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Since the diary's re-emergence this year after 35 years in the hands of a US veteran, it has become a phenomenon, selling more than , copies, generating numerous translations and a television show and causing a wave of patriotic nostalgia among young Vietnamese. Those who have read it say it is the most compelling, honest account yet of a conflict that killed, by some estimates, between two and three million Vietnamese and other Asians, as well as 58, Americans.
I know this diary will go everywhere on planet earth. Dr Dang, from a prosperous family of doctors, volunteered for duty in a military hospital in the killing fields of Quang Ngai Province in central Vietnam in The diary begins there in April, the year after, when the Tet offensive had proved a turning point that convinced many the war against the Communists was unwinnable but which led President Richard Nixon to initiate one of the largest aerial bombardments in history.
As the bombing edged closer to her hospital, the diary records the mounting horrors Dr Dang witnesses in terms by turns worldly, compassionate and enraged. Worn out by the struggle to treat badly wounded comrades with aspirin and bandages, she writes in June "The dog Nixon is foolish and crazy as he widens the war How hateful it is!
We are all humans, but some are so cruel as to want the blood of others to water their gold tree. Shortly before she died, aged 27, the bombs killed five of her patients. Dr Dang helped move the remaining patients and staff to safety and fought an American ground unit which was attacking the now-deserted hospital. As a year-old intelligence officer, Whitehurst reviewed recovered enemy documents.
He was about to burn Dang's diary - "about the size of a pack of cigarettes" - when he was stopped by his translator, who said: "Don't burn this one, Fred, it already has fire in it. I thought, 'I've got to get this back to her family'.