The redemption of the Vietnam War?

 
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Lostinthestates



Joined: 28 Feb 2007
Location: Bethlehem, USA

PostPosted: Thu Aug 23, 2007 2:10 pm    Post subject: The redemption of the Vietnam War? Reply with quote

President Bush is seeking to redeem the Vietnam War.

He has tried to turn conventional wisdom about that war (that it was a quagmire and a sideshow in strategic terms) on its head.

In his speech to the Veterans of Foreign Wars, he presented Vietnam as part of a pattern of American operations in the Far East in which Japan had been democratised and South Korea liberated - despite, he argued, the opposition of "experts" of the day.

Vietnam was a war, he suggested, that was worth fighting. And his message was clear - so, too, is the war in Iraq.

The US withdrawal from Vietnam, he argued, led to more suffering, not less. Just as it would, he implied, in Iraq, with the added danger in Iraq, he claimed, that al-Qaeda would be emboldened.

Three weeks before his administration presents its assessment of the Iraq war to Congress, Mr Bush is signalling that the US will not leave Iraq on his watch (which ends in January 2009). This speech followed a significant phrase he used in a radio address on 11 August that the surge of US troops in Iraq was in its "early stages."

The Vietnam connection

The introduction of Vietnam into the argument is fraught with difficulties.

His speech re-opens an old issue over President Bush. Are his claims reality or exaggeration?

Vietnam might appeal to the veterans who fought there and to a new generation that did not experience the divisions that it wrought in US society, or the military problems that proved insurmountable. It will appeal to American pride and patriotism and seeks to throw critics of the Iraq war onto the defensive.

But its appeal to the American people as a whole might prove hard to project. For them, Vietnam has always been a failure and any comparison with it evokes that failure.

And warnings do not always get heard. Americans, after all, were warned of disaster if South Vietnam fell. Yet that did not happen. The dominoes of Thailand, Malaysia, Singapore and the Philippines did not fall to communism. They thrived. And the United States went on to win the Cold War.

A lesson of Vietnam is that predictions are so often precarious.

Was it winnable?

Mr Bush himself did not say so, but some participants like the former US Secretary of State Al Haig have argued that Vietnam was "winnable". Almost no military historians have agreed.

The US and the South Vietnamese government were facing not just a guerrilla war in South Vietnam led by the Viet Cong but large-scale assaults from the North Vietnamese army. North Vietnam was led by committed ideologues who were quite determined to achieve their goals whatever the cost. They had seen off the French and would see off anyone else.


A lesson of Vietnam is that predictions are so often precarious

The Americans tried all the tactical variations. Kennedy sent thousands of military "advisers" (the question being, of course, whether he would have sent major combat units). Johnson escalated the war into a massive commitment.

"Search and destroy" sweeps, attacks on North Vietnamese supply lines and the North itself, the herding of villagers into encampments, napalm bombing - everything regarded by the Americans as within the bounds of acceptable warfare at that time was tried.

Then American public support collapsed, their troops left and they tried Vietnamisation. They handed the war over to the South Vietnamese army. That, too, failed.

The price

President Bush argued that the price of the US withdrawal "was paid by millions of innocent citizens whose agonies would add to our vocabulary new terms like 'boat people', 're-education camps', and 'killing fields'."

It is interesting to note his use of the word "citizens" to describe the Vietnamese and the Cambodians. It dignifies the war as well as them (though it was not a word used by US troops much) and it hints that other "citizens" (including American ones) will suffer if Iraq, too, is abandoned.

He did not say there would have been suffering and death if the Americans had stayed to fight it out.

Genocide

Another argument he used was that the massacre of the Cambodian population by the Khmer Rouge was the result of the failure in Vietnam.

It is true that the Khmer Rouge gained power in Cambodia the same year that North Vietnamese did in South Vietnam - 1975.

But the seeds of their success had been sown much earlier and the effect of the US bombing of Cambodia (to attack North Vietnamese bases there) is thought to have increased support for the Khmer Rouge to an ultimately disastrous extent.

