Sunday, June 15, 2008

John McCain and Some Basic Facts About the U.S. Vietnam War

By Norman Markowitz

There is an article in the New York Times today about John McCain's 1974 Naval War College thesis dealing with his being a prisoner of war in Vietnam which repeats what was right wing conventional wisdom of the time--that the anti-war movement encouraged defections among prisoners, that the military must do a better job in educating its members to the anti-Communist goals of U.S. foreign policy, etc.

A former colleague of mine at Rutgers in the distant past and a respected military historian, Richard Kohn, chalked this up to the anti-Communist cold war ideological consensus of the 1950s, which was to be challenged in the late 1960s when McCain was a prisoner. While this is true, McCain, as I read the article, never really "deviated" from that one dimensional worldview and has continued to apply it to the world today.

The article is also replete with 1950s cold war images portraying McCain as "tough-minded" in standing up to his captors, portraying the Vietnamese as sadistic brutalizers (although there are remarks by both military historians and former prisoners that McCain, as I wrote in a previous PA article, picks fights with authority, any authority, given his personality, even though in this case it cost him bodily harm).

The article pretty much reflects with some criticisms of it the John Wayne image which McCain will almost inevitably use in the campaign, the image which hopefully will help deepen his defeat since the majority of voters will be able to go beyond the simpleminded cliches of John Wayne movies.

But I am writing this blog piece on something more important than John McCain's image, namely the U.S. Vietnam War. I will be lecturing on that war in a Summer School class tomorrow as I have since it was still going on and there are important "facts" that twenty-first century Americans should understand if they are to deal with where U.S. ruling class policy has led them today. I will present these "facts" one after point by point in some detail.

1. Ho Chi Minh was a Vietnamese revolutionary who called for his peoples independence at the Versailles Conference in 1919, joined the Communist movement and become an organizer of the liberation struggle in Indochina, spending years in colonial jails and leading the Viet Minh, the national resistance movement against both the Japanese occupiers and their Vichy French colonial collaborators in WWII. Ho was both a Communist internationalist and a Vietnamese patriot, as William Z. Foster, Elizabeth Gurley Flynn, Gus Hall, and members of the CPUSA today are both Communist internationalists and American patriots. The "debate" in the U.S. between "liberals" and "conservatives" about whether or not Ho was a "Communist" or a "nationalist" tells us nothing about Ho but a great deal about anti-Communist ideology in the U.S. which denied the essential humanity of those who joined the Communist movement anywhere and portrayed them as either dupes or sinister agents of what B movie actor Ronald Reagan called an evil empire in his role as president of the United States.

2.Even though Ho was very sophisticated, had traveled before WWI to the U.S. a liked the U.S., and was a valuable ally of the U.S. during WWII against Japan, the Truman administration ignored his pleas to recognize his new government in Hanoi, did nothing for three years to stop the French colonialists from re invading Vietnam to restore there colonial empire, and, following the victory of the Chinese revolution in 1949, began to fund the French colonial war in Vietnam in 1950(the first time in its history that the U.S. had intervened to provide aid to a colonial power fighting against an anti-colonial insurgency). Anti-Communism and a denial that the French was seeking to restore their colonial empire(French propaganda which the U.S. unlike everyone else in the world accepted wholeheartedly was that they were preparing the Vietnamese for self-government and fighting Communism. Truman also sought to use this aid to get the French to accept re-armament of West Germany and its eventual joining NATO.

3. By 1954, the U.S. under Eisenhower was providing three quarters of the funding for the French colonial war, which the French decisively lost that year when they were surrounded and forced to surrender at Dien Dien Phu. Although John Foster Dulles attempted nuclear blackmail and even suggested to the French that the U.S. would give them a few atom bombs to use, Eisenhower decided against any U.S. conventional or nuclear intervention and a peace conference took place at Geneva in which Vietnam was to be divided into two zones(with the Viet Minh, who controlled over 70 percent of the territory, withdrawing from large areas under their control with the pledge that there would be unifying elections in 2 years. The U.S. did not sign the treaty but promised separately that it would not undermine.

4. The U.S. then entered the Southern zone (its military mission had been working even before the conference to undermine the French) ousted the French colonial "clients" and brought in its own, set up a government led by a Roman Catholic from the North which was completely dependent on it, refused to hold any elections, brought in in 1956 a large group of American professors to write"South Vietnam's" constitutional, criminal code, set up the infrastructure for its government. All of this was done, as CIA intelligence reports confirmed as early as the Geneva Conference and as Dwight Eisenhower later matter of factly admitted in his memoirs because any free election under the Geneva agreement would have resulted in an overwhelming victory for the Ho and the Vietnamese Communist movement (hence no free election).

5. The Southern dictator Diem from 1956 to 1960 with full U.S. support carried out corrupt and tyrannical policies, "land reform," that gave land to his cronies, repression against both Viet Minh activists and influential local non Communist elements, including the powerful Buddhist clergy, which did not give him what he wanted. In 1960, a National Liberation Front, in which Vietnamese Communists played a leading role but one which consisted of broad anti-Diem anti-colonial forces (those Vietnamese who had concluded that the U.S had merely replaced the French colonialists) was organized to fight the Diem regime.

