On
The 40th Anniversary Of The Fall Of Saigon (Ho Chi Minh
City)-Vietnam At The End- The American End- An Insider’s Story- Frank Snepp’s
“Decent Interval”- A Book Review
Book Review
Decent Interval: An Insider’s Account Of Saigon’s Indecent End Told By The CIA’s Chief Strategy Analyst In Vietnam, Frank Snepp, Random House, New York, 1977
Decent Interval: An Insider’s Account Of Saigon’s Indecent End Told By The CIA’s Chief Strategy Analyst In Vietnam, Frank Snepp, Random House, New York, 1977
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 from
the American Embassy in Saigon (now, mercifully, Ho Chi Minh City) tells more
about that episode of American imperial hubris that most books. Still, 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. 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.
Naturally, a longtime CIA man who in
a fit of his own hubris decided, in effect, to blow the whistle on the American
fiasco, has got his own axes to grind, and his own agenda for doing so. Bearing
that in mind this is a fascinating look at that last period of American
involvement in Vietnam from just after the 1973 cease-fire went into place
until that last day of April in 1975 when the red flag flew over Saigon after a
thirty plus year struggle for national liberation. For most Americans the
period after the withdrawal of the last large contingents of U.S. troops from
combat in 1972 kind of put paid to that failed experiment in
“nation-building”-American-style.
For the rest of us who wished to see
the national liberation struggle victorious we only had a slight glimmer that
sometime was afoot until fairly late- say the beginning of 1975, although the
rumor mill was running earlier. So Mr. Snepp’s book is invaluable to fill in
the blanks for what the U.S., the South Vietnamese and the North Vietnamese
were doing, or not doing.
Snepp’s lively account, naturally,
centers on the American experience and within that experience the conduct of
the last ambassador to Saigon, Graham Martin. Snepp spares no words to go after
Martin’s perfidious and maniacal role, especially in the very, very last days
when the North Vietnamese were sweeping almost unopposed into Saigon. But there
is more, failures of intelligence, some expected, others just plain wrong, some
missteps about intentions, some grand-standing and some pure-grade rancid
anti-communist that fueled much of the scene.
And, of course, no story of American
military involvement any place is complete without plenty of material about,
well the money. From Thieu’s military needs (and those of his extensive
entourage) to the American military (and their insatiable need for military
hardware), to various American administrations and their goals just follow the
money trail and you won’t be far off the scent. And then that famous, or
infamous, photograph of that helicopter exit from the roof of the American
Embassy in just a nick of time makes much more sense. Nice work, Frank Snepp.
The whistleblower’s art is not appreciated but always needed. Just ask heroic
convicted whistle-blower Private Chelsea Manning or exiled Edward Snowden.
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