from the LEAGUE FOR THE REVOLUTIONARY PARTY [http://www.lrp-cofi.org]:

The following article was first published in Proletarian Revolution No. 45 (Fall 
1993). 


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Vietnam: the 'Working-Class War'
Working-Class War: American Combat Soldiers and Vietnam, a book by Christian G. Appy 
published this year, is the most piercing and informative work yet on U.S. 
imperialism's carnage and defeat in Vietnam. In part an effort to counter right-wing 
notions that Vietnam was a just war that "the left" wouldn't let America win, the book 
also raises questions that liberals and even leftists avoid. 

Appy is successful in achieving these goals because he examines the U.S. participation 
in the war through the lens of class structure and class conflict. He details the 
lives of American soldiers in Vietnam: their class backgrounds, military training, war 
experiences (both as victims and victimizers), as well as the post-combat attempts of 
survivors to deal with what they lived through. He provides a human and realistic 
account, using personal interviews and rap sessions with scores of veterans. He 
combines this personal touch with facts, figures and information. But he fails to draw 
the revolutionary conclusions that flow from this material. 

Cannon Fodder
The book doesn't pretend to be a comprehensive analysis of the Vietnam War. Its 
central point is that the U.S. armed forces -- particularly the enlisted men following 
orders, doing the fighting and suffering the casualties -- were overwhelmingly and 
disproportionately from the working class. 

By itself, this is nothing new: recruits for modern imperialist armies in general have 
come from the proletariat. This stems from both the working class's numerical 
predominance in capitalist society and the ruling class's penchant for having those 
less fortunate do its dirty and dangerous work. 

But Appy demonstrates how this rule was particularly acute in Vietnam. Unlike World 
War II, whose vast scale demanded a mobilization of all social strata, Vietnam was 
more limited, and the military was determined to channel bourgeois and even 
middle-class youth away from combat. This was done through a variety of methods: 
student deferments, payoffs to doctors to declare potential recruits unfit, technical 
deferrals, draft board biases, connections (like Dan Quayle's) that get you into the 
stateside National Guard. 

As well, the middle class was obviously under far less economic compulsion to enlist. 
Appy estimates that working-class and poor youth composed a full 80 percent of the 
enlisted ranks. (This figure is actually low in that it excludes youth from "white 
collar" families, many of whom are in fact working-class.) 

One might assume that Blacks, getting screwed every other way in this society, would 
make up a disproportionately high percentage of the war casualties. Actually, Black 
casualties for the entire war were only slightly disproportionate. However, in the 
early part of the war, Black casualties were running at nearly twice the rate of 
white. Only after intense reaction from the Black movement and the increasing 
radicalization of Black youth did their percentages drop. 

Appy also points out that the number of working-class war casualties as a whole in 
1969, the year of highest American fatalities, roughly matched the number of American 
workers who died that year in industrial accidents. What a perfect demonstration of 
capitalism s consistently deadly use of its workforce -- in war and "peace." 

Vietnam added another sick twist to the use of workers as cannon fodder. The U.S. 
military command preferred a conventional set-piece war where superior firepower could 
be brought to bear in massive actions. But in Vietnam they faced a mobile guerrilla 
army with popular support in the countryside. It was the latter's strategy of 
countless small actions over dispersed territory (including the extensive use of mines 
and booby traps) that prevailed. 

To get even a limited engagement, the typical invaders' tactic was to send patrols on 
hot, long treks through rice paddies or dense jungles. The brass's actual hope was 
that such patrols would actually get ambushed: that way artillery and air power could 
be called in to maul the enemy (even if that meant chalking up heavy "friendly fire" 
casualties). In a word, the infantry "grunts" were used as expendable bait. As one 
highly-decorated machine-gunner summed up the nighttime version of this tactic: 

