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A01=Hon Justice
A01=Michael Pembroke
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Author_Michael Pembroke
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Product details

  • ISBN 9781743793930
  • Weight: 500g
  • Dimensions: 153 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Feb 2018
  • Publisher: Hardie Grant Books
  • Publication City/Country: AU
  • Product Form: Paperback
  • Language: English
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"Perceptive and compelling – often heart-rending, sometimes downright terrifying… The lessons are all too pertinent in today’s toxic political climate, with Korea once again a centrepiece and victim." Noam Chomsky
"This is a very important book, an eye-opening one, and a wise one. … beautifully written…the phrase 'as gripping as a thriller,' really applies... No-one with an interest in recent history and current affairs should fail to read it."  AC Grayling

Korea: Where the American Century Began is a timely new account of the role of the US in the Korean War and its responsibility for the current impasse on the Korean peninsula. It provides the history and the context that explains US involvement; why there has been no peace treaty, no unification, and why we now live with the threat of nuclear war in Northeast Asia. Few people understand the real failures of the Korean War or that the United States was the first to abrogate the armistice. As President Trump threatens to ’totally destroy' North Korea, this book tells the tale that fires Pyongyang’s indignation – from the disastrous decision to invade North Korea; to the longest retreat in American military history; to the napalm, the nuclear threats, the biological warfare and the ghastly treatment of  POWs in camps run by the US Army. Korea examines Washington’s role from 1945 to the present in the creation and worsening of relations –how hubris, overreach and militarism have dominated policy, and how, in pursuit of regional hegemony in Northeast Asia, the United States has made a bad situation worse.

Michael Pembroke is a writer, historian, naturalist and the author of the acclaimed biography Arthur Phillip – Sailor, Mercenary, Governor, Spy (2013). He has lived and travelled extensively throughout the world, including in East Asia. His father, an infantry platoon commander during the Korean War, was awarded the Military Cross for his role in a battle described as 'one of the finest battalion attacks in British history'. The research for this book has taken Pembroke to Moscow, Beijing, Pyongyang, Washington DC, Princeton and Cambridge. In 2016, he travelled through North Korea from the Yalu River to the Demilitarised Zone. He has been a judge of the Supreme Court of New South Wales, Australia, since 2010.

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