Perspectives on the Vietnam War and the Iraq War.There is now dissatisfaction, to put it mildly, at the way the Vietnam War Vietnam War, conflict in Southeast Asia, primarily fought in South Vietnam between government forces aided by the United States and guerrilla forces aided by North Vietnam. was and still is wrongly projected and understood by some influential people in the Western media. I wish to share with you the other side of the story and an updated account about Vietnam, the Vietnam that I know. Many public figures have drawn analogies between the Vietnam War and the current Iraq situation. Before making comparisons, before drawing lessons about the Vietnam War in any meaningful way, it is important to understand the Vietnam War from a factual and up to date perspective. The Opposition leader Mr. Mark Latham Mark William Latham (born 28 February 1961), a former Australian politician, was leader of the Federal Parliamentary Australian Labor Party and Leader of the Opposition from December 2003 to January 2005. recently referred to Vietnam when articulating his Iraq policy. He said that the West became involved in the Vietnam War to prevent communism spreading, but that it turned out to be a civil war involving nationalists who wanted unification. He echoed Jim Cairns James Ford Cairns (4 October, 1914 - 12 October, 2003), Australian politician, was prominent in the Labor movement through the 1960s and 1970s, and was briefly Deputy Prime Minister in the Whitlam government. , the Labor leader of the anti-Vietnam War Moratorium movement during the 60s. The whole of the anti-Vietnam war movement anti–Vietnam War movement, domestic and international reaction (1965–73) in opposition to U.S. policy during the Vietnam War. During the four years following passage of the Tonkin Gulf resolution (Aug., 1964), which authorized U.S. arose from the claim, that the Vietnam War was essentially a national revolutionary movement against the South Vietnamese regime, not one fomented or directed by the communist North which, in turn, was being instructed by communist China. (1) Well, the anti-war protesters got their facts wrong. Jim Cairns was wrong then. Mr. Latham is wrong now. The Vietnam War was about preventing communism spreading. The Vietnam War was fomented by the communist North. The communist North was instructed and abetted by communist China and supported by the rest of the communist bloc. This is not merely my view. It has now been admitted by the Communist Party of Vietnam The Communist Party of Vietnam (Đảng Cộng sản Việt Nam) is the currently ruling, as well as the only legal political party in Vietnam. It is a Marxist-Leninist Communist Party supported by (and a part of) the Vietnamese Fatherland Front. . I quote from the Communist Party Communist party, in China Communist party, in China, ruling party of the world's most populous nation since 1949 and most important Communist party in the world since the disintegration of the USSR in 1991. of Vietnam's official biography on Ho Chi Minh Ho Chi Minh (hô chē mĭn), 1890–1969, Vietnamese nationalist leader, president of North Vietnam (1954–69), and one of the most influential political leaders of the 20th cent. His given name was Nguyen That Thanh. : "Ho Chi Minh ... felt the need for active propaganda and organizational work in order to step up the revolutionary movement in colonial countries, including Vietnam. He deemed it his task to spread communist doctrine in Asia in general and in Indochina particularly." (2) In its internal party directive, the Chinese Communist Party Chinese Communist party: see Communist party, in China. Chinese Communist Party (CCP) Political party founded in China in 1921 by Chen Duxiu, Li Dazhao, Mao Zedong, and others. declared its task to be "to assist in every possible way the Communist parties There are, at present, a number of communist parties active in various countries across the world, and a number who used to be active. The formation of communist parties in various countries was first initiated by the formation of the communist Third International by the Russian and people in all oppressed op·press tr.v. op·pressed, op·press·ing, op·press·es 1. To keep down by severe and unjust use of force or authority: a people who were oppressed by tyranny. 2. nations in Asia to win their liberation". (3) That is why, from 1950 to 1978, China gave North Vietnam North Vietnam: see Vietnam. at least 15 to 20 billion U.S. dollars in economic aid, and sent at least 300,000 military and other personnel during the height of the Vietnam war. The famous battle of Dien Bien Phu The Battle of Dien Bien Phu (French: Bataille de Diên Biên Phu; Vietnamese: in 1954 was fought largely with Chinese weapons and under Chinese direction. (4) The Soviet Union also poured billions of rubles into Vietnam. By the 1970s Soviet aid amounted to one billion rubles or more annually, without which the Northern communists could not have continued the war. (5) In his autobiography, Lee Kuan Yew Lee Kuan Yew (lē kwän y , yü), 1923–, prime minister of Singapore (1959–90). noted that Singapore and other
