The Golden Fleece, Tom Carhart
The Golden Fleece, Tom Carhart
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The Golden Fleece
High-Risk Adventure at West Point

Author: Tom Carhart, Wesley K. Clark

Narrator: Tom Perkins

Unabridged: 6 hr 59 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Tantor Media

Published: 09/01/2017


Synopsis

In the fall of 1965, West Point cadet Tom Carhart and five of his classmates from the U.S. Military Academy pulled off a feat of extraordinary ingenuity, precision, and raw guts: the theft of the billy goat mascot from their rival, the U.S. Naval Academy at Annapolis, just before the biggest game of the year.

The U.S. forces in Vietnam were then at two hundred thousand and growing, and the men in West Point's class of 1966 were well aware that they would serve, and quite possibly die, in that far-off war. But West Point's motto, "Duty, Honor, Country," affirms that its graduates will obey the decisions of our elected government, and the men of '66 were dutiful: of the 579 who graduated, 30 died in Vietnam, and roughly five times that number were wounded. Since this would be the men's last Army-Navy football game as cadets, they wanted to go out with a bang, not a whimper.

Carhart tells the incredible true story of how, in stealing that Navy goat, the cadets unknowingly reenacted the story of Jason and the Golden Fleece from Greek mythology. The caper is interwoven with an insider's narrative about the private lives of six West Point cadets in the early 1960s, who, against all odds, hurled their last hurrah of triumph to America before flying off to fight the war in Vietnam.

About Tom Carhart

Tom Carhart is a West Point graduate, an infantry combat veteran (two Purple Hearts in Vietnam), an academic historian, and the author of several military history books.

Tom stole the Navy Goat as a cadet, earned a JD from University of Michigan Law School, was editor of European Taxation, a tax journal published in Amsterdam, and worked for the Rand Corporation in Santa Monica. He returned to Europe as corporate lawyer in Brussels, and ended up in the Pentagon. He was one of three central figures in Rick Atkinson's The Long Gray Line, the story of West Point's class of 1966. He is the author of fifty-odd articles, op-ed pieces, and book reviews in national newspapers over the last twenty years, and has appeared on many TV news shows, including 60 Minutes in 1981 and 60 Minutes II in 2001 (both on Vietnam Veterans Memorial issues).


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