On The 41st Anniversary Of The Fall Of Saigon (Ho Chi Minh City)-Vietnam At The End- VIETNAM –A HISTORY By Stanley Karnow
From The Pen Of Frank Jackman
Sometimes a picture is in fact
better than one thousand words. In this case the famous, or infamous depending
on one’s view, photograph of the last American “refugees” being evacuated by
helicopter from the American Embassy rooftop in Saigon (now, mercifully, Ho Chi
Minh City) tells more about that episode of American imperial hubris that most
books. That clinging mass of blurry figures dragging, fighting, pushing to get
that last out before the NVA swooped down in a flash and closed down the old
shop. Books that spent thousands of words talking about “domino theories, red
menaces, communist hegemony, and sticking it to the Soviets by a little proxy
war in far off rice fields.
Recently I reviewed Frank Snepp’s
book about Vietnam at the end of the war, Indecent
Interval , where I noted “as is the case with this little gem of a book,
ex- CIA man Frank Snepp’s insider account of that fall from the American side,
it is nice to have some serious analytical companionship to that photo
[helicopter rescues off the Embassy rooftop]. Moreover, a book that gives numerous details
about what happened to who in those last days in a little over five hundred
pages. Naming names about who the good guys and bad guys really were (from the
American imperial perspective). Especially now, as two or three later
generations only see Vietnam through the hoary eyes of old veterans, both
military and radical anti-war, from that period like me (a veteran in both
senses) to tell the tale.”
And such histories, memoirs and
remembrances help to get a fix on that Vietnam episode in the lives of many of
the young in that time. Sometimes though the story of war, about what happened
before the whole edifice came crashing down, can be told another way, in a more
personal way. Who knows in one hundred years the book below may present the
more important story.
VIETNAM –A HISTORY, STANLEY KARNOW,
PENQUIN BOOKS, NEW YORK, 1983 (Reviewed April 20, 2007)
As the current Bush
Administration-directed quagmire continues in Iraq it is rather timely to look
at the previously bout of American imperialist madness in Vietnam if only in
order to demonstrate the similar mindsets, then and now, of the American
political establishment and their hangers-on. This book, unintentionally I am
sure, is a prima facie argument, against those who see Iraq (or saw Vietnam) as
merely an erroneous policy of the American government that can be ‘fixed’ by a
change to a more rational imperialist policy guided by a different elite.
Undeniably there are many differences between the current war and the struggle
in Vietnam. Not the least of which is that in Vietnam there was a Communist-led
insurgency that leftists throughout the world could identify with and were
duty-bound to support. No such situation exists in Iraq today where, seemingly,
from the little we know about the murky politics of the parties there militant
leftists can support individual anti-imperialist actions as they occur but
stand away, way away from the religious sectarian struggle for different
versions of a fundamentalist Islamic state that the various parties are
apparently fighting for.
Stanley Karnow’s well-informed study
of the long history of struggle in Vietnam against outsiders, near and far, is
a more than adequate primer about the history and the political issues, from
the American side at least, as they came to a head in Vietnam in the early
1960’s. This work was produced in conjunction with a Public Broadcasting System
documentary in 1983 so that if one wants to take the time to get a better grasp
of the situation as it unfolded the combination of the literary and visual
presentations will make one an ‘armchair expert’ on the subject. A glossary of
by now unfamiliar names of secondary players and chronology of events is
helpful as are some very good photographs that lead into each chapter
This book is the work of a long time
journalist who covered Southeast Asia from the 1950’s until at least the early
1980’s when he went back after the war was over and interviewed various
survivors from both sides as well as key political players. Although over
twenty years has passed since the book’s publication it appears to me that he
has covered all the essential elements of the dispute as well as the wrangling,
again mainly on the American side , of policy makers big and small. While
everyone should look at more recent material that material appears to me to be
essentially more specialized analysis of the general themes presented in
Karnow’s book. Or are the inevitably self-serving memoirs by those, like former
Secretary of War Robert McNamara, looking to refurbish their images for the
historical record. Karnow’s book has the added virtue of having been written
just long enough after the end of the war that memories, faulty as they are in
any case, were still fresh but with enough time in between for some
introspection.
The first part of Karnow’s book
deals with the long history of the Vietnamese as a people in their various
provincial enclaves, or as a national entity, to be independent of the many
other powers in the region, particularly China, who wanted to subjugate them.
The book also pays detailed attention to the fight among the European colonial
powers for dominance in the region culminating in the decisive victory for
control by France in the 1800’s. That domination by a Western imperialist
power, ultimately defeated by the same Communist and nationalist forces that
were to defeat the Americans and their South Vietnamese allies, sets the stage
for the huge role that the United States would come to play from the time of
the French defeat in 1954 until their own defeat a couple of decades later.
This section is important to read because the premises of the French about
their adversary became, in almost cookie-cutter fashion, the same premises that
drove American policy. And to similar ends.
The bulk of the book and the central
story line, however, is a study of the hubris of American imperialist
policy-makers in attempting to define their powers, prerogatives and interests
in the post-World War II period. The sub-title of the book, which the current
inhabitants of the Bush Administration obviously have not read and in any case
would willfully misunderstand, is how not to subordinate primary interests to
momentary secondary interests in the scramble to preserve the Empire.
Apparently, common sense and simple
rationality are in short supply when one goes inside the Washington Beltway.
Taking into account the differences in personality among the three main
villains of the piece- Kennedy, Johnson and Nixon- the similarities of response
and need to defend some sense of honor, American honor, are amazingly similar,
individual rhetoric aside. There thus can be little wonder the North Vietnamese
went about their business of revolution and independence pretty much according
to their plans and with little regard to ‘subtleties’ in American diplomacy.
But, read the book and judge for yourselves. Do not be surprised if something
feels awfully, awfully familiar.
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