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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Asia
: Vietnam
McCain in Vietnam: the ugly face of American imperialism
By Patrick Martin
3 May 2000
Use
this version to print
The twenty-fifth anniversary of victory of the National Liberation
Front in Vietnam was marked by parades and official ceremonies
in Ho Chi Minh City and elsewhere in the country, and by a flood
of media commentary in the United States, where the historic defeat
of American imperialism by the Vietnamese people still rankles
in US ruling circles.
On April 30, 1975 Vietnamese military forces marched into Saigon,
capital of the puppet regime of South Vietnam, completing the
reunification of the country after a more than 30-year struggle
against Japanese, French and American intervention. It was the
culmination of one of the great popular revolutionary struggles
of the twentieth century, in which more than three million Vietnamese
were killed, and millions more were wounded, injured, burned,
poisoned by chemical defoliants, or turned into homeless refugees.
The last American diplomatic and military officials fled the
city aboard helicopters, along with thousands of stooges in the
corrupt military dictatorship of Nguyen Van Thieu. So rapid and
panicky was the withdrawal that, on the waiting aircraft carriers
in the South China Sea, Navy seamen had to push helicopters over
the side after their passengers disembarked, to make room for
subsequent waves of incoming aircraft fleeing Saigon.
Despite the commitment of more than half a million troops,
unmatched capabilities in terms of firepower, total control of
the air and sea, and enormous superiority in economic resources,
the US military could not prevail over an opponent whose will
to fight was seemingly inexhaustible. Vietnam was a shattering
experience from which neither the American ruling class nor American
society as a whole have ever recovered, and it was one which left
the Pentagon military establishment deeply shaken.
This enduring bitterness was on display last week in the person
of Senator John McCain, the Arizona Republican who was defeated
for his party's presidential nomination by George W. Bush. The
former Navy pilot, who dropped bombs on the Vietnamese people
and then was a prisoner of war in Hanoi for five and a half years,
paid a visit to the country on the occasion of the twenty-fifth
anniversary, a tour paid for by NBC's Today program.
McCain played a key role in mobilizing congressional support
for the Clinton administration's restoration of diplomatic and
trade relations with Vietnam in 1994-95, and he has visited the
country a half a dozen times since then. But his latest trip had
a much different tone. It followed his racist comments during
the South Carolina primary, in which he repeatedly used the slur
gooks to refer to his Vietnamese captors.
In both Hanoi, the country's capital, and Ho Chi Minh City,
the former Saigon, McCain made provocative attacks on the Vietnamese,
concluding with the bald claim that the wrong guys
won the war. I think that they lost millions of their best
people who left by boat, thousands by execution and hundreds of
thousands who went to re-education camps,'' McCain told reporters
as he toured Ho Chi Minh City.
He also sharply criticized the policies of the current regime,
claiming that some in the Vietnamese government don't want
a positive relationship with the United States. There's
a difference in the attitude here of the government toward foreign
investment, toward a trade agreement. I see the hammer and sickle
out here on the banners, he said. I'm a bit concerned
about both the policies and attitudes, and the increase in corruption
in this country.
McCain's tour and his comments had an immediate political motivation.
US officials have made no secret of their impatience with the
pace of Vietnam's opening to the world capitalist market, an opening
which was initiated by the Stalinist authorities in Hanoi in 1986
under the slogan doi moi, but which slowed significantly
after the 1997 Asian financial crisis, which first emerged in
nearby Thailand. A US-Vietnam trade agreement was negotiated in
principle last year, but the Vietnamese government has pulled
back from signing or implementing the deal, a turnabout which
McCain denounced on several occasions during his trip.
But there is a deeper significance to his remarks. They are
typical of the arrogance of American imperialism, which has never
reconciled itself to defeat at the hands of a largely peasant
nation. While McCain gives sermons to the Vietnamese, let us recall
that American military forces carried out mass executions, bombed
civilians, defoliated half the country, carried out rape and torture,
burned villages, shot children, threw prisoners out of helicopters
and cut off the ears of people both alive and dead, keeping them
as mementos and trading them for cans of beer. Not every soldier
perpetrated such crimes individually, of course, but the military
intervention as a whole was of a brutal, anti-democratic, imperialist
character, which inevitably found expression in such sadistic
conduct.
What can only be characterized as crimes against humanity and
war crimes were planned at the highest levels of the Pentagon
brass and the Johnson and Nixon administrations, where men in
expensive suits and full-dress uniforms made decisions to authorize
Operation Phoenix (the assassination of 20,000 village leaders
as suspected NLF cadres), the Christmas bombing of Hanoi, the
1970 invasion of Cambodia, the widespread use of Agent Orange
and napalm, and, as was documented in 1998, the use of nerve gas.
Foreign Ministry spokesman Phan Thuy Thanh made an appropriate
response to McCain, declaring in a prepared statement: It
runs counter to the norms of morality that those people who brought
bombs and shells to sow death among our people and wreak havoc
with a country now pass themselves off as having the right to
criticize their victims-cum-saviors.
McCain never addressed the question of why those he regards
as our guys, the South Vietnamese puppet forces, collapsed
so dismally in 1975. Nguyen Van Thieu controlled the fourth largest
army in the worldafter the US, China and the Soviet Unionand
an air force to match. But his regime was perhaps the most corrupt
in history, with officers of the South Vietnamese ARVN siphoning
off money into their overseas bank accounts as fast as the dollars
could be shoveled into the country by the United States.
Vietnam today is tightly controlled politically by the Vietnamese
Communist Party, but in some areas of human rights and social
conditions this one-party state compares not unfavorably with
the so-called land of the free. A twenty-fifth anniversary
amnesty reduced the prison population of Vietnam from 70,000 to
60,000, less than one out of every one thousand people. By contrast,
the United States has more than two million people in its jails,
nearly one out of every one hundred. Many thousands of those are
Vietnam War veterans, disoriented and psychologically crippled
by their experience in southeast Asia.
Vietnam is desperately poor, but it nonetheless maintains educational
facilities that exceed those of many richer countries. Nearly
90 percent of the adult population is literate, a figure far higher
than most other less developed countries in Asia and higher than
many American states. Through a painstaking recovery of land damaged
by saturation bombing, rice production has been restored to a
level where Vietnam has gone from being a net importer, with frequent
food shortages, to the second biggest rice exporter in the world.
A historical balance sheet of the Vietnamese revolution must
be drawn, with a full accounting of the crimes committed by Stalinism,
both internationally and within Vietnam, against the liberation
struggle. But Vietnam, which has never received either reparations
or the slightest expression of regret for the devastation and
loss of life inflicted by American aggression, needs no lectures
on morality from American politicians.
See Also:
US Militarism
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