From 1956 to 1970, journalist David Brinkley cohosted “The Huntley-Brinkley Report,” NBC’s nightly news show, with Chet Huntley. He later moved to ABC as a political commentator and retired in 1997. Highly critical of U.S. policy in Vietnam, Brinkley here discusses his personal feelings about the war and the role of the American press.
William Westmoreland became the commander of United States forces in Vietnam in 1964. Named “Time” magazine’s Man of the Year in 1965, he came to be seen as the symbol for an unpopular war. In these excerpts from his HEARTS AND MINDS interview, he discusses civilian casualties in war, military st...
The following funeral footage was captured in a South Vietnamese village in the province of Quang Nam that had been bombed accidentally by Americans. In it, a woman mourns a civilian casualty of the bombing. Director Peter Davis and his crew remember this footage, shot by Dick Pearce, as one of t...
This footage was shot in a South Vietnamese military hospital in Saigon and contains graphic and disturbing images of badly injured Army of the Republic of Vietnam soldiers. Though director Peter Davis did not find a context for this footage in HEARTS AND MINDS, he and his colleagues have never f...