How to Turn a Nightmare into a Fairy Tale
40 Years Later, Will the End Games in Iraq and
Afghanistan Follow the Vietnam Playbook?
By Christian Appy
April 27, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "TD"
- If our wars in the Greater Middle East ever end, it’s a pretty safe bet
that they will end badly -- and it won't be the first time. The “fall of Saigon”
in 1975 was the quintessential bitter end to a war. Oddly enough, however, we’ve
since found ways to reimagine that denouement which miraculously transformed a
failed and brutal war of American aggression into a tragic humanitarian rescue
mission. Our most popular Vietnam end-stories bury the long, ghastly history
that preceded the “fall,” while managing to absolve us of our primary
responsibility for creating the disaster. Think of them as silver-lining
tributes to good intentions and last-ditch heroism that may come in handy in the
years ahead.The trick, it turned out, was to separate
the final act from the rest of the play. To be sure, the ending in Vietnam was
not a happy one, at least not for many Americans and their South Vietnamese
allies. This week we mark the 40th anniversary of those final days of the war.
We will once again surely see the
searing images of terrified refugees, desperate evacuations, and final
defeat. But even that grim tale offers a lesson to those who will someday
memorialize our present round of disastrous wars: toss out the historical
background and you can recast any U.S. mission as a flawed but honorable, if not
noble, effort by good-guy rescuers to save innocents from the rampaging forces
of aggression. In the Vietnamese case, of course, the rescue was so incomplete
and the defeat so total that many Americans concluded their country had
“abandoned” its cause and “betrayed” its allies. By focusing on the gloomy
conclusion, however, you could at least stop dwelling on the far more
incriminating tale of the war’s origins and expansion, and the ruthless way the
U.S. waged it.
Here’s another way to feel better about America’s role in
starting and fighting bad wars: make sure U.S. troops leave the stage for a
decent interval before the final debacle. That way, in the last act, they can
swoop back in with a new and less objectionable mission. Instead of once again
waging brutal counterinsurgencies on behalf of despised governments, American
troops can concentrate on a humanitarian effort most war-weary citizens and
soldiers would welcome: evacuation and escape.
Phony Endings and Actual Ones
An American president
announces an honorable end to our longest war. The last U.S. troops are
headed for home. Media executives shut down their war zone bureaus. The faraway
country where the war took place, once a synonym for slaughter, disappears from
TV screens and public consciousness. Attention shifts to home-front
scandals and sensations. So it was in the United States in 1973 and 1974,
years when most Americans mistakenly believed that the Vietnam War was over.
In many ways, eerily enough, this could be a story from our
own time. After all, a few years ago, we had reason to hope that our seemingly
endless wars -- this time in distant Iraq and Afghanistan -- were finally over
or soon would be. In December 2011, in front of U.S. troops at Fort Bragg, North
Carolina, President Obama
proclaimed an end to the American war in Iraq. “We’re leaving behind a
sovereign, stable, and self-reliant Iraq,” he said proudly. “This is an
extraordinary achievement.” In a similar fashion, last December the president
announced that in Afghanistan “the longest war in American history is coming
to a responsible conclusion.”
If only. Instead, warfare, strife, and suffering of every kind
continue in both countries, while spreading across ever more of the Greater
Middle East. American troops are
still dying in Afghanistan and in Iraq the U.S. military is back, once again
bombing and advising, this time
against the Islamic State (or Daesh), an extremist spin-off from its
predecessor al-Qaeda in Iraq, an organization that only came to life well after
(and in reaction to) the U.S. invasion and occupation of that country. It now
seems likely that the nightmare of war in Iraq and Afghanistan, which began
decades ago, will simply drag on with no end in sight.
The Vietnam War, long as it was, did finally come to a
decisive conclusion. When Vietnam
screamed back into the headlines in early 1975, 14 North Vietnamese
divisions were racing toward Saigon, virtually unopposed. Tens of thousands of
South Vietnamese troops (shades
of the Iraqi army in 2014) were
stripping off
their military uniforms, abandoning their American equipment, and fleeing. With
the massive U.S. military presence gone, what had once been a brutal stalemate
was now a rout, stunning evidence that “nation-building” by the U.S. military in
South Vietnam had utterly failed (as it would in the twenty-first century in
Iraq and Afghanistan).
