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Kiss the Boys Goodbye: How the United States Betrayed its Own POWs In Vietnam

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The bestselling expose of a major political scandal--in the tradition of All the President's Men and Spycatcher. The story of a five-year investigation by two award-winning journalists, Kiss the Boys Goodbye reveals heartbreaking evidence of POWs abandoned in Vietnam, of official obstruction and missing files, censored testimony and thinly veiled threats from government sources. 16 pages of photographs.

512 pages, Paperback

First published September 1, 1990

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Monika Jensen-Stevenson

3 books2 followers

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5 stars
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64 (31%)
3 stars
36 (17%)
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11 (5%)
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6 (2%)
Displaying 1 - 20 of 20 reviews
Profile Image for Peggy.
100 reviews1 follower
November 4, 2013
I alternated between feeling angry and feeling a terrible sense of injustice and sadness.
Written by a previous 60 minutes producer, Kiss the Boys Goodbye is a suberb and in depth look at a story no one wanted told, a story that people would do almost anything to supress, and others would sacrifice everything to have told. The research is excellent and very detailed. At times I had to stop reading, just to take a step back. What if, I kept asking myself, what if my father, uncle, brother, husband, cousin, nephew had been one of these men. The author mentions in her book having been in Viet Nam a few years ago, probably somewhere in the 2010 or 2011 and seeing a man she thought to be caucasion, living on the streets, treated like a unwanted beggar. Although the true accounting of living POW's in Vietnam has never been released it was deemed by the government that due to the conditions and the ages it was improbable that were any still alive. Close to 40 years have passed since we evacuated VietNam, if I do the math, if a young soldier was 18 in 1973, in chronological years he would only be 57 years old.....wouldn't you wonder too?
Profile Image for Susan.
69 reviews2 followers
September 3, 2014
This was first non-fiction historical book I read on the cover-up and the mere fact that our government did indeed leave our POW's and MIA's behind for the sacrifice of American Foreign Policy and operations that were highly questionable and were concealed from the American public for decades.

When evidence did surface that their were prisoners of war were still left in the jungles of Vietnam the government denied it and when a soldier came forward to say he was a prisoner of war and that there were countless others being held against their will the government disagreed and convicted him of basically what they called treason because they thought ex-marine Bobby Garwood was collaborating with the enemy and they convicted him on the grounds of treason.

The government buried his story of the fact there were prisoners left behind. As the author examines Garwood's case she comes across a world of secret information, missing files, censored testimony, and official obstruction and even threats from government officials.

I was shocked and enthralled by this unbelievable story of deception and outrage that our US government, the land of the free and democracy would abandon the men and women who fought for their country. They essentially ridiculed their validity of human value and were persecuted by their own government by using the cry of National Security to conceal their actions to whom they should be questioned as to why are intelligence bureaucrats running our country?

Reading this book forever changed how I viewed our country and how they put our soldiers at stake for their own means and keeping the perception we leave no one behind when in fact we do.
119 reviews
March 15, 2012
Very good book, worth the time to get through this = = UNBELIEVABLE AND SHOCKING!! Second time I've read this which took me as long to read this time too. Takes a lot of concentration to stay with it. Difficult to read and take in all that goes on "under cover" in our government. Politicians covering up there "red faces" as one lie leads to another, etc. It's hard take!
30 reviews
December 14, 2012
Now I know why Ross Perot spoke to George H W Bush with such disdain during the 1980 Presidential debates. GJWB, as CIA chief, left our MIAs there and BOTH knew it!!! Read it and you will understand why the 2,500 MIAs were never rescued. Shame on us!!
Profile Image for Mark.
5 reviews
January 26, 2018
I enjoyed this book. It’s seriously sad to know all the behind the scenes things taking place to hide the fact we had people still over there. It’s a eye opener for sure.
146 reviews9 followers
May 11, 2022
First, I found Col. David Hrdlicka's MIA cenotaph at Littleton Cemetery. Then I researched his story, and read his wife, Carol's, 2021 book FNDING DAVID, which left me fuming. That led me to KISS THE BOYS GOODBYE. MY GOD! How our government, peopled by many of the same above-it-all players, left hundreds behind in Viet Nam and Laos...and who knows where else... This book reads like a tense novel; the author and her co-writer/husband receive threats, veiled and otherwise, to back off their research. Stories about how POWs and MIAs were declared dead by decree, with no evidence, and no plan to find them. Nixon, Bush, Clinton, Johnson - Kissinger, McCain, Kerry...no doubt our very own current president... lying for personal power and gain.

