Bernd Greiner
(b.1952) is a historian and political scientist. He is director of the section "Theory and History of Violence" at the Hamburger Institut für Sozialforschung. His latest book is Krieg ohne Fronten. Die USA in Vietnam [War without fronts. The USA in Vietnam], Hamburger Edition 2007.
Eurozine Articles
In view of the occasion
A war that began with a lie and must end in disaster
In Iraq, like in Vietnam, the US military is in thrall to ideological warriors in civilian dress; and in Iraq, like in Vietnam, morale has disintegrated among troops fighting a war without fronts. Bernd Greiner examines the US military's unwillingness to learn from its mistakes. [more]
Not being able to stop
Richard Nixon's Vietnam policy as a paradigm for the Cold War
Why do heads of state insist on deciding conflicts through force, against the counsel of their advisors? What lies behind their unwillingness to use exit options? An analysis of the Nixon administration's conduct in Vietnam yields insights. [more]
The Shift from a Civilian to a Wartime Society
The long-term impact on American society of Pearl Harbor is substantial, writes Bernd Greiner. The changes are grounded more in economics than in ideology. [more]
You'll never walk alone
American war crimes in Vietnam
The reaction of politicians, the press and the army towards pictures of war crimes from Vietnam bear startling parallels to the impact of the Abu Ghraib prison pictures from Iraq. [more]