On April 30, 1975, a Communist tank
crashed through the gates of Independence Palace in the southern capital of
Saigon, a dramatic and triumphant conclusion to a 30-year-long Vietnamese
struggle to achieve national independence and reunification. The blood-soaked
American effort to construct a permanent non-Communist nation called South
Vietnam ended in humiliating defeat.
It’s hard now to imagine such a climactic conclusion in Iraq
and Afghanistan. Unlike Vietnam, where the Communists successfully tapped a deep
vein of nationalist and revolutionary fervor throughout the country, in neither
Iraq nor Afghanistan has any faction, party, or government had such success or
the kind of appeal that might lead it to gain full and uncontested control of
the country. Yet in Iraq, there have at least been a series of
mass evacuations and
displacements reminiscent of the final days in Vietnam. In fact, the region,
including
Syria, is now engulfed in a refugee crisis of staggering proportions with
millions seeking sanctuary across national boundaries and millions more homeless
and displaced internally.
Last August, U.S. forces returned to Iraq (as in Vietnam four
decades earlier) on the basis of a “humanitarian” mission. Some 40,000 Iraqis of
the Yazidi sect, threatened with slaughter, had been
stranded on Mount Sinjar in northern Iraq surrounded by Islamic State
militants. While most of the Yazidi were, in fact, successfully evacuated by
Kurdish fighters via ground trails, small groups were flown out on helicopters
by the Iraqi military with U.S. help. When one of those choppers went down
wounding many of its passengers but killing only the pilot, General Majid Ahmed
Saadi, New York Times reporter Alissa Rubin, injured in the crash,
praised his heroism. Before his death, he had told her that the evacuation
missions were “the most important thing he had done in his life, the most
significant thing he had done in his 35 years of flying.”
In this way, a tortured history inconceivable without the
American invasion of 2003 and almost a decade of excesses, including the torture
and abuse at
Abu Ghraib, as well as counterinsurgency warfare, finally produced a heroic
tale of American humanitarian intervention to rescue victims of murderous
extremists. The model for that kind of story had been well established in 1975.
Stripping the Fall of Saigon of Historical Context
Defeat in Vietnam might have been the occasion for a
full-scale reckoning on the entire horrific war, but we preferred stories that
sought to salvage some faith in American virtue amid the wreckage. For the most
riveting recent example, we need look no further than Rory Kennedy’s 2014
Academy Award-nominated documentary
Last Days in Vietnam. The film focuses on a handful of Americans
and a few Vietnamese who, in defiance of orders, helped expedite and expand a
belated and inadequate evacuation of South Vietnamese who had hitched their
lives to the American cause.
The film’s cast of humanitarian heroes felt obligated to carry
out their ad hoc rescue missions because the U.S. ambassador in Saigon,
Graham Martin, refused to believe that defeat was inevitable. Whenever aides
begged him to initiate an evacuation, he responded with comments like, “It’s not
so bleak. I won’t have this negative talk.” Only when North Vietnamese tanks
reached the outskirts of Saigon did he order the grandiloquently titled
Operation Frequent Wind -- the helicopter evacuation of the city -- to begin.
By that time, Army Captain Stuart Herrington and others like
him had already led secret “black ops” missions to help South Vietnamese army
officers and their families get aboard outgoing aircraft and ships. Prior to the
official evacuation, the U.S. government explicitly forbade the evacuation of
South Vietnamese military personnel who were under orders to remain in the
country and continue fighting. But, as Herrington puts it in the film,
“sometimes there’s an issue not of legal and illegal, but right and wrong.”
Although the war itself failed to provide U.S. troops with a compelling moral
cause, Last Days in Vietnam produces one. The film’s heroic rescuers
are willing to risk their careers for the just cause of evacuating their allies.