It was in fact left to Vietnam to invade and remove the genocidal Khmer Rouge in 1979.

Ultimately, the war in Iraq will not be won in arguments over Vietnam.

The fact that President Bush is making these arguments shows how determined he is to stay in Iraq.
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I thought this article was very interesting and just shows how Bush is full of crap and desperation!
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faceless
admin


Joined: 25 Apr 2006

PostPosted: Thu Aug 23, 2007 2:26 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I wonder how many people will believe his shite though? In his comments about Vietnam he suggests that less people from other countries would have been killed - since when did he or any american government care about the lives of other country's citizens? He's a manipulative bastard to suggest that he gives a toss about humanity...
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Lostinthestates



Joined: 28 Feb 2007
Location: Bethlehem, USA

PostPosted: Thu Aug 23, 2007 2:46 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

faceless wrote:
I wonder how many people will believe his shite though? In his comments about Vietnam he suggests that less people from other countries would have been killed - since when did he or any american government care about the lives of other country's citizens? He's a manipulative bastard to suggest that he gives a toss about humanity...


I fully agree with you faceless! I do think though that it is a fairly cleverly construed arguement if you don't look at it more carefully! The best thing about Bush citing lessons learned from the Vietnam war though is that the biggest lesson was that it was a huge mistake - one lesson old Bushy did not learn! I saw a car a few days with a sticker on it counting the days down until Bush is out of office - I think the date was 30th January 2009! I thought that was quite funny and quite fitting..
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luke



Joined: 11 Feb 2007
Location: by the sea

PostPosted: Thu Aug 23, 2007 10:07 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

bush in 2004 ...

Quote:
'QUESTION: How do you answer the Vietnam comparison?

BUSH: I think the analogy is false. I also happen to think that analogy sends the wrong message to our troops, and sends the wrong message to the enemy.'


Laughing

from the morning star

Quote:
Lessons and lies

GEORGE W Bush's invocation of the Vietnam war to counter calls for withdrawal of US troops from Iraq is remarkable on at least two grounds.

The first is that any mention of Vietnam recalls his own cowardice in using family political influence to secure himself a bolthole in the Texas and Alabama National Guard instead of risking his own skin in a dirty war to which he was committed.

The second is that his version of what took place in Indochina bears no relation to what actually happened.

According to Mr Bush, US premature military withdrawal was responsible for adding to our vocabulary "new terms like 'boat people,' "re-education camps' and 'killing fields'."

By using these trigger words, the US president attempts to pin the blame for subsequent mass illegal migration from Vietnam and Khmer Rouge slaughter on the US occupation ending "without getting the job done."

In fact, both phenomena were directly due to the criminal actions of Washington.

The US war against Vietnam, including carpet bombing designed, as one US general observed, to return the country to the Stone Age, was a carnival of high-tech barbarism.

It killed 4 million Vietnamese and devastated the economy of this Third World country.

The US military-industrial complex surpassed itself in the profitable task of inventing and refining new weaponry, including napalm, white phosphorus, toxic defoliants, anti-personnel landmines and cluster bombs.

It used Vietnam as a testing ground for its weapons of mass destruction.

At the end of its resistance war, Vietnam was independent but impoverished, yet Washington refused to hand over reconstruction aid promised at the Paris peace talks.

No wonder so many desperate people sought to escape from poverty in Vietnam.

Similarly, with Cambodia, the Khmer Rouge may have modelled themselves on a distortion of Mao Zedong's teachings, but they developed as the direct result of Washington's continual escalation, committing more and more troops in what would probably be called "surges" now and expanding its bombing sorties from South Vietnam to North Vietnam and then to Laos and Cambodia.

The dislocation of normal life in previously peaceful Cambodia opened the way to the barbarism of the Khmer Rouge, who were overthrown by Vietnamese armed forces after a series of unprovoked attacks on Vietnam.

Nor should it be forgotten that, for all their condemnation of Khmer Rouge genocide now, Britain and the US vetoed the new Hanoi-supported Cambodian government from taking its place at the United Nations for many years.

