 ABOUT
THE BOOK
From The Publisher
For many years, Bui Tin was one of Hanoi's most prominent journalists.
Until September 1990, when he decided to remain in France though not, as
he insists, to defect, he was Deputy Editor of Nhan Dan, the Communist
Party daily, the Vietnamese equivalent of Pravda. Before that he worked in
a similar capacity on the Vietnam People's Army newspaper and carried out
numerous important assignments. In 1973 he was official spokesman for the
North Vietnamese delegation which went to Saigon after the Paris
Agreements to arrange the return home of US prisoners of war. Two years
later, he was one of the first high-ranking Communists to enter Saigon,
and witnessed the scene at Independence Palace when the South Vietnamese
government formally surrendered on April 30, 1975. He then went on to
report, despite official reluctance, the growing tension on the border
between Vietnam and Cambodia which prompted Hanoi to overthrow Pol Pot's
regime. Once again, on that occasion, Bui Tin was one of the first
Vietnamese to enter Phnom Penh. As many foreign journalists have
commented, 'He was always in the right place at the right time.'. It was
no accident. Bui Tin joined the Revolution and the Communist Party in
1945, which led to his active participation in the war against the French
colonial regime. After 1954, he continued to serve as an officer in the
People's Army and was promoted colonel following two pioneering treks down
what became known as the Ho Chi Minh Trail. The reports he wrote of his
observations during these hazardous journeys obviously impressed the
leadership in Hanoi, and he was therefore reassigned as an official
journalist. In this privileged position, Bui Tin came to know many of
Hanoi's top leaders, often accompanied them on their trips abroad, and
could not help but observe their strengths and weaknesses.
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Last Updated: 10/07/01
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