Asian countries were saved from communism by the Vietnam war: (6)
"Although American intervention failed in Vietnam, it bought time for the rest of Southeast Asia. In 1965, when the U.S. military moved massively into South Vietnam, Thailand, Malaysia, and the Philippines faced internal threats from armed communist insurgencies, and the communist underground was still active in Singapore ... America's action [in Vietnam] enabled noncommunist Southeast Asia to put their own houses in order. By 1975, they were in better shape to stand up to the communists. Had there been no U.S. intervention, the will of these countries to resist them would have melted and Southeast Asia would most likely have gone communist. The prosperous emerging market economies of A.S.E.A.N. were nurtured during the Vietnam War years." Time and again, events in Vietnamese history proved that Ho and his communist cohorts used the patriotic feelings of the Vietnamese people The Vietnamese people (Vietnamese: người Việt or người Kinh) are an ethnic group originating from what is now northern Vietnam and southern China. only to further their ends. In the early 40s, Ho founded the Vietminh front, ostensibly os·ten·si·ble adj. Represented or appearing as such; ostensive: His ostensible purpose was charity, but his real goal was popularity. to unite all anti-French forces to fight for independence. But in fact it was under the strong influence and direction of the Indochinese Communist Party, whose role was carefully disguised to alleviate the concern of non-communist elements. (7) The moment independence was within reach, the first people that Ho eliminated were other anti-French nationalist and religious leaders who refused to place themselves under communist command, such as the founder of the Buddhist Hoa Hao Hòa Hảo is a religious tradition based on Buddhism founded in 1939 by Huynh Phu So, a native of the Mekong River Delta region of southern Vietnam. branch, the Most Venerable Huynh Phu So
leader - a person who rules or guides or inspires others American Revolutionary leader - a nationalist leader in the American Revolution and in the creation of the United States and novelist Khai Hung. The method of eliminating these figures varied in its brutality. Many were bound hand and foot and thrown into a river. Some were buried alive. (8) After the declaration of independence in 1945, Ho's troops also placed "at least two hundred opposition figures ... in detention camps". (9) During the Vietnam War, the antiwar an·ti·war adj. Opposed to war or to a particular war: antiwar protests; an antiwar candidate. movement supported the The National Front for the Liberation of South Vietnam This article or section may contain original research or unverified claims. Please help Wikipedia by adding references. See the for details. This article has been tagged since September 2007. “Viet Cong” redirects here. or the Vietcong, thinking it was a national uprising of South Vietnamese dissatisfied with what was perceived by them as the unpopular South Vietnam South Vietnam: see Vietnam. regime. The communist sympathizers in the West actively promoted it as "quite independent from Hanoi". (10) It was in fact a product of the Communist Party, led by a Party veteran, placed under the Party command and was first mentioned publicly in an address in the Party's Third National Congress by the Party elder Ton Duc Thang Ton Duc Thang, 1888–1980, Vietnamese politician. He was an early supporter of Ho Chi Minh and was imprisoned (1929–45) by the French colonial regime. After Vietnamese independence, he rose quickly in the North Vietnamese Communist party. . Again, the Party directive was very clear that there would be no mention of communism. (11) As such, the members of the anti-Vietnam war movement let themselves be deceived by the communists. As such, the whole of the anti-war movement was based on a fallacy. And there were influential people in the West who were willing to propagate that fallacy. Novelist Graham Greene wrote The Quiet American in 1955 in which he denounced America and non-communist South Vietnam as engaged in acts of terrorism against the Vietnamese people. He could not provide any specific, verifiable detail about one such alleged incident on which the whole book was based and which he asserted was a true incident. At the time he wrote that book, thousands of people in the North were killed in the so-called "Land reform" campaign initiated by Ho. Graham Greene was happy to ignore that campaign. But what happened is as follows. In 1954, Vietnam was divided into communist North and non-communist South. The first thing Ho did when he took control of the North was to launch the "Land