----- Original Message ----- 
From: Rick Rozoff <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Sunday, April 16, 2000 11:23 AM
Subject: [STOPNATO] Vietnam - who won?


STOP NATO: NO PASARAN! - HTTP://WWW.STOPNATO.HOME-PAGE.ORG

Baltmore Sun
April 16, 2000
www.sunspot.net
Vietnam -- who won? 
Myth: The view that the war was lost due to U.S. military bungling
ignores the realities of the conflict.
By Bob Buzzanco
Bob Buzzanco is an associate pro fessor of history at the University of
Houston and author of "Masters of War: Military Dissent and Politics in
the Vietnam Era" (Cambridge, 1996) and "Vietnam and the Transforma tion
of American Life" (Blackwell, 1999). 
AS WE approach the 25th anniversary of the end of the Vietnam War on
April 30 and the reunification of Vietnam under socialist rule, memories
of that conflict are still alive and a vital part of American political
discourse. 
During a recent visit to Vietnam, Defense Secretary William S. Cohen
pointedly refused to apologize for the U.S. military action there,
explaining, as he put it, "Both nations were scarred by this. They (the
Vietnamese)have their own scars from the war. We certainly have ours." 
Cohen's words echo those of President Jimmy Carter, who in 1977 refused
to normalize relations with Vietnam because, in his words, "the
destruction was mutual." 
Vietnam has also been a major part of this year's presidential politics.
With the rival major candidates, George W. Bush and Al Gore,
respectively, explaining his service in the National Guard or touting
his time in Southeast Asia. Even more than Bush and Gore, Sen. John
McCain put Vietnam into a central place during his run for the
presidency. As the son and grandson of admirals and a prisoner-of-war in
Vietnam for nearly six years, McCain's opinions on the war gained
significant press attention and carried great weight. 
In particular, McCain believed that American troops in Vietnam, as a
common complaint holds, fought with one hand tied behind their backs,
that it was "senseless" and "illogical," in McCain's words, to not carry
the ground war over the 17th parallel into North Vietnam or to not wage
a totally unrestrained air war, especially with B-52 bombers. 
Cohen and McCain tap into rich myths about the war, views which still
resonate after 25 years but also, and unfortunately, are misguided and
wrong and keep us still from coming to terms with Vietnam. 
There is no basis to even suggest that the fallout from the war affected
the United States and Vietnam similarly. 
While the United States suffered serious losses -- more than 58,000
killed and billions of dollars spent -- Vietnam's losses were
staggering. More than 3 million Vietnamese died during the American war,
with at least that many wounded. More than 15 million Vietnamese,
Cambodians, and Laotians became refugees. American weapons -- especially
the 6.5 million tons of bombs dropped from the air on Indochina --
destroyed more than 10,000 hamlets and 25 million acres of forest in
South Vietnam (the land of the U.S. ally in the war); additionally the
United States dropped more than 11.2 million gallons of Agent Orange and
400,000 tons of napalm on South Vietnam, a nation roughly the size of
New Mexico or Arizona. 
Since the end of the war, thousands of Vietnamese continued to be killed
every year from contact with unexploded bombs from the war, and their
environment continues to feel the effects of dioxin and other
herbicides. There is nothing "mutual" about such destruction; "their ...
scars" run much deeper than "ours." 
McCain's point is equally troubling, for it offers a "stabbed in the
back" explanation in place of a reasoned examination of a war that was
morally, politically, and strategically wrong. Indeed, many of America's
ranking military officers, the comrades of McCain's father and
grandfather, had warned against a war in Vietnam from the 1950s forward. 
In 1954, amid the Dien Bien Phu crisis, the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff
recognized that the Nationalist-Communist Viet Minh, led by Ho Chi Minh,
held the military initiate and were successfully identified with
"freedom from the colonial yoke and with the improvement of the general
welfare" of the Vietnamese people. 
By 1963, as the Kennedy administration was escalating the U.S.
commitment to Vietnam, the incoming Marine Commandant, Gen. Wallace
Greene, lamented to fellow officers that "we're up to our knees in the
quagmire" in Vietnam and warned "you see what happened to the French,"
which had lost its colonial hold over Indochina in 1954, "well, maybe
the same thing is going to happen to us." 
Officers held similar fears regarding the way the war was fought, but
not because they had "one hand tied behind their back." "If anything
came out of Vietnam," Gen. Harold K. Johnson, the Army Chief of Staff,
observed, "it was that air power couldn't do the job." 
Even the American commander in Vietnam, Gen. William Westmoreland,
believed that a totally unrestrained air war would not have been
decisive, writing after the war: "I still doubt that the North
Vietnamese would have relented." 
Westmoreland was attacked by the Marines, who believed his strategy of
attrition, as Gen. Victor Kulak put it, was "wasteful of American lives
[and] promising a protracted, strength-sapping battle with small
likelihood of a successful outcome." 
And on it went; throughout the entire U.S. experience in Vietnam, from
the end of World War II until the 1970s, American officers were never
enthusiastic about fighting in Vietnam, were always aware of the perils
of war there, remained deeply divided internally over intervention and
strategy and were not optimistic that they would succeed 
Far from fighting with their hands behind their back, they were able to
unleash the technological might of the United States on a small country
without forcing the enemy there to yield to their power, an outcome they
expected long before the war ended. 
Why then, amid the historical evidence to the contrary, do the Cohen and
McCain myths persist? 
A deep examination into the historical record on Vietnam shows that the
destruction was far from "mutual," and that military leaders complained
about intervening in the war itself, not that they were fighting
shorthanded. 
Perhaps politicians and many media members feel more comfortable with
these explanations than with the truth, than with the recognition that
the United States intervened into a war of liberation and revolution
against the Vietnamese. 
While claiming to be the champion of freedom and self-determination, the
United States waged a brutal and bloody war on the people of a small
country, both ally and enemy alike, to warn them of the perils of
self-determination, be it nationalist or socialist. Rather than allow
the Vietnamese to choose their own political system, government, and
social organization, the United States tried to violently force its
preferred system on a people who were not receptive to it. 
So, 25 years later, the "destruction" is to the historical legacy of
Vietnam, and unless we are able to see the full picture of the war, we
all are studying Vietnam with our metaphorical arms behind our backs.


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