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- <text id=94TT0194>
- <title>
- Feb. 14, 1994: Peace Finally At Hand
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Feb. 14, 1994 Are Men Really That Bad?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- VIETNAM, Page 34
- Peace Finally At Hand
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>As Washington ends its embargo, Hanoi welcomes Yankees back,
- signaling a fresh start for old foes
- </p>
- <p>By James Walsh--Reported by John Colmey and William Dowell/Hong Kong, Jay Peterzell/Washington
- and Barbara Rudolph/New York
- </p>
- <p> Lyndon Johnson called it a "damned little pissant country."
- Even less flattering language was used by many of the half a
- million Americans in uniform who made their way through, around
- and above it: trooping across swamps, languishing in Quonset
- huts, piloting PT boats, spacing out on drugs, shelling from
- offshore, amputating limbs, bombing from B-52s, killing, maiming--and getting maimed and killed. How all that ended is well
- known. Bill Clinton, a college dissenter during the height of
- hostilities in Vietnam, showed last week that he could put a
- coda to that sad history and make a fresh start at pacification,
- this time with butter instead of guns. His lifting of Washington's
- 30-year-old trade embargo against Hanoi amounted to the final
- farewell to arms in the long, dismal, tortured struggle that
- devoured much of the best resources of both countries.
- </p>
- <p> Even so, the President looked uncomfortable doing it. The outstanding
- issue between the U.S. and Vietnam is one that can still turn
- out to be a land mine for this war-era draft avoider: the final
- disposition of American servicemen whose fate in battle remains
- unresolved. In his announcement Clinton deferred elaborately
- to the families of those missing in action, stressing that he
- was "absolutely convinced" that ending the embargo would best
- serve their interests.
- </p>
- <p> The salve was probably warranted, but most Americans did not
- require it. They had long since accepted the need to close the
- books on their country's most anguished 20th century war. "The
- drumbeat of history is moving in the opposite direction," declared
- Jan Scruggs, one of the movers behind the Vietnam Memorial,
- the black, V-shaped granite wall that draws thousands of poignant
- pilgrimages every year to Washington, "and we have to catch
- up with the rest of the world."
- </p>
- <p> For now, Hanoi's breakthrough to its old foe is less than total.
- Though the two sides are setting up liaison offices to handle
- their interests, Washington is withholding diplomatic recognition
- pending what Clinton called "more progress, more cooperation,
- more answers" on missing servicemen. The list, which technically
- numbers 2,238, is actually far shorter. The Pentagon is satisfied
- that only 73 unresolved cases remain in which the missing combatants
- could conceivably have been captured alive. Some families, and
- supporting groups of veterans, hotly dispute such a short list,
- calling Clinton a victim of bureaucratic flimflam.
- </p>
- <p> The President took pains to meet with representatives of the
- veterans before the announcement. The sessions were clearly
- sensitive for him. When he delivered a Memorial Day speech at
- the Vietnam Memorial last year--at the point when controversy
- over plans to admit gays to the military was still high--many
- veterans turned their backs on the new Commander in Chief and
- shouted catcalls. Last week Clinton denied he had put a commercial
- gold rush ahead of veterans' concerns, which a top aide insisted
- were his "sole consideration." The logic was that Vietnam needed
- a show of good faith by the U.S. to ensure settling the MIA
- issue permanently.
- </p>
- <p> Vietnamese leaders feel they have gone a long way by turning
- over remains and releasing archives. They have long been angling
- for the prize of U.S. trade and investment, which signals for
- them final access to the expanding circle of prosperity on the
- Pacific Rim. With its five-year-old, China-style market reforms
- known as doi moi, or economic renovation, the country of 70
- million is hailed by entrepreneurs as one of the most fertile
- frontiers remaining for international investment.
- </p>
- <p> How rich a prospect? Says Levi Richardson, manager of Vietnam
- affairs for the U.S.-ASEAN Council for Business and Technology:
- "There will be phenomenal growth. They're starting at ground
- zero." The U.S.-ASEAN Council, which includes many of the FORTUNE
- 500 companies that do business in Southeast Asia, has conducted
- the only systematic survey of Vietnam's business opportunities;
- it expects roughly $2.6 billion worth of trade and investment
- to flow within two years and $8.2 billion within five. Even
- then, Vietnam would not be "a powerhouse like Indonesia and
- other ASEAN countries," Richardson admits, "but people expect
- it to become a significant trading partner."
- </p>
- <p> Optimists see one of the most significant economic opportunities
- of the next decade: the rebuilding virtually from the ground
- up of Southeast Asia's second most populous nation. A land that
- underwent almost 30 years of continuous warfare--including
- bombing by more tonnage of explosives than was dropped by the
- Allies on Germany in World War II--is still largely ruined
- terrain. About 4,000 bridges and 50,000 miles of roads need
- to be replaced or repaired. Hanoi anticipates spending about
- $1 billion before the turn of the century on harbor-dredging
- projects alone. The country also needs power plants, additional
- airliners and new hotels, dozens of which are already under
- construction in Saigon, now called Ho Chi Minh City.
