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McCain and Vietnam: Revising history to pave the way for new
wars
By Bill Van Auken
18 June 2008
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The Republican Partys presumptive candidate for president,
Senator John McCain of Arizona, is routinely referred to in the
US media as a Vietnam War hero. In speech after speech
over the past month, his Democratic rival, Senator Barack Obama,
has prefaced criticism of McCains policies with a declaration
of his belief that the Republican is a genuine war hero,
a man who has served this country heroically and an
American hero whose military service we honor.
While conventional political wisdom would no doubt dismiss
such rhetoric as, on the one hand, the packaging of the candidate
by the Republicans and, on the other, a tactical feint on the
part of a Democratic candidate lacking in military experience,
the words have a far deeper and more ominous political significance.
What is the objective source of McCains designation as
a war hero, a title that he parlayed into a successful
political career bankrolled by the family fortune of his second
wife and abetted by the corrupt Arizona developer Charles Keating?
McCain, the son and grandson of four-star Navy admirals, was
nearly a decade into a rather undistinguished career as a Navy
pilot when he was shot down over North Vietnam in October 1967,
landing him for the next five and a half years in a Vietnamese
prisoner of war camp.
Before his plane went down, he had spent about 20 hours in
combat in the skies over Vietnam, dropping high explosives on
the towns and people below during short flights from an American
aircraft carrier parked in the South China Sea.
He had volunteered to participate in an operation known as
Rolling Thunder launched by the Democratic administration
of President Lyndon Johnson in an attempt to break the will of
the Vietnamese people. The aim was to use sustained bombing to
destroy the countrys economy and infrastructure and kill
or maim large numbers of its citizens.
Before the war was over, US warplanes dropped close to eight
million tons of explosivesfour times the bombs dropped in
all of World War IIon a country roughly the size of New
Mexico. This, the most intense and sustained bombing campaign
in history, devastated Vietnams cities and destroyed its
industrial, transportation and communications infrastructure.
Before the war was over, some five million Vietnamese were
killed, many of them victims of US aerial bombardments.
In his book Vietnam: A History, veteran journalist Stanley
Karnow presents the account given by a Vietnamese peasant of one
bombing raid: The bombing started at about eight oclock
in the morning and lasted for hours. When we first heard the explosions,
we rushed into the tunnels but not everyone made it. When there
was a pause in the attack, some of us climbed out to see what
we could do, and the scene was terrifying. Bodies had been torn
to pieceslimbs were hanging from trees and scattered around
the ground. The bombing began again, this time with napalm, and
the village went up in flames. The napalm hit me. I felt as if
I was burning all over, like a piece of coal. I lost consciousness.
Friends took me to the hospital, and my wounds didnt begin
to heal until six months later. Over 200 people died in the raid,
including my mother, sister-in-law and three nephews. They were
buried alive when the tunnel collapsed.
What is described here is not an act of heroism, but a war
crime carried out by what was militarily the most powerful nation
on earth against an impoverished and historically oppressed country.
When McCain was shot down, he was completing such a bombing
run against a power plant in a heavily populated area of Hanoi.
McCains survival after parachuting into Hanoi is testimony
to the humanity of the Vietnamese people and was owed in particular
to one Vietnamese worker who swam into the lake where the wounded
pilot had landed, pulled him out before he drowned and then protected
him from an enraged crowd.
One can only imagine the reaction if a foreign pilotwhose
own country was never attackedwere to parachute into Phoenix
or any other US city or town after bombing raids that had torn
men, women and children to pieces and reduced homes to rubble.
In a 1997 interview on the CBS news program 60 Minutes,
McCain frankly acknowledged, I am a war criminal; I bombed
innocent women and children. It was an honest statement,
though hardly a convincing argument for making him president.
The fact that he was a war criminal reflected not merely his
own personal actions, which in terms of slaughter were no doubt
every bit as devastating as a My Lai massacre, albeit inflicted
from a longer distance. Rather it was a matter of the objective
character of the war itself. Clearly there were many in the top
echelons of the government, its military and intelligence agencies
and in both major parties who bore far greater responsibility
for the waging of a criminal and counterrevolutionary war of aggression
in Vietnam.
The American ruling establishment has spent more than three
decades attempting to revise the history of the Vietnam War in
order to conceal its own responsibility for the greatest war crimes
since the fall of the Nazis and to erase the political memory
of US imperialisms defeat under conditions of mass opposition
and social struggles at home.
Kicking the Vietnam syndrome has been the stated
aim within the ruling elite at least since the first Bush administration.
It was hoped that the first Persian Gulf War and then the invasion
of Iraq would somehow sweep aside the popular aversion to US wars
of aggression that was the bitter legacy of Vietnam.
