Limit search to available items
Streaming video

Title Interview with Paul N. McCloskey, 1981 / by Richard Ellison and Paul McCloskey
Published Boston, Mass. : WGBH Boston Video, 1983

Copies

Description 1 online resource (video file (26 min.)) : sound, color
Series American history in video
Vietnam : a television history
American history in video
Summary Former Republican politician from California, Paul (Pete) McCloskey, talks about the 1973 vote that ended US involvement in the Vietnam War. McCloskey believes that it was the gradual increase in the number of certain Congressmen, who had been elected on the platform of opposing excessive presidential power, that changed the course of American policy in Vietnam. He also recalls that when he was elected in 1967, his constituency was still in favor of the war, but that in 1969, after the Tet Offensive, public opinion began to turn. McCloskey also relates how, during the signing of the Paris Peace Agreement, Kissinger wanted to make sure that a decent interval would elapse before Saigon fell, in order for it to appear the US had lived up to its obligation
Notes Title from resource description page (viewed Nov. 5, 2012)
This edition in English
Subject McCloskey, Paul N., 1927- -- Interviews
SUBJECT McCloskey, Paul N., 1927- fast (OCoLC)fst00016702
Subject Vietnam War, 1961-1975 -- Treaties
Politics and government.
SUBJECT United States -- Politics and government -- 1969-1974. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85140471
Subject United States.
Genre/Form interviews.
Interviews.
Nonfiction television programs.
Treaties.
Interviews.
Nonfiction television programs.
Interviews.
Émissions télévisées autres que de fiction.
Form Streaming video
Author Ellison, Richard, producer
McCloskey, Paul N., 1927- interviewee (expression), speaker.