What can y'do... the government deflects, hides, lies until it has been long enough to be certain our captured soldiers/sailors/airmen have died. The suggestion herein that there were people hired by our government who worked to ensure POWs/MIAs were never found.

It is a beautifully written, deeply researched, sickening read... They LIE! They DO leave people behind...with impunity and pure, cold blooded intent.
Profile Image for William.
481 reviews11 followers
November 15, 2015
Once again this book is another indictment of the US government knowingly abandoning it men at the conclusion of their wars in Southeast Asia. One of numerous books on the POW/MIA issue that everyone should read. When this book was being written and subsequently published these men were still leaving E&E (Escape and Evasion codes) for US satellites to find. The government was still getting credible reports of Americans imprisoned in Vietnam and Laos.
2 reviews
January 31, 2016
Excellent and Infuriating Look into Vietnam POWs

Compiling years of research and clandestine meetings that would fit a Bond film, the authors present a compelling and dark look into a highly contentious issue.
Profile Image for Hans Brienesse.
293 reviews4 followers
September 9, 2025
This book is breathtaking both in it's scope and subject. I have yet to come across a book on the CIA that portrays it in a good light. And the lengths this organisation goes to in order to protect its self serving interests is despicabl,e and the most bizarre must be the sacrifice of hundreds of soldiers taken prisoner by the Vietcong and others. Those men marched willingly, and in some cases unwillingly, to a war in a far off land in the belief of the American Way that looks after its own. The postscript states that the issue has died a natural death as must also surely apply to all those POWs never returned. You simply must read this book to gain perspective on the most unsavoury part of American Foreign Policy and the ability of an organisation to control all the narrative by fair means or foul.
Profile Image for Mick Meyers.
607 reviews2 followers
September 1, 2021
A timely reminder with the war in Afghanistan coming to an end?always interested in American history but this one was a bit too dry and if your a fan of acronyms then this is for you.the fight is not always communism or terrorism but a way for the rich few to get richer either through drugs oil or backhanders.the old saying rich mans war poor mans fight is as true now as when first said.and yes I do believe people were left behind and I think this will happen again but governments do not like to be shamed.
434 reviews1 follower
August 5, 2025
This should have been a great book about a shocking scandal that hurts government credibility ,encourages conspiracy theorists and above all must have damaged countless families with the trauma of not knowing what happened to their loved one.Instead we get a turgid account mainly focussed on the efforts - commendable - of author and husband to open up what happened .It gets swallowed in transactional minutiae and the real human cost gets lost.Was so interested to read this and was so disappointed by the end
7 reviews
May 6, 2020
Very informative look at the Vietnam War and secret operations afterward. The main issue I had with it is that the authors jumped from person to person or idea to idea leaving me spending more time trying to figure out who or where that specific person or agency fit into the story. Became very confusing at times, but the overall message was very eye opening.
119 reviews1 follower
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February 5, 2021
A must read for every "Patriot"

Required reading for anyone who's ever uttered the phrase "my country, right or wrong". Eyes opening account of what people of a certain age group were close to experiencing.










19 reviews1 follower
September 12, 2021
Frightening

Amazing to learn you can trust very few people in our government. I am very disillusioned with Reagan and Bush for ignoring the plight of those brave soldiers.
1,904 reviews3 followers
February 26, 2025
So terrible for these “forgotten” POWs — not an easy read.
Profile Image for Beth in SF.
51 reviews6 followers
September 13, 2007
War is ugly, politics is uglier, and individual pain is both hidden and screamed. Commentaries on frustration and despair.
35 reviews
January 16, 2011
Hard to swallow but well-researched and well-done.
Profile Image for Kathy.
169 reviews5 followers
March 19, 2014
Wow.........excellent and sickening and enlightening and sad......I have a grandson in the Marine Corps and one going into the Air Force..........I will keep praying
Displaying 1 - 20 of 20 reviews

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