The purpose ... was for you to walk up on Charlie and for him to hit you, and then for 
our hardware to wipe them out. We were used as scapegoats to find out where they were. 
That was all we were -- bait. They couldn't find Charlie any other way. They knew 
there was a regiment out there. They weren't looking for just a handful of VC. 
Actually, they'd love for us to run into a regiment which would just wipe us out. Then 
they could plaster the regiment (with air strikes and artillery) and they'd have a big 
body count. The general gets another damn medal. He gets promoted. "Oh, I only lost 
two hundred men, but I killed two thousand." (p. 184)
While Appy focuses on the plight of the U.S. soldiers, he does not miss the point that 
the main victims of the war were Vietnamese, from the North and the South. Between 1.5 
and 2 million were killed during the war -- not to mention other casualties and 
destruction. A great many casualties were civilians, most of whom died at the hands of 
American forces. This is not surprising, since, as Appy notes, the thrust of U.S. 
policy was a racist attitude toward Vietnamese. All "gooks" were potential enemies to 
be watched, interrogated -- and, if caught "where they weren't supposed to be" or 
among "Vietcong sympathizers," killed. 

'Pro-War' Workers?
Another key point for Appy is countering the notion that the working class was the 
bastion for pro-war feelings in the country. Among the informational nuggets: 

One survey, taken in the same year the media invented the term hard-hats (1970), found 
that 48 percent of the northern white working class was in favor of immediate 
withdrawal of American troops from Vietnam, while only 40 percent of the white middle 
class took this dove position.
And when the entire working class including Blacks was included, the percentage for 
withdrawal went up. 

The working-class youth that volunteered for service did not do so out of any John 
Wayne-type patriotic fervor. In fact, a large-scale survey in 1964 found the biggest 
single reason for volunteering was to avoid being drafted! This was even more so when 
the survey was repeated in 1968. Patriotism was the answer of only 11.2 percent in 
1964 and 6.1 percent in 1968. 

At the same time, there was a more pronounced opposition among workers to anti-war 
demonstrators than to the war itself. Why? Appy is right on the money. 

This, I think, indicates that working-class anger at the anti-war movement -- 
primarily a middle-class movement -- often represented class conflict, not conflict 
over the legitimacy of the war. (p. 41)
He quotes a firefighter who lost his son to the war: 

It's people like us who give up our sons for the country. The business people, they 
run the country and make money from it. The college types, the professors, they go to 
Washington and tell the government what to do.... But their sons, they don't end up in 
the swamps over there, in Vietnam. They're deferred.... Let's face it: if you have a 
lot of money, or if you have the right connections, you don't end up on a firing line 
in the jungle over there, not unless you want to.... 
I think we ought to win that war or pull out. What the hell else should we do -- sit 
and bleed ourselves to death, year after year? I hate those peace demonstrators. Why 
don't they go to Vietnam and demonstrate in front of the North Vietnamese?... The 
whole thing is a mess. The sooner we get the hell out of there the better. (p. 42)

This viewpoint illustrates vividly what Marxists call mixed consciousness. Here 
elementary working-class resentment towards the war is welded in contradictory fashion 
to reactionary sentiments. 

Another example, from a returning veteran: 

Last week, I had to be in Chicago; I ran into a "Resist the Draft" rally on the 
street. At first I smile: kids at it again, just a fad. Then I started getting sore. 
About how I had to go and they could stay out. Cosco went in and he was the 
straightest guy I ever knew. My Negro buddy didn't like the war, but he went too. I 
just stood there and got sore at those rich kids telling people to "resist the draft." 
What about us poor people? For every guy who resists the draft one of us gotta go and 
he gets sent out into the boonies to get his backside shot at. One of their signs read 
"We've Already Given Enough." And I thought, "What have they given?" (p. 301)
Again, mixed and contradictory views. But even in confusion, this analysis demolishes 
the "Resist the Draft" position, exposing its class bias and inability to do anything 
about capitalist militarism. And that position was characteristic of the liberal 
anti-war movement: not only did it have a middle-class social base, it had a 
middle-class political program. 

