret War was decidedly not. Reporters who came to investigate rumors about a war were turned away at gunpoint—with one exception. A newly minted CIA officer, John Willheim, already an accomplished photographer, was chosen to enter and document the Secret War, without any restrictions. His photographs and films were highly classified at the time.
Delivery Order value under £100: £4.50 per order (however many titles)
Order value over £100: Free shipping
DeliveryEurope: £9 per item (Europe as defined by https://www.royalmail.com/europe)

Other territories: £17 per item (Some heavy items are charged extra for overseas orders. If this applies, it will be noted on the title's webpage)

Overseas deliveries  As this is a heavy item, we will contact you after you have ordered to process an additional £6 charge for shipping to Europe (not UK) and £12 for other overseas territories. 

Publisher's description

“Only the dead have seen the end of war.”
—George Santayana, Soliloquies in England and Later Soliloquies (1922), often wrongly attributed to Plato

This book tells the extraordinary story of what later became known as the “CIA’s Secret War” in the Asian country of Laos in the 1960s and 1970s. It was the largest clandestine CIA operation to this day. A guerrilla army of Hmong people fought against the North Vietnamese communist-supported Pathet Lao. While the war in next-door Vietnam was widely covered by the media, the Secret War was decidedly not. Reporters who came to investigate rumors about a war were turned away at gunpoint—with one exception. A newly minted CIA officer, John Willheim, already an accomplished photographer, was chosen to enter and document the Secret War, without any restrictions. His photographs and films were highly classified at the time. Only top American intelligence officials, a few senior U.S. congressmen, and President Lyndon Johnson had access to Willheim’s material. In the decades to follow, they remained almost entirely hidden. Far from glorifying war, the striking images and informative text in this book can be seen today, fifty years later, as historic testimony of an almost lost era. This is the only photo book ever published on the Secret War. Everyday images of the people, villages, and landscapes behind the battlelines stand in brutal contrast to the reality of war. Willheim’s sympathies were clearly allied with the Hmong people who were fighting this proxy war for the United States against communists in the North and ultimately lost it. At war’s end, those Hmong who did not flee Laos were persecuted and continue to be by the current communist government as “America’s forgotten warriors.” Tens of thousands of Hmong fled to neighboring Thailand and later emigrated to the United States, France, and Germany. Willheim turned over his historic photographs, films, and thoughts to the award-winning Dutch photo book designer -SYB-, who combined them into a riveting, almost cinematic documentary photoboo

More Information
Dimensions22 x 29.8 cm
BindingHardcover
Signed CopyNo
Stock & Delivery StatusNot yet available - taking advance orders
PublisherHartmann
Date Published2022
ISBN 139783960700654
Edition1st
No. of Pages280
Image Count175
Author / PhotographerJohn Willheim