reform" campaign. Under this campaign, people deemed wealthy were summarily executed. In the communist mentality, being wealthy or successful is a sin because one can only be wealthy or successful by exploiting the labourers. Wealthy means one belongs to the exploiting class, enemy of the working class. In war-torn, impoverished, backward Vietnam, wealthy might involve merely owning a few blocks of land, a brick house or a fabrics shop. This campaign was carried out following the Chinese Maoist model, under the directives of Chinese communist advisors, using Chinese statistics, (12) which set a quota of people who must be declared "class enemies". So there were people who were killed just so that the quota was reached. Estimates of people killed in this campaign ranged from tens to hundreds of thousand, including several thousand people who were Vietminh supporters. (13) Noam Chomsky Noun 1. Noam Chomsky - United States linguist whose theory of generative grammar redefined the field of linguistics (born 1928) A. Noam Chomsky, Chomsky is the leading antiwar, anti-American intellectual. He was described by his like-minded admirer John Pilger as "a humane, thoroughly moral man", someone "who [is committed ] to the principle of free expression". (14) With these views, Chomsky and Pilger saw it as their mission to support the Northern communists who persecuted Vietnamese intellectuals, who imprisoned im·pris·on tr.v. im·pris·oned, im·pris·on·ing, im·pris·ons To put in or as if in prison; confine. [Middle English emprisonen, from Old French emprisoner : en- poets and novelists, who silenced anyone who dared to speak out against the Party line. In 1966, when Chomsky passionately avowed a·vow tr.v. a·vowed, a·vow·ing, a·vows 1. To acknowledge openly, boldly, and unashamedly; confess: avow guilt. See Synonyms at acknowledge. 2. To state positively. "to speak the truth and to expose lies" as a reason for his anti-American, pro-Vietnamese communist stand, (15) North Vietnamese North Vietnam A former country of southeast Asia. It existed from 1954, after the fall of the French at Dien Bien Phu, to 1975, when the South Vietnamese government collapsed at the end of the Vietnam War. It is now part of the country of Vietnam. poet Nguyen Chi Thien Nguyen Chi Thien, born in 1939 in Hanoi, Vietnam is a dissident poet who spent a total of twenty-seven years in imprisonment. Thien started school in private academies. was imprisoned for doing just that, writing the truth and exposing lies by the communists. For this Nguyen Chi Thien was imprisoned for a total of 27 years. Intellectuals in the North had been silenced well before that. In the late 50s, intellectuals within the Communist Party's own ranks, those who fought with the communists against the colonialists, thinking they fought for freedom and national independence, were crushed in a movement known as the "Nhan Van Giai Pham" affair. "Nhan Van" and "Giai Pham" were the names of two literary publications, in which contributors spoke out against the bloody killing during the "Land reform" campaign and the oppression in the North, and were themselves subsequently denounced, terrorized and imprisoned. In the meantime Adv. 1. in the meantime - during the intervening time; "meanwhile I will not think about the problem"; "meantime he was attentive to his other interests"; "in the meantime the police were notified" meantime, meanwhile , To Huu, the Party's favourite poet, was elevated to the rank of Politburo member with such literary gems as: "Stalin! Stalin! I love you ten times more than I love my own father!" The Western media turned what was a military success on the part of the non-communist forces in the South to a political victory for the communists in the crucial propaganda front in the West. During Tet 1968 (the Vietnamese New Year) the communists conducted a surprise attack in South Vietnam's major provinces and capitals. Arnaud de Borchgrave Arnaud de Borchgrave (1926–) is an American journalist who specializes in international politics. He is currently editor at large of The Washington Times and of United Press International. , at the time Newsweek's chief foreign correspondent foreign correspondent n. A correspondent who sends news reports or commentary from a foreign country for broadcast or publication. Noun 1. and in charge of the Tet Offensive Tet offensive, 1968, a series of crucial battles in the Vietnam War. On Jan. 31, 1968, the first day of the celebration of the lunar new year, Vietnam's most important holiday, the Vietnamese Communists launched a major offensive throughout South Vietnam. coverage, reported that it was an unmitigated un·mit·i·gat·ed adj. 1. Not diminished or moderated in intensity or severity; unrelieved: unmitigated suffering. 