The drama and danger are amped up by the film’s insistence
that all Vietnamese linked to the Americans were in mortal peril. Several of the
witnesses invoke the specter of a Communist “bloodbath,” a staple of pro-war
propaganda since the 1960s. (President Richard Nixon, for instance, once
warned that the Communists would massacre civilians “by the millions” if the
U.S. pulled out.) Herrington refers to the South Vietnamese officers he helped
evacuate as “dead men walking.” Another of the American rescuers, Paul Jacobs,
used his Navy ship without authorization to escort dozens of South Vietnamese
vessels, crammed with some 30,000 people, to the Philippines. Had he ordered the
ships back to Vietnam, he claims in the film, the Communists “woulda killed ‘em
all.”
The Communist victors were certainly not merciful. They
imprisoned hundreds of thousands of people in “re-education camps” and subjected
them to brutal treatment. The predicted bloodbath, however, was a figment of the
American imagination. No program of systematic execution of significant numbers
of people who had collaborated with the Americans ever happened.
Following another script that first emerged in U.S. wartime
propaganda, the film implies that South Vietnam was vehemently anti-communist.
To illustrate, we are shown a map in which North Vietnamese red ink floods ever
downward over an all-white South -- as if the war were a Communist invasion
instead of a countrywide struggle that began in the South in opposition to an
American-backed government.
Had the South been uniformly and fervently anti-Communist, the
war might well have had a different outcome, but the Saigon regime was
vulnerable primarily because many southern Vietnamese fought tooth and nail to
defeat it and many others were unwilling to put their lives on the line to
defend it. In truth, significant parts of the South had been “red” since the
1940s. The U.S.
blocked reunification elections in 1956 exactly because it feared that
southerners might vote in Communist leader Ho Chi Minh as president. Put another
way, the U.S. betrayed the people of Vietnam and their right to
self-determination not by pulling out of the country, but by going in.
Last Days in Vietnam may be the
best silver-lining story of the fall of Saigon ever told, but it is by no means
the first. Well before the end of April 1975, when crowds of terrified
Vietnamese surrounded the U.S. embassy in Saigon begging for admission or trying
to scale its fences, the media was on the lookout for feel-good stories that
might take some of the sting out of the unremitting tableaus of fear and
failure.
They thought they found just the thing in Operation Babylift.
A month before ordering the final evacuation of Vietnam, Ambassador Martin
approved an airlift of thousands of South Vietnamese orphans to the United
States where they were to be adopted by Americans. Although he stubbornly
refused to accept that the end was near, he hoped the sight of all those
children embraced by their new American parents might move Congress to allocate
additional funds to support the crumbling South Vietnamese government.
Commenting on
Operation Babylift, pro-war political scientist Lucien Pye said, “We want to
know we’re still good, we’re still decent.” It did not go as planned. The first
plane full of children and aid workers crashed and 138 of its passengers died.
And while thousands of children did eventually make it to the U.S., a
significant portion of them were not orphans. In war-ravaged South Vietnam some
parents placed their children in orphanages for protection, fully intending to
reclaim them in safer times. Critics claimed the operation was tantamount to
kidnapping.
Nor did Operation Babylift move Congress to send additional
aid, which was hardly surprising since virtually no one in the United States
wanted to continue to fight the war. Indeed, the most prevalent emotion was
stunned resignation. But there did remain a pervasive need to salvage some sense
of national virtue as the house of cards collapsed and the story of those
“babies,” no matter how tarnished, nonetheless proved helpful in the process.
Putting the Fall of Saigon Back in Context
For most Vietnamese -- in the South as well as the North --
the end was not a time of fear and flight, but joy and relief. Finally, the
much-reviled, American-backed government in Saigon had been overthrown and the
country reunited. After three decades of turmoil and war, peace had come at
last. The South was not united in accepting the Communist victory as an
unambiguous “liberation,” but there did remain broad and bitter revulsion over
the wreckage the Americans had brought to their land.
Indeed, throughout the South and particularly in the
countryside, most people viewed the Americans not as saviors but as destroyers.