6. The new Kennedy administration, which combined liberal phrases with cold war policies, defined the war in Vietnam as a "war of aggression" by North Vietnam against "its neighbor" South Vietnam (even though South Vietnam had been created by the U.S. in violation of the 1954 Geneva agreement, the insurgency in the South while supported by the Hanoi government was indigenous) and began to send in "advisors" to "teach" the South Vietnamese new "counter-insurgency" tactics to defeat their enemies.

7. The corruption and tyranny of the Diem regime and the resistance of the Vietnamese people led the Kennedy administration to conclude that Diem had to be removed and replaced with a military government to prosecute the war. The CIA played the leading role in coup against Diem which led to his assassination in 1963, weeks before John Kennedy was assassinated in the U.S. in a completely unrelated act.

8. With both Diem and Kennedy dead, UN secretary General U Thant sought to have the parties go back to the Geneva settlement of ten years earlier but Lyndon Johnson refused. With the military government failing badly, the U.S. military with Johnson's approval prepared to plan for a major U.S. troop and bombing intervention some time after the 1964 presidential election to make the war into a U.S. Vietnamese war in which the U.S. because of its huge technological superiority would win. In the Summer of 1964, a phony "crisis" seized upon by the Johnson administration (a very small clash between Vietnamese PT boats and a U.S. destroyer in Vietnamese territorial waters of "Gulf of Tonkin Resolution" empowering the president to use all necessary military to protect U.S. forces. The resolution was to become the "legal basis for massive U.S. intervention.

10. In the Winter of 1965, the intervention began, an escalation spiral of bombing, more troops, more bombing, more troops... The war was also defined in corporate bureaucratic language, kill ratios, body counts. Massive firebombing(napalm) and chemical warfare with a bacteriological aspect ("defoliation" which destroyed vegetation and crops and people) became common.McCain was captured when he crashed his plane, part of a bombing raid over Hanoi in 1967).

11. The massive escalation failed disastrously, as the NLF's Tet offensive in the Winter of 1968 showed. Peace negotiations began in Paris as the war continued. Johnson's Vietnam policy destroyed his Great Society administration, ended the "war on poverty" that he had proclaimed, and brought Richard Nixon into the White House.

12. Nixon pursued a brutal and cynical strategy of reducing U.S. troop involvement, massively increasing U.S. bombing to cover the troop reductions, extending the war in Cambodia with disastrous long-term consequences for the people of Cambodia, and eventually, after hundreds of thousand of more dead IndoChinese and millions of more homeless Indochinese, accepting a truce on terms that were essentially what was available to him in 1969. John McCain was released. When it became clear to the Vietnamese in 1975 (after Nixon was gone) that the reparations he had promised them would never be received and also that his "promises" to his Saigon clients to bring back massive bombing if the NLF moved into the cities to unify the country would not happen, Vietnam was unified in a matter of weeks.

What lessons would McCain like to draw from all of this for his administration. A government has the "right" to violate a major international treaty to set up a puppet government and create a country which never existed before because of its ideological dictates. I guess, as I sometimes tell my classes, that a socialist government on Mars in the 1980s, deciding that American capitalism under Ronald Reagan threatened it, (that star wars was a plan to attack the evil empire on Mars) would have the right to divide the U.S. at the Mississippi River, declare the states East of the Mississippi the United Socialist States of America, and proceed to use massive military force to overcome resistance

Perhaps, as he has written in other venues, McCain thinks that a "better" use of U.S. military power would have produce "victory" in the U.S. Vietnam War. But how, given Vietnam's bordering China, the support it received from the Soviet Union. Also, what would "victory" mean except an unstable long-term occupation in a devastated country whose people despised the occupiers (a little bit like Iraq today).

How can you convince soldiers to fight such wars and publics to support them, to be blind to the millions of casualties and the effects of the bombing, napalming and defoliation? McCain doesn't say, and he can't say, because you can't do it except by denying reality or making war the solution to all serious problems in international affairs. Such policies throughout history have always had disastrous consequences, whether the consequences are in the short term or the long term.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

"McCain, as I wrote in a previous PA article, picks fights with authority, any authority, given his personality, even though in this case it cost him bodily harm)."

Is this to suggest that he was tortured? What evidence other than McCain's own self promotion is there that he was tortured? As the son of a high ranking admiral I have read that he was given special consideration and even offered early release. You can find on the web accounts from other prisoners at the Hanoi Hilton that state that McCain was never to their knowledge tortured by the Vietnamese. At the very least they were more media savvy than that with high profile prisoners. Those broken arms and leg, etc., were the result of his parachute jump.

awhtaylor said...

I hope there is a conceptual difference in approach between McCain and Obama on "national security", but first I'd like to ask about how US foreign policy has always defined "national security", I think the very term emerges from an ideologically distorted imperialist newspeak where powers deemed to be in any way contrary to US global domination are "threats" or "rogue states". As history post WW 1 shows us, this has involved scores of coups, invasions, nuclear blackmail, military occupations, and economic destabilizations. This is the tableau, the ideologically corrupted background which McCain and Obama both accept merely by virtue of running for the US presidency. I do think Obama sincerely wants to be more diplomatic. I believe he wants to re-define some cases of terrorism as criminality rather than as a matter for a State of War. I think this is a preferable way of managing the US Empire. But he will still be in charge of and constrained by his role leading world imperialism.