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April 24, 2007 9:38 AM

Why Halberstam Should Be Required Reading

Lawyer Andrew Cohen analyzes legal affairs for CBS News and CBSNews.com.
(GETTY IMAGES)
You no doubt know by now that David Halberstam, one of the best American journalists of this or any other era, died yesterday in a car accident in California. He was 73 and still a vibrant force in the landscape of our culture—when he died he was on his way to interview the former football star Y.A. Tittle for another sports book he was in the process of writing.

I met Halberstam once when I was a student in Boston—he was friends with one of my journalism professors and came to talk to our class—and nearly 20 years later I still remember the way he challenged and inspired us to become good, honest tribunes of the news. He himself was more than that. He was an icon and the story of his life in journalism reads almost like a reporter’s fairy-tale—boy goes to cover exotic, controversial war, bucks establishment, takes heat, is protected by courageous bosses, is ultimately proven right, goes on to win Pulitzer and journalism immortality.

Now that he is gone, I hope people will rediscover two of his most vital books, both of which are crucially relevant today. In 1965, he wrote “The Making of A Quagmire,” which was subtitled “An Uncompromising Account of Our Precarious Commitment in South Vietnam.” The other book, for which he was perhaps most famous, is “The Best and the Brightest,” his 1972 account of the Washington establishment’s decisions to take us to war in Vietnam. In the first book, Halberstam offered us a bottom-up look at the conflict; in the second he offered us a top-down review. In both cases his work was masterful...

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