I decided to read this book after I saw the author on a Fox News special about the Pueblo. I had been stationed in Osan, South Korea, a few years after the incident, so I knew a little bit about the Pueblo, but not very much. This book answered all my questions, and more. I think anyone with an interest in American foreign policy should read it.
The book really has 3 parts. In the first section, Lerner looks at the background of this intelligence program (operation clickbeetle), the history of the program, the specific preparation of this ship and mission, the background of the men who operated the ship, and the situation in Korea. Then, in the next part, he looks at the mission itself, focusing mostly on the events the day that North Korea captured the Pueblo on the high seas, and what that meant for the US and the Cold War. Finally, he looks at the way the Lyndon Johnson administration decided to turn to diplomacy rather than a military response, and how that developed over a year of negotiations, until the men were finally released just before Christmas in a somewhat bizarre solution in which the US signed an apology letter that they had already publicly denounced. The ship, shockingly, still is in North Korea, serving as a tourist attraction.
This is really a good book. First of all, Lerner writes beautifully. This book reads so smoothly, and the story is so intense, that you almost can't put it down. His research is also very impressive. It looks like he has been to every archive, and talked to every person, related to the event. And he looks at every aspect of the incident. There is a look at the military side of the story, a lot about the diplomacy, a chapter about the public reaction in the US, details about the treatment of the men in captivity (one year in North Korean prisons--just brutal stuff), even a discussion of the intelligence loss involved here.
There are a few things that I liked particularly. He brings North Korea into the picture, showing how they were not simply taking orders from the Soviets but were a nation struggling with their own problems, and in order to distract the people from his failed communist leadership, Kim Il Sung tried to show them how tough he was by going after America. Lerner also shows how Americans everywhere: in the government, in the military, in the general population, in congress, saw this as part of the cold war, and refused to recognize that North Korea mattered. So I was shocked to see how Johnson immediately tried to solve the problem by going to the USSR, and the UN and China, but not to North Korea. He also does a good job showing how the Navy let the men down, and then tried to scapegoat the officers by blaming them for not going down with the ship, when Lerner shows that the Navy had let the men down on so many support levels. For example, the condition of the ship was horrible, it didn't even have a reliable steering system or a good self-destruct system or a working communication system, the Pueblo was slow and unstable, had bad navigation equipment, and almost no guns. Pre-mission trials showed this to everyone in the Navy, but still, they ignored the commander's requests to fix anything. Finally, as a former soldier, I was really impressed by his discussion of the crew. He shows how the Navy let them down by not giving them the right support, training, and information. He also shows how they hung together in North Korea, despite some pretty rough times.
There are a few problems I should mention. Some maps would have been helpful. The military details were fine for me, but people without a military background might find some of it tough reading. And I did wonder if Lerner could have told us more about the views of the common soldier who was wondering if we were going to go to war over this, especially the grunts in Vietnam. Still, this is overall a really, really, good book. It shows how the US during the Cold War sometimes overlooked the complexity of the world, and just looked for easy answers that saw everything as part of a Soviet conspiracy. I would recommend it highly to anyone.