Their hostility to Vietnam for having the temerity to defeat the efforts of the mightiest imperialist state to subjugate it had no limits.

For Washington, the murderous Khmer Rouge were preferable to a civilised and dignified people who refused to bend the knee.

The US president's comments indicate that his administration still fails to respect the desire of the Iraqi people for independence and is prepared to lie to the US people, claiming that failure to press on with a disastrous military adventure will mean that "the enemy would follow us home."

Lies and phony history lessons will not avail this war criminal president. Iraqi resistance and US public opinion will force an end - the sooner the better - to the occupation of Iraq."


Quote:
War analogy strikes nerve in Vietnam

By BEN STOCKING, Associated Press Writer Thu Aug 23, 1:45 PM ET

HANOI, Vietnam - President Bush touched a nerve among Vietnamese when he invoked the Vietnam War in a speech warning that death and chaos will envelop Iraq if U.S. troops leave too quickly.

People in Vietnam, where opposition to the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq is strong, said Thursday that Bush drew the wrong conclusions from the long, bloody Southeast Asian conflict.

"Doesn't he realize that if the U.S. had stayed in Vietnam longer, they would have killed more people?" said Vu Huy Trieu of Hanoi, a veteran of the communist forces that fought American troops in Vietnam. "Nobody regrets that the Vietnam War wasn't prolonged except Bush."

He said U.S. troops could never have prevailed here. "Does he think the U.S. could have won if they had stayed longer? No way," Trieu said.

Vietnam's official government spokesman offered a more measured response when asked at a regular media briefing to comment on Bush's speech to American veterans Wednesday.

"With regard to the American war in Vietnam, everyone knows that we fought to defend our country and that this was a righteous war of the Vietnamese people," Foreign Ministry spokesman Le Dung said. "And we all know that the war caused tremendous suffering and losses to the Vietnamese people."

Dung said Vietnam hopes that the Iraq conflict will be resolved "very soon, in an orderly way, and that the Iraqi people will do their best to rebuild their country."

Although Vietnam opposed the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq, Dung stressed that ties between Hanoi and Washington have been growing closer since the former foes normalized relations in 1995, two decades after the war's end.

In his remarks to U.S. veterans, Bush said a hasty retreat from Iraq would lead to terrible violence.

"One unmistakable legacy of Vietnam is that the price of America's withdrawal was paid by millions of innocent citizens whose agonies would add to our vocabulary new terms like 'boat people,' 're-education camps' and 'killing fields,'" Bush said.

Many people in Vietnam said Bush's comparison was ill-considered.

The only way to restore order in Iraq is for the United States to leave, said Trinh Xuan Thang, a university student.

"Bush sent troops to invade Iraq and created all the problems there," Thang said.

If the U.S. withdrew, he said, the violence might escalate in the short term but the situation would eventually stabilize.

"Let the Iraqis determine their fate by themselves," Thang said. "They don't need American troops there."

Ton Nu Thi Ninh, former chairwoman of the National Assembly's committee on foreign affairs, said Bush was unwise to stir up sensitive memories of the Vietnam War.

"The price we, the Vietnamese people on both sides, paid during the war was due to the fact that the Americans went into Vietnam in the first place," Ninh said.
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alan1254
King of the Marshes


Joined: 01 May 2007
Location: Thailand

PostPosted: Fri Aug 24, 2007 7:39 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

No he's right! Vietnem was a war worth fighting and so is Iraq .............. ok thats the end of my argument as I can't think of anything to suport the theory, perhaps he can't associate the idea that they lost the Vietnam war and they will loose the Iraq war, oh I forgot they won it ages ago did'nt he tell us that less than two weeks after it began, there is no way to win this war it can not end, they may pull the troops out eventualy but that will not be the final shot, our children and their children and maybe their children will die because of this lets grab the oil while we can war. Yes they got rid of one of the worlds nasty bastards but when the war started the UN said that Iraq was an enemy of human rights and a possible threat to world peace but they were on a list of such governments they were ranked number 32, so why didnt they go after one the others in say Africa, perhaps its that they dont have much oil?
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