Many Black soldiers, Appy notes, had a somewhat different attitude toward anti-war 
views, if not "the movement." They saw Black leaders -- Martin Luther King, Malcolm X, 
SNCC, the Panthers, Muhammed Ali -- taking strong positions that the war was 
imperialist and racist. One soldier said: 

We didn't really feel that we were fighting for our country; half the brothers felt it 
wasn't even our war and were sympathetic with Ho Chi Minh.
Appy demonstrates the class gap between the working-class soldiers and the 
middle-class and bourgeois anti-war movement. But he does not draw the conclusion that 
capitalism is inevitably imperialist, the fundamental enemy of working people 
everywhere. 

Why was the U.S. in Vietnam? Capitalism, in this epoch of imperialist decay, is 
impelled to maintain a system of oppressed nations as sources of cheap labor and raw 
materials. The Stalinist leaders of North Vietnam and the National Liberation Front 
(NLF) themselves stood for a form of statified capitalism -- Ho Chi Minh's Stalinists 
had butchered revolutionary Vietnamese workers led by Trotskyists after World War II 
in order to accommodate to French and U.S. imperialism. Still, the fight for national 
independence was a blow to the world imperialist system. The "domino effect" of a 
defeat would reverberate across the "third world" and was a real concern for the 
imperialists. 

Appy avoids any anti-imperialist or anti-capitalist conclusions. In fact, while 
touching at certain points on a "big picture," e.g. some history of Vietnam and 
aspects of American foreign policy, he does not coherently address the relation of the 
war to the world in which it took place. He obviously feels the war was "wrong" but 
does not clearly say why. Without seeing the class reasons behind the seemingly 
irrational actions of the U.S., the imperialist intervention is reduced to a 
"mistake," missing the essence. It helps build the illusion that imperialism can be 
re-directed and reformed. 

Revolutionary Anti-War Strategy
Appy's inability to draw anti-imperialist conclusions becomes acute when he addresses 
the issue of the main victims of the war, the Vietnamese, and what they should have 
done. He says, "One might argue, as I have, that atrocity was intrinsic to the very 
nature of American intervention in Vietnam, that given the policy of fighting a 
counterrevolutionary war on behalf of a client state incapable of winning widespread 
support among its people, American atrocities were inevitable." (p. 267) 

But he evades the question of whether the Vietnamese were right to defend themselves, 
even if under Stalinist leadership. Instead, he levels his major criticism against 
"radical" American opponents of the war. Describing those who sided with the NLF as a 
tiny minority of students, he says: "Those who did embrace America's official enemy 
contributed to the isolation of the anti-war movement." He thus implicitly opposes any 
support for the fight against imperialism -- or at least for Americans solidarizing 
with such a fight. 

The revolutionary position was to give "military," not political, support, to the 
Stalinist-led forces -- that is, to fight for the defeat of the U.S. without indulging 
in any glorification of the NLF. Imperialism was the biggest criminal and the 
immediate danger to the workers of the world. 

The key to building a working-class anti-war movement is to link opposition to the war 
to defense of the interests of the working class, not to middle-class moralism. 
Pacifism, draft resistance and conscientious objection are strategies that have always 
been rejected by the working class in practice. Proletarian communists say that 
revolutionary workers should go to war with their class brothers and take the only 
possible course for defending our class: turning the imperialist war into a class war. 

To this end, revolutionaries help their fellow soldiers understand the imperialist and 
class nature of the army and the war; we raise, for example, the demand that the 
officers should be chosen by the soldiers themselves, so that workers are not turned 
into cannon fodder by racist, incompetent and anti-working class officers. We fight 
for full political and union rights for soldiers. We oppose class privileges for 
bourgeois youth: no student deferments, no special officers' academies, no ROTC. We 
show that military training and arms are essential tools for building a workers' 
militia at home that can defend strikes and working-class communities against cops, 
scabs, thugs and fascists -- and can be turned into a weapon for proletarian 
revolution. 