2. disaster for Hanoi. They lost some 50,000 and at least as many wounded. The South Vietnamese side had some 6,000 casualties. (16) Yet the Western media publicised the carnage of American bodies to a war-weary home audience. They also showed, ad nauseum, the picture of a South Vietnamese soldier shooting a Vietcong, in civilian clothing, point blank. The message was loud and clear--this is the kind of atrocity that the South Vietnamese army did to its own people, with the backing of America. The Western media did not report the massacre of some 4,000 unarmed civil servants and civilians in the old imperial city of Hue committed by the communists, or other similar massacres. Arnaud de Borchgrave wrote, "Several mass graves were found with some 4,000 unarmed civil servants and other civilians, stabbed or with skulls smashed by clubs." (17) The Western media did not show the human carnage which occurred daily in South Vietnam due to the terrorist acts of the communists. (18) General Nguyen Ngoc Loan, the South Vietnamese soldier in the picture, passed away in 1998. Neil Davis Neil Brian Davis (February 14, 1934 - September 9, 1985) was an Australian combat cameraman who achieved worldwide recognition for his work as a photojournalist during the Vietnam War and other Indochinese conflicts. Early life Davis was born in rural Tasmania in 1934. , the courageous Australian war correspondent killed on assignment in Thailand, set out the background to the killing when interviewed for David Bradbury's 1980 documentary, Frontline. The Vietcong shot by General Loan had, not long before this picture was taken, led a team of communist terrorists in a killing spree, killing the whole family of a South Vietnamese officer in the process--including his 80 year old mother, his wife and his small children. How often is the background of this photo explained? Eddie Adams, the Pulitzer-winning photographer who took that picture, apologized in person to General Loan and his family for the irretrievable damage it did to his honor when he was alive. When General Loan died, Adams praised him as a hero of a just cause. Another picture comes to mind every time the Vietnam War is mentioned: that of a naked girl running away from a napalm bomb. In her biography, (19) Kim Phuc, the girl in the picture, described how the communist regime brought her on its money-begging expeditions for her value as a perfect live display of American war atrocities and as a guilt trigger for the West, the way the Elephant Man is valued in a freak show. Kim Phuc escaped from Vietnam and now lives in Canada. General Vo Nguyen Giap Vo Nguyen Giap: see Giap, Vo Nguyen. Vo Nguyen Giap (born 1912, An Xa, Viet.) Vietnamese military leader. He began to work for Vietnamese autonomy as a youth and attended the same high school as Ho Chi Minh. , in his memoirs, admitted that news media reporting of the war and the anti-war demonstrations that followed the Tet Offensive surprised him. Communist colonel Bui Tin was among the North Vietnamese delegates who accepted the surrender of South Vietnam. He made clear that "the anti-war movement in the United States, which led to the collapse of political will in Washington, was essential to our strategy". Bui Tin defected to the West and now lives in America. He is now among the most outspoken critics of the Vietnamese communist dictatorship. In 1975, while the anti-war camp cheered on the communist victory, North Vietnamese poet Nguyen Chi Thien, in his dark cell, wept: (20) "O South Vietnam ever since that day of your loss I have experienced a thousand, ten thousand agonies!" When the so called "Liberation army" of the communists came to South Vietnam, their first act of "liberation" was to conduct mass arrests and mass persecution of South Vietnamese. They put more than one million of their "unified brothers" in the horrible concentration camps. ("Over the past three years, we have liberated more than one million people who were guilty of collaborating with the enemy one way or another": interview of the then Vietnamese Prime Minister Pham Van Dong Pham Van Dong: see Dong, Pham Van. by Jean-Claude Labbe. (21)) Millions of South Vietnamese women and children suddenly became husbandless and fatherless. In 1979, a B.B.C. news bulletin reported that Vietnam held more political prisoners than any other country in the world. The "Liberation army" appropriated people's properties, shops and factories, nationalized all means of production Means Of Production is a compilation of Aim's early 12" and EP releases, recorded between 1995 and 1998. Track listing