- </p>
- <p> The enthusiasts believe that assets like oil, timber and an
- industrious, literate population are the makings of another
- Asian miracle. Harder heads are skeptical, noting that the nation
- consolidated by Ho Chi Minh's heirs after the 1975 fall of Saigon
- is poverty-stricken and still at least partly under the thumb
- of ancient Marxists. Per capita income remains at $200 a year,
- one of the poorest in the world. Says Julian Reid, a director
- of Jardine Fleming Securities in Hong Kong: "In the medium to
- long term, Vietnam is extremely exciting. The short term is
- full of frustrations."
- </p>
- <p> Nevertheless, the world has been beating a path to the reforming
- communist country's door, and American business scouts have
- been like frustrated greyhounds in the traps, waiting to spring.
- Practically within minutes after Clinton's announcement, Pepsi-Cola
- was passing out free cans of Pepsi on the streets of Ho Chi
- Minh City. United Airlines promised to inaugurate regular flights
- from Los Angeles quickly. American Express signed a contract
- to return with its charge cards, the first to be admitted in
- 19 years. A regime that used to revile Uncle Sam as an imperialist
- aggressor was rolling out the welcome mat for a strategic economic
- partnership with Yankee might and know-how.
- </p>
- <p> At least 34 U.S. firms have set up in-country offices, and several
- of them were waiting only for Clinton's go-ahead before putting
- ink to paper. Pepsi's rival Coca-Cola has lined up two joint
- ventures; Cokes will sell for the equivalent of 10 cents each.
- Division president Andrew Angle explains, "We want to keep the
- price as low as we can. We think Vietnam, with its hot, humid
- climate, has the potential to become one of our major markets
- in Asia."
- </p>
- <p> Mobil Oil has an inside track too. It is prepared to buy a 38%
- stake in a consortium that will explore the offshore Blue Dragon
- field about 150 miles southeast of Ho Chi Minh City. Some outside
- consultants believe Vietnam is saving for American interests
- a share in the offshore Big Bear field. It would be a significant
- move. Big Bear stretches over South China Sea beds also claimed
- by China, which has been flexing its naval muscle in the neighborhood.
- Should the People's Republic begin exploiting the field in waters
- it controls, it could drain away profits important to Hanoi.
- American involvement would be an effective political counterweight.
- </p>
- <p> Lack of legal safeguards is a large cloud on the golden horizon,
- though Hanoi recently passed its first bankruptcy code after
- the war. Another major caveat: a near dearth of normal banking
- procedures. Can a stock exchange open in the country before
- the end of the year, as Vietnam hopes? Hong Kong analyst Reid
- doubts it: "You can't even write a check. The largest currency
- denomination is a 50,000-dong bill [about $5]. If you wanted
- to buy $1 million worth of stock, you'd have to go around with
- eight wheelbarrows full of cash."
- </p>
- <p> A more basic quandary is the political system, reform communist
- in name but still pouring revenues into antiquated, money-losing
- state-owned industries. Bureaucratic decisions are almost whimsical,
- says Meridee Matson, vice president of Dallas-based Channel
- Marketing Corp. Her firm won a license to do business in the
- country two months ago. "Things change on a daily basis," she
- says. "You think something's been approved, and it's not." She
- adds, "No one wants to talk about it, but bribery is very big
- over there. If people don't want cash under the table, they
- want a paid trip to the U.S."
- </p>
- <p> What Hanoi has yet to show is whether its market experiments
- are built to last. Bui Diem, a former South Vietnamese ambassador
- to Washington, faults the revolutionary generation itself for
- leading the country down a bombed-out economic road. "For Vietnam
- to become some kind of new tiger," he argues, "you need economic
- development and political liberalization. The party is in control.
- Its leaders can change the laws the way they want. If there's
- no liberalization, there's no possibility of long-range, stable
- development."
- </p>
- <p> All the same, Vietnamese tend to believe that the return of
- Uncle Sam, offering strategic security with one hand and commercial
- goodwill with the other, will redeem a history of mutual mistakes.
- "Everyone I know is interested in doing business in Vietnam,"
- says Hong Kong-based U.S. businessman Warren Williams. "Expectations
- on both sides are unrealistic. When I was there in the mid-
- to late '60s, the Vietnamese thought nothing would go right
- until the Americans got out. Now they say nothing will go right
- until the Americans come back. I thought they were wrong then,
- and I think they are wrong now." Fair warning: a generation
- after 58,000 Americans and 650,000 Vietnamese died fighting
- one another, Clinton's fresh start may prefigure some disillusionments.
- But it is a welcome start to a better future for all that.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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