The incredible true story of a top secret mission to resuce POWs in Vietnam. In the last year of the Vietnam conflict, even as American troops were leaving for home, there were still those fighting for their prisoners of war being held in the Communist north. There were two operations launched to rescue the POWs. One—the legendary Son Tay Raid—was revealed to the public. The other was classified as Top Secret. This is the incredible true story of that almost-forgotten mission...Among the personnel recruited for Operation Thunderhad was a select group of operators from both the U.S. Navy SEALs and the Underwater Demolition Teams who knew that if they were captured, they would be killed, tortured, or simply disappear. They went in anyway. Here, for the first time, the details of Operation Thunderhead are revealed—the mission, the materials, and the men who put their lives on the line to save their brothers in arms.
Essentially a rewrite of John Dramesi's "Code of Honor", with a short bit at the end on the actual POW recovery attempt based on a detailed interview with Operation Thunderhead team member Rick Hetzell. I recommend reading, "Hope for Freedom: Operation Thunderhead", by Edwin L. Towers for a more detailed and accurate account.
Incredible. A must read if you like military/war/history and the human spirit to thrive, survive, and the will to fight and rebel injustice in the worst of circumstances.
Misleading subtitle (and picture) on a book written for those who have no idea what life was like in a North Vietnamese prison camp in the late 1960's. It's a well-documented (not to be confused with well-written) account of American POW's in Viet Nam.
The last quarter of the book details a catastrophic rescue attempt using the submarine pictured on the cover. The SEAL died in an accident during the operation - not in-county as the subtitle states.
It does bring up the moral dilemma American prisoners of war face under the U.S. Code of Conduct - duty to escape vs. duty to prevent suffering of fellow prisoners.
This book spent about 80% of its pages on the suffering of a few (mostly one) of the PoWs held by the Vietnamese, and the rest on the operation that failed. This last part wasn't really exciting, probably because it came at the end, and, well, it failed.
I had read other books about the horrible treatment of our POW in North Vietnan so that was not new information. I ended up think John Dramesi was not a hero but his actions lead to more beating of all our POW some of which died and others with life shorting permanent injuries.
The story was good, but it was more of a historical account of the pilots ordeal in the Hanoi Hilton. It wasn't until the finally chapters that the actual rescue attempt was made.