McCains admission in 1997 notwithstanding, his lionization
as a war hero has very much been a part of this effort. Meanwhile,
his own conceptions about the Vietnam war have played a decisive
role in shaping his attitudes towards Iraq and a potential new
war against Iran.
An article published in the New York Times Sunday, based
on an essay written by McCain in 1974 while attending the National
War College approximately a year after his release, provided fresh
insight into the lessons drawn by McCain from his grueling and
formative experience in Vietnam. While many officers concluded
that the US should have never sent combat forces into Vietnam,
McCains essay focused on the failure to sustain public
support for the fight, according to the Times.
He criticized fellow POWs who questioned the legality
of the war as being easy marks for Communist propaganda
and blamed divisive forces in the US itself.
As an antidote, he proposed a more intensive indoctrination
of US troops in the foreign policy aims of the governmentwhile
admitting that a program of this nature could be construed
as brainwashingand a more aggressive attempt
by the government to acquaint the American people with some
basic facts of its foreign policy.
Of course, millions of Americansincluding many in the
militaryquestioned the legality of the war because
it was in fact a criminal war of aggression. Moreover, American
working people were not prepared to continue paying the price
for this war, which killed some 60,000 troops and left hundreds
of thousands more physically and mentally shattered. Meanwhile,
people all over the world regarded the war as a crime and a moral
disgrace.
A number of naval and air force pilots, however, drew different
conclusions about the war. Most prominent among them was Gen.
Curtis LeMay, the former Air Force chief of staff, who chafed
at any restrictions on the air war against the Vietnamese and
suggested that the US bomb them back into the stone age.
These elements were highly critical of the Johnson administration
at the outset of the Rolling Thunder campaign, believing that
the US needed to carry out the unrelenting carpet bombing of Vietnamese
cities. They praised Nixon for unleashing 200 B-52 bombers on
Hanoi in the so-called Christmas Bombings of 1972, an atrocity
that failed to break the will of the Vietnamese people and paved
the way to the withdrawal of American forces from the country.
McCain has described his term at the National War College,
when he wrote his essay, as the period when his principles
were grounded on issues of war and foreign policy. His basic
conclusion was that the US could have won the Vietnam War had
it pursued a different military strategy and not succumbed to
the influence of divisive forces, in which he includes
the antiwar movement, the media and the Democratic Party.
McCains rewriting of the history of Vietnam is by no
means unique. It has been a major ideological campaign for decades,
finding its expression in such popular culture products as the
Rambo films. Its ultimate purpose is to pave the way to
new US wars of aggression such as the one in Iraqwhere McCain
has said that he would have no problem keeping US troops for 100
yearsand Iran, where he expressed his view by singing bomb,
bomb, bomb ... bomb, bomb Iran to the music of an old Beach
Boys tune.
The Democratic Partys aiding and abetting of this ideological
campaign also did not just begin with the obsequious praise of
McCain as a war hero. For decades, the party has recoiled
in fear from the charge of the right that its antiwar wing was
responsible for US imperialisms defeat.
It is worth noting that the Republicans meanwhile have shown
no compunction about attacking rival candidates war records.
In 2004, they formed the Swiftboat Veterans for Truth
not only to vilify Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry
for having opposed the war upon his return from Vietnam, but to
question whether the battle for which Kerry was awarded the Silver
Star ever took place.
For their part, Kerry and the Democrats did their best to bury
the candidates campaign against the war of more than 30
years before, presenting him as a war hero who knew
how to defend his country.
The effect of this campaign rhetoriclike the Democrats
continuous honoring of McCains military record
todaywas to help rehabilitate the Vietnam War.
This attempted rehabilitation is founded not on any new insights
into the past, but is rather predicated on the hope that searing
memories have faded and that a new generation is less familiar
with the terrible events of that war.
In the end, this historical revisionism, practiced by both
the Democrats and Republicans, is driven by a consensus within
the ruling elitewhatever the tactical disagreements on how
best to salvage their interests in Iraq. They agree that the defense
of American imperialisms strategic position will require
new and even more terrible war crimes.
This is no less true of Obamawho has described Afghanistan
as a war we must win, proposed unilateral attacks
on Pakistan, and called for a larger armythan it is of John
McCain.
Under these conditions, and with American working people once
again confronting both intense social struggles at home and war
abroad, the defense of the real history of US imperialisms
defeat in Vietnam becomes all the more vital.
See Also:
Bush, McCain "gaffes"
on Iran echo Iraq war lies
[23 March 2008]
The New York Times
and the 2008 elections: What the McCain "exposé"
reveals
[27 February 2008]
Romney withdraws, ensuring
McCain the Republican presidential nomination
[9 February 2008]
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