Daniel Ellsberg leaked the Pentagon Papers to try to stop the Vietnam war
The historian, policy-planner and determined activist died on June 16th, aged 92

Two thatch huts were still smouldering when Daniel Ellsberg and his group reached the village. It took nothing to destroy them; just a Zippo lighter. Children were searching for toys in the ashes. In the first days of his posting to Saigon in 1965, to advise on General Edward Lansdale’s “pacification” programme, he had fallen in love with Vietnamese children: their nimbleness, their boldness, their fascination with the hair on his arms. They had followed him around like a cloud of birds. Now he watched one little girl pull out a blackened doll.
Explore more
This article appeared in the Obituary section of the print edition under the headline “Tell me lies about Vietnam”

From the June 24th 2023 edition
Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents
Explore the edition
Pope Francis changed the Catholic church, but not as much as he hoped
The most open-minded pope for many years died on April 21st—Easter Monday—aged 88

Mario Vargas Llosa was shaped by authoritarianism
The Peruvian novelist and liberal died on April 13th, aged 89

Betty Webb never spoke about her work, until she had to
The Bletchley Park “secretary” died on March 31st, aged 101
George Foreman’s career was about resurrection
The two-time heavyweight champion of the world died on March 21st, aged 76
Oleg Gordievsky worked for both sides in the cold war
The KGB officer who spied for Britain died on March 4th, aged 86
Richard Fortey remade the world with fossils
The palaeontologist, writer and TV presenter died on March 7th, aged 79