This program is based on the "proletarian military policy" developed by Lenin and 
Trotsky. To our knowledge, the LRP is the only tendency in the U.S. today that upholds 
it. (See the article Marxism and the Draft in Socialist Voice No. 9 and our pamphlet, 
"No Draft" is No Answer!) 

The revolutionary strategy against the Vietnam War was adopted by no section of the 
anti-war movement, not even that led by self-proclaimed revolutionaries. Of course, 
the revolutionary position would have been met with hostility, at least initially, by 
most American soldiers and workers (including those Appy interviewed and quoted). It 
would have been misunderstood as a way to get Americans killed. 

But this would have changed over time. By the latter part of the war, opposition 
within the army was rampant. Orders were being ignored or disobeyed, soldiers were 
refusing to fight. "Fraggings" (attempted murders using fragmentation grenades) of 
officers by their own troops were becoming commonplace. An organized core of 
militants, anti-imperialist in tone, was emerging, for example in the Vietnam Veterans 
Against the War. As Appy shows, many Black soldiers saw right through the war's racist 
foundations. By 1971, a retired officer and military analyst was forced to write: 

By every conceivable indicator, our army that now remains in Vietnam is in a state of 
approaching collapse, with individual units avoiding or having refused combat, 
murdering their officers and noncommissioned officers, drug-ridden and dispirited 
where not near-mutinous. (p. 247)
In this situation, a political program to win revolutionary-minded soldiers to the 
notion of American GI s turning their guns around -- and connecting this with defense 
of the Vietnamese -- was quite possible. 

Middle-Class Opposition
While Appy doesn t spell out his politics, his emphasis on the soldiers' class 
resentments towards the anti-war activists meshes with a view expressed in a review of 
his book by an admirer of one of the main organizations responsible for the character 
of the U.S. anti-war movement, the SWP. 

Appy describes the attitudes of the working class at home, whose sons were doing the 
fighting, and debunks the "Archie Bunker" hard-hat stereotype -- the myth that most 
workers supported the war. 
But he does make the point that there was a "class" antagonism between the working 
class and the antiwar movement.... "Working-class people opposed college protesters 
largely because they saw the antiwar movement as an elitist attack on American troops 
by people who could avoid the war." 

For those who participated in the anti-Vietnam War movement, this statement is an 
oblique endorsement of the approach that was taken by the Student Mobilization 
Committee (SMC) and the National Peace Action Coalition (NPAC), coalitions that were 
led by the Trotskyists of the Socialist Workers Party. Their strategy was oriented to 
building massive demonstrations around the slogan, "Bring the Troops Home Now!" -- a 
slogan that was crafted to appeal to the deep-seated concerns of the working class and 
American GIs. (Joseph Ryan, in Socialist Action, June 1993)

In reality, the SWP more than anyone else was identified with the passive, legal peace 
marches that it policed for the benefit of grateful liberal politicians. Its strategy 
catered to middle-class draft-dodging. And while its slogan "Bring the Troops Home 
Now" sounds today like a call for sympathy with American workers, hardly anyone took 
it in that spirit then. It was a patriotic appeal to reformists, especially in the 
Democratic Party, who didn't want it said publicly that the U.S. was waging war 
against Vietnam for imperialist reasons. 

A similar appeal pervaded the short-lived movement against George Bush's Gulf War in 
1990-91: "Support Our Troops, Bring Them Home Now." Both slogans fail to distinguish 
between identifying with the dangers soldiers face and the reactionary role they are 
called on to play. Thus they provided backhanded support to the imperialist war 
efforts and left the field to the liberal compromisers. 

Appy does not connect his sympathy for the war's working-class victims to any idea 
that American workers (and Vietnamese) could actually resist in a class-based 
opposition. Why does he come up empty after so many insights? The reason can only be 
cynicism towards the capacity of our class to fight against misery and defeat the 
capitalist enemy. 