When North Vietnam was put under the control of the communists in 1954, one million people fled the North to the South. When the whole country was taken over by the communists in 1975, nearly two million Vietnamese refugees from both the North and the South fled the country by boat and caused shock waves around the world. An estimated half a million people, or even more, perished at sea in their desperate journey for freedom. I am among the survivors of those perilous journeys. Before the communist invasion, South Vietnam was far from a fully-fledged democracy, but a framework for democracy was established, with the four governing institutions--constitution, executive, legislative and judicial--operating independently. With all the difficulties, the limitations and the set-backs of a country at war, even in times of most political unrest, South Vietnam's free market economy was growing and the right to private property was respected. Society was guided by the rule of law. There were basic freedoms, including freedom of information and freedom of the press. Several dozen newspapers were privately run: Chinh Luan, Saigon Times, Le Journal D'Extreme Orient (French for Far Eastern Journal) were known for their independence. An army of foreign correspondents was given full freedom to cover the war. Political freedom was allowed, a pluralistic, multiparty system was in place, and parties other than the ruling party were allowed to operate. But a clear line was drawn in relation to communism: communist activities were outlawed and communist elements were harshly dealt with. The Western media did not like this. The communist sympathizers in the West made much of it. The anti-war protesters saw it as an excuse to denounce the South Vietnam government as repressive. They disregarded the fact that South Vietnam was in a life or death battle with a most dangerous and ruthless enemy. Those were harsh but necessary measures in times of war, where national security is of utmost priority. Freedom does not include freedom to engage in terrorism. Now after thirty years, what has communism brought to the Vietnamese people? Vietnam has now declined to the rank of the poorest and most corrupt countries in the world. Before the end of the war, South Vietnam was on a par with other developing countries in the region. Its annual per capital income was $500, worth $4,000 in 2004 dollars. Now, after 30 years of "liberation", the annual per capita income Noun 1. per capita income - the total national income divided by the number of people in the nation income - the financial gain (earned or unearned) accruing over a given period of time has declined to $470. Hanoi has money to send two military divisions to Laos to crush anti-communist uprisings but has no money to feed children. Unicef has reported an alarming number of Vietnamese children forced into prostitution, some as young as five or six years old. After thirty years of peace, intellectuals, artists, Buddhist monks, Catholic priests, religious followers, tribal people, and even communist veterans are subject to summary arrests, torture, killing, harassment and imprisonment Imprisonment See also Isolation. Alcatraz Island former federal maximum security penitentiary, near San Francisco; “escapeproof.” [Am. Hist.: Flexner, 218] Altmark, the German prison ship in World War II. [Br. Hist. for their peaceful demands for freedom. The Unified Buddhist Church The Unified Buddhist Church (Eglise Bouddhique Unifieé) was founded by Thich Nhat Hanh in France in 1969, during the Vietnam War (not part of the Unified Buddhist Church of Vietnam). of Vietnam has been banned from operation, church properties are confiscated con·fis·cate tr.v. con·fis·cat·ed, con·fis·cat·ing, con·fis·cates 1. To seize (private property) for the public treasury. 2. To seize by or as if by authority. See Synonyms at appropriate. adj. , the church's 84 years old patriarch, the Most Ven. Thich Huyen Quang, was arrested and has been in internal exile for over twenty years TWENTY YEARS. The lapse of twenty years raises a presumption of certain facts, and after such a time, the party against whom the presumption has been raised, will be required to prove a negative to establish his rights. 2. . Thirty-two year old journalist for The Journal of Communism, Nguyen Vu Binh, was sentenced to seven years in prison for advocating democracy and individual liberty. During Easter this year, 280 Christian highlanders were killed in a peaceful mass prayer protest for religious freedom and for the return of their ancestral lands appropriated by the authority. The voice of protest against the grave violations of human rights in Vietnam In its 2004 report on Human Rights Practices, the U.S. Department of State characterized Vietnam’s human rights record as “poor” and cited the continuation of “serious abuses. can now be heard around the world. Amnesty International Amnesty International (AI,) human-rights organization founded in 1961 by Englishman Peter Benenson; it campaigns internationally against the detention of prisoners of conscience, for the fair trial of political prisoners, to abolish the death penalty and torture of , Human Rights Watch, the United Nations, Rome, Pen International, Journalists without Frontier, the Montagnard Foundation, the U.S. Congress, Australian parliamentarians with their recent M.P.s for Vietnam initiative, the