Does Europe remember the fall of Saigon?

 

 

Jean Bricmont, in Counterpunch, USA, 2 May 2015

 

On April 30, 1975, Saigon fell. The last Americans fled the country. Vietnam
was reunited, as it was supposed to have been twenty years earlier according
to an international agreement sabotaged by Washington. The Vietnam War,
which had been going on for thirty years ever since France began its attempt
to reconquer its lost Indochinese colonies, finally came to an end.

 

For the Vietnamese who died in that war, there will be no minute of silence,
no solemn commemoration, no “duty to remember”, no vows of “never again”.
After all, the millions of Vietnamese who died are not considered victims of
“genocide “. They were merely killed by years of massive bombing and the
systematic slaughter of a people who wanted to be independent. What’s so
special about that ?

 

In old Europe we are warned every day against repeating the crimes of
Nazism, a phenomenon that has been dead for over half a century. In
contrast, the sources of the slaughter in Vietnam have remained alive and
active, whether through U.S. policy in Central America or Southern Africa
and now for several years in the Middle East. The “war against terror” has
already cost over a million lives and is far from over.

 

What do our great European humanitarians have to say on this subject? Do
those who deplore the rising number of refugees drowning in the
Mediterranean see the connections? Do they realize that the same United
States military drive to remake the world is the fundamental source of these
ongoing disasters? How many calls to we hear to leave the sinking ship of
U.S. imperialist wars? To make a real peace with Russia and Iran? To end our
policy of perpetual intervention as obedient auxiliaries of the United
States?

 

At the time of the Vietnam war, enlightened European leaders, Olof Palme in
Sweden and De Gaulle in France, openly stood up against U.S. policy.
Intellectuals like Bertrand Russell and Jean-Paul Sartre mobilized public
opinion against war. Demonstrations took place even in countries that were
far from the conflict. And today? Nothing. Public opinion was almost
entirely in favor of the war that destroyed Libya, notably on “the left”.

 

The end of the war in Vietnam was the end of an era, the era of national
liberation struggles which no doubt constituted the most important political
movement of the 20th century. In the West, it marked the start of the
reconstruction of imperial ideology under the cover of “human rights”.
Instead of stopping liberation struggles, the emphasis would be on
subverting and destroying countries that had gained independence. The
media-savvy campaign to arouse “solidarity” with the plight of Vietnamese
boat people and victims of the Khmer Rouge massacres in Cambodia enabled a
large sector of the French and U.S. intelligentsia to drop any effort to
understand the causes and effects of events. After all, the Khmer rouge
would never have taken power without the combination of U.S. bombing of the
Cambodian countryside and regime change in Phnom Penh. Analysis was shoved
aside in favor of immediate emotional reaction to unexplained events. A
moralism without context favored the invention of “the right of humanitarian
intervention” in order to destroy national sovereignty, international law
and the United Nations Charter.

 

In France, the anti-communist “new left” that emerged from May ’68,
influenced by the intellectual bluff of Bernard-Henri Lévy and cohorts,
completely reversed the position of the old left. Whereas the traditional
left defended international peace and opposed U.S. interventionism, the “new
left” welcomed every uprising regardless of political content and showed no
concern for the underlying relationship of forces. All that mattered were
the “human rights” as defined and highlighted by mainstream media.

 

Today that new left is at a dead end, whether in the Middle East or in
relations with Russia or China, along with the American policy that it has
helped to disguise ideologically. Forty years after Vietnam gained its
freedom, it is high time for new evaluations and drastic changes. But who
has the courage to meet these challenges?

 

JEAN BRICMONT teaches physics at the University of Louvain in Belgium. He is
author of Humanitarian Imperialism.  He can be reached at
[email protected]

 

Translation by Diana Johnstone.

 

 

From: http://www.counterpunch.org/2015/05/01/the-fall-of-saigon/

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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