And with good reason. The U.S. military dropped four million tons of bombs on
South Vietnam, the very land it claimed to be saving, making it by far the most
bombed country in history. Much of that bombing was indiscriminate. Though
policymakers blathered on about the necessity of “winning the hearts and minds”
of the Vietnamese, the ruthlessness of their war-making drove many southerners
into the arms of the Viet Cong, the local revolutionaries. It wasn’t Communist
hordes from the North that such Vietnamese feared, but the Americans and their
South Vietnamese military allies.
The many refugees who fled Vietnam at war’s end and after,
ultimately a million or more of them, not only lost a war, they lost their home,
and their traumatic experiences are not to be minimized. Yet we should also
remember the suffering of the far greater number of South Vietnamese who were
driven off their land by U.S. wartime policies. Because many southern peasants
supported the Communist-led insurgency with food, shelter, intelligence, and
recruits, the U.S. military decided that it had to deprive the Viet Cong of its
rural base. What followed was a long series of forced relocations designed to
remove peasants en masse from their lands and relocate them to places where they
could more easily be controlled and indoctrinated.
The most conservative estimate of internal refugees created by
such policies (with anodyne names like the “strategic hamlet program” or
“Operation Cedar Falls”) is 5 million, but the
real figure may have been 10 million or more in a country of less than 20
million. Keep in mind that, in these years, the U.S. military listed “refugees
generated” -- that is, Vietnamese purposely forced off their lands -- as a
metric of “progress,” a sign of declining support for the enemy.
Our vivid collective memories are of Vietnamese refugees
fleeing their homeland at war’s end. Gone is any broad awareness of how the U.S.
burned down, plowed under, or bombed into oblivion thousands of Vietnamese
villages, and herded survivors into refugee camps. The destroyed villages were
then declared “free fire zones” where Americans claimed the right to kill
anything that moved.
In 1967, Jim Soular was a flight chief on a gigantic Chinook
helicopter. One of his main missions was the forced relocation of Vietnamese
peasants. Here’s the sort of
memory that you won’t find in
Miss Saigon, Last Days in Vietnam, or much of anything
else that purports to let us know about the war that ended in 1975. This is not
the sort of thing you’re likely to see much of this week in any 40th anniversary
media musings.
“On one
mission where we were depopulating a village we packed about sixty people into
my Chinook. They’d never been near this kind of machine and were really scared
but they had people forcing them in with M-16s. Even at that time I felt within
myself that the forced dislocation of these people was a real tragedy. I never
flew refugees back in. It was always out. Quite often they would find their own
way back into those free-fire zones. We didn’t understand that their ancestors
were buried there, that it was very important to their culture and religion to
be with their ancestors. They had no say in what was happening. I could see the
terror in their faces. They were defecating and urinating and completely freaked
out. It was horrible. Everything I’d been raised to believe in was contrary to
what I saw in Vietnam. We might have learned so much from them instead of
learning nothing and doing so much damage.”
What Will We Forget If Baghdad “Falls”?
The time may come, if it hasn’t already, when many of us will
forget, Vietnam-style, that our leaders sent us to war in Iraq
falsely claiming that Saddam Hussein possessed weapons of mass destruction
he intended to use against us; that he had a “sinister nexus” with the al-Qaeda
terrorists who attacked on 9/11; that the war would essentially
pay for itself; that it would be
over in “weeks rather than months”; that the Iraqis would greet us as
liberators; or that we would build an Iraqi democracy that would be a model for
the entire region. And will we also forget that in the process
nearly 4,500
Americans were killed along with perhaps
500,000 Iraqis, that millions of Iraqis were
displaced from their homes into internal exile or forced from the country
itself, and that by almost every measure civil society has failed to return to
pre-war levels of stability and security?
The picture is no less grim in Afghanistan. What silver
linings can possibly emerge from our endless wars? If history is any guide, I’m
sure we’ll think of something.
Christian Appy,
TomDispatch regular and professor of history at the University
of Massachusetts, is the author of three books about the Vietnam War, including
the just-published
American Reckoning: The Vietnam War and Our National Identity
(Viking).
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Copyright 2015 Christian Appy