European Parliament, the German Parliament and the Italian Parliament, are amongst those expressing horror at what is occurring. Amid all these voices of protest, the silence from the anti-Vietnam War camp is deadening. The heartfelt sentiments expressed in the anti-war protests--to fight for freedom from oppression, to put an end to to destroy. - Fuller. See also: End exploitation--are nowhere to be heard, now that the most brutal acts of oppression and exploitation are committed by the communists. Those who supported the communists during the war out of ignorance still refuse to acknowledge the stark evidence stacked right in front of them. Their doggedness is astonishing a·ston·ish tr.v. as·ton·ished, as·ton·ish·ing, as·ton·ish·es To fill with sudden wonder or amazement. See Synonyms at surprise. . Communist Party members, even communist war-time leaders such as General Tran Do, former Ho Chi Minh's bodyguard Tran Dung Tien and former Director of the Marxist-Leninist Institute Hoang Minh Chinh have been locked up, persecuted or put under house arrest for advocating real democracy. They are typical of the life-long revolutionaries who have come to regret the policies of the Vietnamese Communist Party and the wasted sacrifices for the war and socialism. Duong Thu Huong was a Communist Party member until she started writing novels on government corruption and the abuse of power. She was imprisoned and now is an outspoken dissident. This is what she had to say about the communist government in an interview with A.B.C. television's Foreign Correspondent's reporter: (22) "The good people who upheld ideals have all died away. Their successors today are all mean and cunning thieves. People in power are involved in drug trafficking and smuggling and use the regime's power to grab people's properties. They embezzle public funds and national assets to monopolise the business market ... Each of them has buildings to rent to foreigners and a lot of wealth ... I myself choose to be a rebel ... That is my revenge for those who died unjustly, in vain in the anti-American war." In the meantime, Philip Noyce, Australian film maker and a self-confessed "dyed-in-the-wool" leftist left·ism also Left·ism n. 1. The ideology of the political left. 2. Belief in or support of the tenets of the political left. left , went to Vietnam in 2002 to a red carpet treatment red carpet treatment n → réception f en grande pompe red carpet treatment red n to give sb the red carpet treatment → den roten Teppich für jdn ausrollen from the Vietnamese dictatorship for his remake of the film The Quiet American, with its deceptive, out-of-date and out-of-place propaganda sanctifying the Vietnamese communists as their nation's saviour. In the meantime, Amnesty International's request to visit hundreds of P.O.C.s in Vietnam has been consistently rejected. It was the pressure from the antiwar movement that forced the U.S. administration to pull troops out of Vietnam. Largely because of their action, 80 million Vietnamese people are now doomed to oppression. Are we going to let this happen to Iraq? There must be a responsible exit strategy for Iraq. Any troop pull-out should be a process that happens gradually, and not before the Iraqi national security is built up and its governing institutions are strengthened. Building a democracy is not an overnight undertaking. It should not be subject to a deadline. After decades under Saddam Hussein's brutality, after so much destruction from the war, the Iraqi people deserve something better then a society run by fundamentalists. The escalation of violence in Iraq means that more help is needed so that the Iraqi people can build a society which respects freedom and human rights and is based on the rule of law. These are universal values which should rise above the traditional left-right division and should not be caught between the simplistic sim·plism n. The tendency to oversimplify an issue or a problem by ignoring complexities or complications. [French simplisme, from simple, simple, from Old French; see simple pro--or anti-American labelling in political discourse. The recent Iraqi prisoners scandal is a disgrace, the way the My Lai massacre My Lai Massacre (March 16, 1968) Mass killing of as many as 500 unarmed villagers by U.S. soldiers in the hamlet of My Lai during the Vietnam War. A company of U.S. soldiers on a search-and-destroy mission against the hamlet found no armed Viet Cong there but nonetheless in Vietnam was a disgrace to the American army. Are these acts excusable in any way? No. Are they justifiable in any way? No. But should this incident shake the belief in a free and democratic system in any way? No. It is thanks to that system that these details are aired in public: this is a confirmation that we have freedom of the press and freedom of expression, and that we have a justice system to hold those responsible accountable. We