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Distant War: Recollections of Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia

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The November 17, 2011, episode of American Heroes Radio features a conversation with Chief Warrant Officer Marc Yablonka, CSMR, the author of Distant War: Recollections of Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia.

Program Date: November 17, 2011

Program Time: 1500 hours, PACIFIC

Topic: Distant War: Recollections of Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia

Listen Live: http://www.blogtalkradio.com/lawenforcement/2011/11/17/distant-war-recollections-of-vietnam-laos-and-cambodia

Chief Warrant Officer Marc Yablonka, CSMR, “is a graduate of the Professional Writing School of the University of Southern California. He served as a Public Affairs Officer (CWO-2) with the 40th Infantry Division Support Brigade and the Installation Support Group, California State Military Reserve, at the Joint Forces Training Base in Los Alamitos, California, between 2001 and 2008. He also served with the Sar-El unit of the Israeli Defense Forces. Marc Yablonka is the author of Distant War: Recollections of Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia.”

According to the book description of Distant War: Recollections of Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia, “This is a newly-edited compilation of eighteen years of Yablonka’s reportage on American involvement in Indochina and the people affected by America’s connection to that part of the world. After all those years and numerous articles about an indelible mark on American history published in the likes of the U.S. Military’s Stars and Stripes, Army Times, American Veteran, the Weider History Group publication Vietnam Magazine and others, these stories needed a wider audience for the world to know what they suffered, how most survived, and how they overcame adversity. Distant War: Recollections of Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia, will be the vehicle to the reader’s understanding of a war and its aftermath that may seem distant now, but what is important is that it will make readers realize—if they haven’t already—that in war, whether in the jungles of Vietnam or the sands of Iraq, in a very real sense, while who wins and who loses is obviously important, what is equally necessary is that good somehow must and shall prevail.”


Distant War
Marc Phillip Yablonka  More Info

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