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- <text id=90TT1080>
- <link 93XP0324>
- <link 93HT0383>
- <link 93HT0355>
- <link 91TT0290>
- <link 89TT2613>
- <title>
- Apr. 30, 1990: Vietnam:15 Years Later
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Apr. 30, 1990 Vietnam 15 Years Later
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- VIETNAM, Page 18
- COVER STORIES
- Vietnam 15 Years Later
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Guilt and recrimination still shroud America's perceptions of
- the only war it ever lost
- </p>
- <p>By Paul A. Witteman--With reporting by Michael Duffy/
- Washington
- </p>
- <p> Twenty-three years after the fact, Denny McClellan's
- recurring dream is still vivid. Once again he is 18, back on
- patrol ten miles northwest of Danang in the company of equally
- wary, heavily armed grunts of the 2nd Battalion, 7th Marines.
- His M-16 is loaded for Charlie, and a couple of grenades are
- within easy reach in his flak jacket. His field pack weighs 40
- lbs., and the day is surpassingly hot. The lance corporal his
- buddies call "Red" is sweating heavily. His squad leader, not
- much older than McClellan, gives a hand signal, and the patrol
- moves off the road and down a narrow trail. Just the beginning
- of another very long day in the Republic of Vietnam. Says
- McClellan, now a 19-year veteran of the San Francisco police
- force: "I remember individual days there in perfect sequence
- like it was yesterday."
- </p>
- <p> If not yesterday, last week. Or was it last month? Certainly
- it can't be 15 years since the U.S.-supported regime folded
- like a pup tent and the remaining American Marines executed
- what the tactical instructors at Quantico euphemistically
- called a "retrograde movement" from the roof of the
- fortress-like U.S. embassy annex. Today chickens run helter
- skelter through the American compound.
- </p>
- <p> But the U.S. has not extracted itself from Vietnam. From The
- Deer Hunter and Platoon to Born on the Fourth of July,
- interpretations of the war continue to be big at the movies.
- Television has China Beach, the award-winning series about a
- rest and relaxation center in Danang. The London hit show Miss
- Saigon, a musical about a doomed romance between a Vietnamese
- bar girl and an American soldier, will be coming to Broadway
- next year with seats costing as much as $100. Bookstores are
- filled with memoirs, histories, reprints and novels. This
- spring Harper & Row even published The Vietnam Guidebook, with
- advice for travelers to places like Hue and My Lai, although
- the U.S. State Department places restrictions on such
- excursions. Courses on Vietnam are staples of college
- curriculums.
- </p>
- <p> The war festers like a canker in the minds of many of the
- 2.7 million Vietnam veterans and the 750,000 Vietnamese who
- live in the U.S. The 3,600 members of National League of
- Families of American Prisoners and Missing in Southeast Asia
- still believe there may be loved ones locked in prisons hidden
- somewhere in the impenetrable Annamese Cordillera.
- What-might-have-been gnaws at some of the draft dodgers who fled
- to Canada or into the National Guard. Certainly the war
- prompted career choices for young men who joined the Peace
- Corps or enrolled in graduate school to stay out of the Army.
- </p>
- <p> For the families of the 58,022 U.S. servicemen and -women
- who died in Indochina, the war continues as a dull ache, a pain
- shared by the kin of the millions of Vietnamese killed on both
- sides. For most other Americans, Vietnam is as much a mystery
- as it was 25 years ago, when apprehensive Marines in full
- battle gear first waded onto the beaches near Danang. But the
- mystery has long been stripped of its innocence and is shrouded
- instead in guilt and recrimination.
- </p>
- <p> Some of the bafflement arises from a curious inability to
- come to terms with a failed policy, with America's greatest
- military defeat. But it is also due to the continuing attitude
- of the U.S. Government. Fifteen years after U.S. Ambassador
- Graham Martin slipped away in the predawn darkness of a
- collapsing Saigon, the U.S. has yet to establish diplomatic
- relations with the government of Vietnam. Washington continues
- to act as if Hanoi had sent its troops to invade Virginia
- instead of down the Ho Chi Minh Trail. Since 1975, the U.S. has
- imposed a trade embargo against Vietnam that has been more
- effective than the mining of Haiphong harbor ever was. It has
- helped keep Vietnam's badly managed economy on its knees, which
- in turn has encouraged a steady flow of refugees to Hong Kong
- and Malaysia.
- </p>
- <p> Three Administrations in Washington have insisted that
- Vietnam meet several conditions before diplomatic or commercial
- relations can return to normal. All Vietnamese troops must be
- permanently withdrawn from Cambodia and a peaceful settlement
- must be reached in that ravaged land. The roughly 15,000
- Amerasian children (now young adults, like many of the children
- of the MIAs) must be allowed to leave Vietnam if they wish, and
- political prisoners freed from re-education camps. Questions
- about the remaining POW/MIAs should be resolved. So runs the
- checklist of U.S.-Vietnamese policy, as it has for much of the
- past decade. Hanoi insists that it has met the conditions.
- Although progress has been made on all of these issues,
- Washington is not yet satisfied.
- </p>
- <p> Either way, a sizable number of Americans are saying the
- time has come for a different course of action. In a poll for
- TIME/CNN by Yankelovich Clancy Shulman, 48% of those questioned
- said the U.S. should re-establish relations with Vietnam; 32%
- are opposed. Vietnam veterans seem to agree: of the 208 vets
- surveyed for TIME/CNN at the Vietnam memorial, 44% said the
- U.S. should open an embassy in Hanoi.
