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The Spy Who Loved Us_ The Vietnam War and Pham Xuan An's Dangerous Game ( PDFDrive )

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274 NOTES

RELIABLE SOURCES

149 “I felt extremely angry with this traitor”: See Hoang Van

Hai and Tan Tu, Pham Xuan An: A General of the Secret

Service (Hanoi: The Gioi, 2003), 97.

156 Harriman asked Shaplen to contact North Vietnam: See

Tom Heenan, From Traveler to Traitor: The Life of Wilfred

Burchett (Melbourne: Melbourne University Press, 2006),

204.

157 “most highly respected Vietnamese journalist”: See Robert

Shaplen, “We Have Always Survived,” The New Yorker, April

15, 1972. Reprinted in Reporting Vietnam, pt. 2 (New York:

Library of America, 1998), 281–334.

158 An explained to a reporter for Le Monde: See Jean-Claude

Pomonti, Un Vietnamien bien tranquille : L’extraordinaire

histoire de l’espion qui défia l’Amérique (Paris: Editions des

Equateurs, 2006), 72.

160 “surely one of the best-informed men in town”: See Robert

Shaplen, Bitter Victory (New York: Harper & Row, 1986), 11.

THE PERFECT CRIME

190 “the first known case of a Communist agent”: See Zalin

Grant, Facing the Phoenix: The CIA and the Political Defeat

of the United States in Vietnam (New York: Norton, 1991),

256.

191 the relationship between Time and the Agency was so

close: See Hugh Wilford, The Mighty Wurlitzer: How the

CIA Played America (Cambridge: Harvard University Press,

2008), 232.

192 “more than four hundred American journalists”: See Carl

Bernstein, “The CIA and the Media,” Rolling Stone, October

20, 1977, 55–67.

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