Appy recognizes that mainstream liberalism itself escalated the U.S. involvement in 
Vietnam. But his alternative is to praise other liberals like Martin Luther King Jr., 
who in the last years of his life articulated opposition to the war. But King was a 
barrier to developing a more radical and even revolutionary leadership against the war 
and for Black liberation. So despite his body blows to the limitations of the 
middle-class protest against the Vietnam War, Appy ends up with his own version of 
middle-class patronization. 

Revolutionary Leadership and the Military
It is a tragedy that a revolutionary leadership was not built during the Vietnam War. 
For all its problems, the anti-war movement contained many dedicated activists who 
could have been won to a revolutionary pole. Working-class resistance to capital's 
offensive "at the point of production" was seething, and a rank and file upsurge in 
the early 1970's coincided with increased working-class opposition to U.S. American 
involvement in Vietnam. Coupled with the mass soldiers' dissension, the sparks could 
have built quite a fire. 

Viewed in isolation, the conditions for an American revolution were not at their 
ripest during the Vietnam War: the imperialist economy still had life left in it, so 
it was difficult to dispel illusions in the system held by many workers. But the 
winning and cohering of huge sections of workers and soldiers and revolutionary-minded 
students into a revolutionary vanguard was possible. The domination of left-reformist 
politics, not objective events alone, was decisive in leading the anti-war movement to 
a dead end instead of a revolutionary beginning. 

It is equally a tragedy that no proletarian leadership existed in Vietnam. (The 
Stalinists had cut it off at the roots in the 1940s.) For revolution is always an 
international question. The Vietnamese section of an internationalist party could have 
fostered a policy of revolutionary fraternization with American soldiers, appealing to 
them as class brothers. The NLF did make significant overtures to Black soldiers (to 
the Panthers in particular), and not without impact. "No Vietcong ever called me 
Nigger" said something real. 

But the NLF, like the American anti-war left, had a middle-class leadership, and its 
effect was limited by that reality. A genuine Vietnamese workers' revolution would 
have had a decisively stunning impact on Black American workers who were experiencing 
great radicalization at home and on the entire American working class struggle. Its 
potential effect on a whole round of revolutionary situations around the world can't 
be underestimated. 

Looking at the military now, it might seem that the potential for revolutionary 
organizing has disappeared. The U.S. military now appears "leaner and meaner," a 
disciplined all-volunteer force that showed it could more or less efficiently 
implement imperialist demands in the Persian Gulf. But the volunteer army retains a 
mostly working-class base that serves largely out of economic compulsion. The "Vietnam 
syndrome" remains: there is still a great fear in the ruling class of alienating not 
only the working-class public but also its volatile military base, 30 percent Black 
and Latino, by any expensive, prolonged venture with high casualties. 

That is why the U.S. has limited its heroic efforts to intervening in small countries 
like Panama and Grenada, where the mismatch would be of almost comic proportions. In 
Iraq, the U.S. faced a demoralized foe on open terrain favorable to the full use of 
its sophisticated arsenal, in particular air power, so it could minimize its own 
casualties. Where there is the slightest risk the Pentagon backs off or withdraws 
quickly, as in Somalia, Bosnia and Haiti today. 

As the world economic crisis deepens and imperial rivalries heat up, military forces 
will build up everywhere. (Even now, the U.S. has cut precious little of its armed 
forces as a "peace dividend" in the wake of the collapse of the Cold War.) If the 
imperialist capitalist system remains, not just another Vietnam but another world war 
is inevitable. The draft will have to be re-introduced, jingoism will rise and 
working-class youth will again be ordered to serve as bait on an even more massive 
scale in imperialist wars. 

Understanding this eventuality is not enough: revolutionists must prepare for it. 
Working Class War is not just a good history book, it is a tool that shows the need 
for a working-class answer to war. Building the proletarian vanguard in and out of the 
military is critical. It is unfortunate that its author casts himself in opposition to 
it. 





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