- </p>
- <p> "Of course we should establish relations," says Rob
- Pfeiffer, a high school counselor in Oakland, Me. "We're
- pretending Vietnam just doesn't exist." An official in the
- Maine chapter of Veterans for Peace, Pfeiffer says his fellow
- members support recognition as a means to gain more on-site
- information about the effects of Agent Orange. "Open it up,"
- says McClellan. "If we established relations with China, why not
- with Vietnam?" Former antiwar activist Anne Weills, who
- created a furor in 1968 when she went to Hanoi with a
- delegation that brought back three American prisoners, comes
- to the same conclusion from a different perspective. "We owe
- Vietnam a great debt," says the Berkeley attorney. "Americans
- have a role to play in the reconstruction of Vietnam because
- we had such a large role in destroying it."
- </p>
- <p> Weills' view is not widely shared: in the TIME/CNN poll, 80%
- say the U.S. does not owe Vietnam anything. Nor is the push to
- establish full diplomatic relations generally embraced by the
- Vietnamese who escaped in 1975 or have fled in flimsy boats
- since then. "The U.S. should not normalize until the Vietnamese
- government guarantees human rights," says Phac X. Nguyen,
- advertising manager of a Vietnamese-language newspaper in San
- Jose. "They lowered people to the life of animals."
- </p>
- <p> Antipathy toward the regime in Hanoi is highest in the ranks
- of South Vietnamese rangers and paratroopers, many of whom have
- settled in California. In a speech in San Jose early this
- month, former President Nguyen Van Thieu, now living in London,
- suggested that if political changes are not forthcoming in
- Hanoi, the refugees should be prepared to head home, shoulder
- weapons and seize control again.
- </p>
- <p> The passion in the Vietnamese exile community is a puzzle
- to many Americans. That is no surprise to Phuong Dai Nguyen,
- a sophomore at the University of California, Berkeley, whose
- family fled Saigon in 1975: "The Americans don't know much
- about the Vietnamese." Yet the same has been true of the
- Vietnamese government's inability to fathom the importance to
- the U.S. of the POW/MIA issue. Fully 62% of those polled by
- TIME/CNN--and 84% of Vietnam veterans--believe there are
- still MIAs alive in Vietnam.
- </p>
- <p> "There is no logic to this," says Douglas Pike, a retired
- State Department analyst who assiduously read accounts of every
- reported MIA sighting but was never able to come up with
- verification by a second source. A resident of northern
- Vietnam, released after 13 years in re-education camps, is
- equally incredulous. "Americans? There are no Americans here.
- I never heard of any." The Vietnamese people long ago gave up
- looking for their own missing. Bodies decompose quickly in the
- subtropical climate. Although no U.S. official will say so
- publicly, the widespread conviction is that there are no more
- live Americans.
- </p>
- <p> Still, the National League of Families issues regular status
- reports of sightings on a hundred or so of the 2,303 men listed
- as missing in action or unaccounted for in Vietnam, Cambodia
- and Laos. Since a Japanese lieutenant hid on a Philippine
- island for 30 years after World War II before surfacing,
- anything is possible. But it is more likely that any Americans
- still in Vietnam remain there for conjugal reasons and have led
- retiring lives. Either that or the people sighted were really
- East Europeans or the now grown Amerasian offspring of former
- G.I.s.
- </p>
- <p> Because issues surrounding the war are so emotionally
- charged even now, some people counsel continued caution in
- dealing with the government of Vietnam. "Any improvement has
- to be gradual," says Republican Senator John McCain of Arizona,
- who spent 5 1/2 years in a North Vietnamese prison after his
- Navy attack bomber was shot down over Hanoi in 1967. "Below the
- surface, there is a very strong anti-Vietnamese feeling. When
- you get down to the V.F.W. halls, the American Legion halls,
- these people still have the feeling that the U.S. was damaged
- and humiliated in that conflict." Nonetheless, says McCain,
- who in the past has favored legislation for reopening ties to
- Vietnam, "it is in our interest, over time, to have an
- improvement in relations."
- </p>
- <p> A similar assessment comes from a senior Bush Administration
- official who follows Vietnam closely. "I don't think having a
- society that is armed to the teeth and poor to boot is good for
- the region," the official says. "Our long-term interest is in
- the peace and stability of the Southeast Asian peninsula." For
- its part, the Vietnamese government sees the Soviet presence
- fading in the region and wants renewed American involvement as
- a counterweight to growing Chinese influence. Two years ago,
- Hanoi floated a proposal to let the U.S. military reoccupy its
- former bases in Cam Ranh Bay and Danang. This month, following
- reports that the Soviet navy was scaling back its forces in
- Cam Ranh Bay, the Vietnamese repeated the offer. The Vietnamese
- would benefit from the dollars flowing into their economy from
- the bases. The U.S. would regain the use of facilities that the
- Pentagon loudly bemoaned losing and in turn would gain
- invaluable leverage in the ongoing negotiations with the
- Philippine government over renewing the leases at Subic Bay and
- Clark air base. It could be what Pentagon planners call a
- "win-win" scenario.
- </p>
- <p> Strategy aside, there is a more humane reason for
- recognition. American involvement in Indochina was more than
- just an exercise in global strategy. The desire to help people
- preserve their freedom and improve their lives was an important
- justification for committing U.S. soldiers to battle. The
- lingering pain of Vietnam is due, in part, to the realization
- that the idealism turned sour. For the half-million Vietnam
- vets suffering from post-traumatic-stress disorder and even for
- those who have adjusted well, a U.S. return to Vietnam might
- ameliorate the sense that America left a job unfinished.
- McClellan puts it this way: "Every time we walked down that
- road at the beginning of a patrol, we turned off. I've always
- wondered what was around the next bend. I want to go back
- before I get too old, and walk around that bend to see what's
- there. Then maybe I'll be able to put Vietnam to rest."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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