extend justice even to our enemy, the kind of justice Saddam Hussein and the Vietnamese communists denied their own people. This system of ours is not perfect, human beings are not perfect, but under our system there is the chance for progress, for improvement, for rectification. An Iraqi society based on the principles of freedom, human rights and the rule of law will allow the Iraqi people to progress. For the Vietnamese people, the My Lai incident My Lai incident (mē lī), in the Vietnam War, a massacre of Vietnamese civilians by U.S. soldiers. On Mar. 16, 1968, a unit of the U.S. army Americal division, led by Lt. William L. and the rest of the smear campaign conducted by the anti-Vietnam war camp against American involvement in Vietnam cannot blight the truth: that our struggle against communism is a just cause. To strive for freedom, democracy and human rights is a worthy aspiration. The Vietnam War against the communist invasion was a just war. 50,000 American soldiers, 504 Australian soldiers and 185,000 soldiers from the South Vietnamese army died in a just cause. They are heroes in the heart of the Vietnamese people. They died to defend the yellow flag with three red stripes, the flag of free Vietnam. Statues to commemorate their sacrifice have been erected in the United States and in Australia by the Vietnamese community. After so much suffering, the Vietnamese people deserve some happiness. That is why the Vietnamese communities are joining hands with human rights organizations around the world to demand human rights and to continue our struggle to reclaim freedom and democracy for the Vietnamese people. We are fervent believers in freedom and democracy. Because we have experienced the alternative. (1.) Paul Strangio, Keeper of the Faith: A biography of Jim Cairns (Melbourne University Press, 2002), page 141. (2.) Communist Party of Vietnam's website at www.cpv.org.vn/hochiminh_en/biography/ docs/chapter3.htm (3.) Qiang Zhai, China and the Vietnam Wars 1950-1975 (University of North Carolina Press The University of North Carolina Press (or UNC Press), founded in 1922, is a university press that is part of the University of North Carolina. External link
(4.) Immanuel C.Y. Hsu Immanuel Chung-Yueh Hsü (1923- October 24,2005, 徐中約) was a sinologist, a scholar of modern Chinese intellectual and diplomatic history, and a professor of history at the University of California at Santa Barbara. , The Rise of Modern China (Oxford University Press, 1995), pages 795-96. (5.) Spencer C. Tucker, Encyclopedia of the Vietnam War (ABC-CLIO, 2000), page 415. (6.) Lee Kuan Yew, From Third World to First: The Singapore Story, 1965-2000 (Harper Collins, 2000), pages 467 and 573. (7.) William Duiker duiker (dī`kər, dā`–), name for members of a group of small, light antelopes, found in thick brush and forest over most of Africa. All stand under 25 in. (64 cm) high at the shoulder. , Ho Chi Minh (Allen & Unwin, 2000), page 245. (8.) James Banerian, Losers are Pirates : A close look at the PBS PBS in full Public Broadcasting Service Private, nonprofit U.S. corporation of public television stations. PBS provides its member stations, which are supported by public funds and private contributions rather than by commercials, with educational, cultural, series "Vietnam : a television history" (Phoenix, Arizona: Sphinx sphinx (sfĭngks), mythical beast of ancient Egypt, frequently symbolizing the pharaoh as an incarnation of the sun god Ra. The sphinx was represented in sculpture usually in a recumbent position with the head of a man and the body of a lion, Publishing, 1985), page 69. Duiker, op. cit., page 376. (9.) Duiker, op. cit., page 386. (10.) Robert Manne, The Shadow of 1917 (The Text Publishing Company, 1994), page 86. (11.) Duiker, op. cit., page 527. (12.) Duiker, op. cit., page 477. (13.) Duiker, op. cit., page 476. (14.) John Pilger, Distant Voices (Vintage, 1992), page 341. (15.) Noam Chomsky's February 1967 essay, "The Responsibility of Intellectuals", referred to in his American Power and the New Mandarins, (The New Press, 2002), foreword. (16.) Arnaud de Borchgrave, "A mini-Tet Offensive?", The Washington Times, 16 April 2004. (17.) Arnaud de Borchgrave, ibid. (18.) Dr. M. W. J. M. Broekmeijer, The Vietcong Passed By and South Vietnam: Victim of Misunderstanding (Voorburg, Netherlands: Asia Publishing, 1971). (19.) Denise Chong, The Girl in ihe Picture: The Story of Kim Phuc, (Viking Press, 1998). (20.) Nguyen Chi Thien, The Flowers of Hell (VCANA, 1996), page 397. (21.) Paris Match, September 1978. (22.) Transcript of ABC ABC in full American Broadcasting Co. Major U.S. television network. It began when the expanding national radio network NBC split into the separate Red and Blue networks in 1928. television's Foreign Correspondent programme: "Daring to speak out". |
|
||||||||||||||||

, yü)
Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion