Beware of
Official Histories of War: The Vietnam Case-Telling the Truth
Published on: March 21, 2015 on PortsideOriginally Posted By Harry Targ, November 1, 2014 Diary of a Heartland Radical
Well, I’m not going to
point any moral;
I’ll leave that for yourself
Maybe you’re still walking, you’re still talking
You’d like to keep your health.
But every time I read the papers
That old feeling comes on;
We’re — waist deep in the Big Muddy
And the big fool says to push on.
Pete Seeger – “Waist Deep In
The Big Muddy”I’ll leave that for yourself
Maybe you’re still walking, you’re still talking
You’d like to keep your health.
But every time I read the papers
That old feeling comes on;
We’re — waist deep in the Big Muddy
And the big fool says to push on.
Journalist Sheryl Gay Stolberg recently reported on the
Pentagon’s development of public educational materials concerning the history
of the Vietnam War. In addition to preparations for a 50th year commemoration
of President Johnson’s escalation of the war in 1965, DOD has been posting a
war “timeline” on their website. The project was initiated by Congress in 2008
and will cost some $15 million (“Paying Respects, Pentagon Revives Vietnam, and
War Over Truth,” New York Times, October 9, 2014).
Perusing the timeline, a discerning reader would discover an
oversimplified, distorted, and ahistorical narrative about the role of the
United States in Vietnam. What is being presented as official history reduces the
possibility that future generations of Americans will be able to learn from the
mistakes of the past.
For starters, the narrative needs to develop eight elements
of the United States/Vietnam story that are either missing from the timeline
entirely or are grossly oversimplified.
First, it is critical to remember that the Indochinese
peninsula, what became North and South Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia, was a
colony of France from the 1850s until the Japanese occupation during the Second
World War. After the war, the French sought to reestablish their Southeast
Asian empire. They refused to negotiate with the Vietnamese, who demanded
independence. What ensued was the bloody French/Indochinese War from 1946 until
1954. The French, defeated in 1954, were forced to withdraw. From 1950 until
1954, the United States funded 80 per cent of the French war effort while
fighting in Korea, negotiating to construct a military alliance in Southeast
Asia, and building an anti-communist network of states elsewhere in Asia.Second, an agreement to end the French/Indochina War was achieved at the Geneva Conference of May, 1954. The Geneva Accords granted the three Indochinese states independence, required the withdrawal of all outside military forces from Vietnam, and temporarily divided Vietnam at the 17th parallel. Within two years there were to be all-Vietnamese elections to establish one government. Despite the fact that the United States did not sign the Geneva Accords, a statement was issued promising support for them if all parties acted as agreed. The United States, in violation of Geneva, created a new government in the South and picked an autocrat, Ngo Dinh Diem, to lead a new government there. Diem announced that the South would not participate in the expected elections. Thus, what was to be a temporary administrative division of Vietnam became permanent by fiat.
Third, it must be concluded that every president from World
War II through Gerald Ford, engaged in policies to oppose the wishes of the
Vietnam people. The United States played a central and negative role in
Indochina; from supporting the French effort to reestablish its colony, to
imposing the Diem family on South Vietnam, to covertly attacking targets in the
North, to fighting in the South, and to massively bombing all across the
peninsula in Laos and Cambodia as well as North and South Vietnam.
Fourth, United States military operations, which began with
President Eisenhower sending 1,000 “advisors” to South Vietnam, expanded to 540,000
troops in combat operations by 1968. In addition, United States covert
agencies, including the Central Intelligence Agency, engaged in policies of
assassinations, moving populations, and in other ways undermining South
Vietnamese society. Intervention was economic and cultural as well as military
as major United States corporations established projects in Saigon with wealthy
South Vietnamese investors.
Fifth, the Johnson and Nixon Administrations launched
horrific bombing campaigns, hitting targets in the South and later the North.
After an attack on a U.S. military base at Pleiku in South Vietnam during
February, 1965, the Johnson Administration initiated Operation Rolling Thunder.
This was a three-year non-stop bombing campaign with large areas of South
Vietnam and parts of North Vietnam declared “free fire zones.” Between 1965 and
1971, 142 pounds of explosives per acre had been dropped on Vietnam equal to
584 pounds per person. One hundred eighteen pounds of explosives were detonated
per second. The total magnitude of bombing equaled 450 Hiroshima-sized
bombs. The rural landscape was destroyed, devastating key rural industries such
as rubber and timber production, and disease and death spread. The bombing
increased migration to Saigon (now Ho Chi Minh City). Corruption,
prostitution, and drug trafficking expanded in the over-populated city. By the
end of 1967 more bombs had been unleashed on Vietnam than during the entire
European phase of World War II.
Sixth, the Vietnamese and United States troops were
victimized by massive amounts of Agent Orange released on people and the rural
landscape; twenty-one million gallons of herbicides between 1961 and
1971. One-quarter of South Vietnam had been sprayed to destroy crops.
Thirty-six percent of rice-growing swamps were made unfit for cultivation by
1974 and 30,000 Vietnamese hamlets, five million villagers, were victims of
direct spraying. Dioxin, a deadly element of Agent Orange produced by Monsanto
and Dow Chemical, created a broad range of cancers, diabetes, heart disease,
and Parkinson’s disease. Genetic abnormalities still exist today as children
are born with gruesome physical deformities and twenty-eight “hotspots” still
exist in South and Central Vietnam that endanger local populations.Seventh, the Vietnam policy was built on twenty-five years of lies. The Vietnamese who fought the Japanese occupation during World War II and sought a free Vietnam after the war were authentic nationalists, committed to establishing an independent country free of colonial control. Each president lied about their escalation of the United States role by claiming that the Vietnamese fighting the United States and the Saigon government were mere puppets of Chinese or Soviet communism. Eisenhower lied when he claimed that if Vietnam “fell,” the rest of the region would as well, the simplistic domino theory. Kennedy lied when he claimed that the Diem family running the South Vietnamese government, the police, the military and those who controlled the land constituted democratic tendencies in South East Asia. Johnson lied when he claimed that the North Vietnamese engaged in an unprovoked attack on U.S. naval vessels in the Gulf of Tonkin. And Richard Nixon lied when his advisor declared that “peace is at hand” just before the 1972 election. After that election Nixon launched the most massive lethal bombing campaign against targets all across North and South Vietnam, the so-called “Christmas bombing.”
Finally, contrary to media distortions, most anti-war
activists regretted that young men and women were drafted to fight in an unjust
and immoral war. The peace movement knew that most of those who fought in
Vietnam, were drafted or enlisted because of their economic disadvantage and/or
racism at home. American soldiers, like their Vietnamese comrades, were victims
of a murderous war that cost millions killed and maimed.
There were no heroes and heroines during these troubled
times but any accurate timeline must celebrate both the soldiers and the
anti-war activists who sacrificed their privilege, their educational
opportunities, even their citizenship to say “no” to war. The only way America
can avoid becoming “waist deep in the big muddy” again and again is to clearly
understand its history. That is what the official timeline is designed to
resist. Without a clear understanding of the past “the big fool,” whoever he or
she might be, will successfully convince the American people “to push on.”
For more of the history of the United States war in Vietnam
and how that country has developed since the end of the war see Duncan
McFarland, Paul Krehbiel, and Harry Targ editors, Vietnam, From National
Liberation to 21st Century Socialism, Committees of Correspondence
Education Fund, Changemaker Publications, 2013.
[Harry Targ teaches
foreign policy, US/Latin American relations, international political economy,
and topics on labor studies in a Department of Political Science and a program
in Peace Studies at Purdue University. He is a co-chair of the Committees of
Correspondence for Democracy and Socialism (CCDS), former member of the
Northwest Central Labor Council (AFL-CIO),and the Lafayette Area Peace
Coalition (LAPC).]