Category: Vietnam

Whitewashing Down Under: The Vietnam War Fifty Years On – » The Australian Independent Media Network

The biggest blunder in recent history and who do we apologise to and for what? It remains unclear today why we didn’t tell America to fuck off back then.

The Vietnam War tormented and tore the societies who saw fit to participate in it. It defined a generation culturally and politically in terms creative and fractious. And it showed up the rulers to be ignorant rather than bright; blundering fools rather than sages secure in their preaching. Five decades on, the political classes in the United States and Australia are still seeking to find reasons for intervening in a country they scant understood, with a fanatic’s persuasion, and ideologue’s conviction, a moralist’s certainty. Old errors die hard.

Source: Whitewashing Down Under: The Vietnam War Fifty Years On – » The Australian Independent Media Network

‘Random Murder, Rape, and Pillage’: A US Soldier Describes 1968 in Vietnam | The Nation

Brummett told Laird that his unit

did perform on a regular basis, random murder, rape and pillage upon the Vietnamese civilians in Quang Tin Province…with the full knowledge, consent and participation of our Troop Commander.… These incidents included random shelling of villages with 90mm white phosphorus rounds, machine gunning of civilians who had the misfortune to be near when we hit a mine, torture of prisoners, destroying of food and livestock of the villagers if we deemed they had an excess, and numerous burnings of villages for no apparent reason.

I asked Richard Brummett to reflect on Vietnam, the war and the country, and to tell me a little bit about the year that transformed his life and what came after it.

 

via ‘Random Murder, Rape, and Pillage’: A US Soldier Describes 1968 in Vietnam | The Nation

The Hypocrisies of Commemoration: Dispute at Long Tan

One of the stranger sights in international relations is that of a defeated State seeking to commemorate its fallen in a country whose affairs it sought to disrupt. Australia is particularly adept …

Source: The Hypocrisies of Commemoration: Dispute at Long Tan

Why Vietnam objected to the Long Tan commemoration

The battle has remained a sensitive issue for Vietnam’s communist country’s rulers for 50 years.

Source: Why Vietnam objected to the Long Tan commemoration

‘We have America on our side’: How times have changed for Vietnam – The Drum (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)

For Vietnam, surrounded by the ever-constant threat of Chinese paternalism, the American war now seems like a historical anomaly.

Source: ‘We have America on our side’: How times have changed for Vietnam – The Drum (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)

The Almanac Syndicate content RSS Feed Today in Nation history. March 16, 1968: The My Lai Massacre in Vietnam. The Death Cult

My Lai massacre

PFC Capezza shown setting a fire during the My Lai massacre, in which between 300 and 500 Vietnamese civilians were killed. Photo by Ronald Haberle/Wikimedia Commons.

In one of the most shocking of the many American massacres in Vietnam—yet one by no means exceptional in the context of that horrific war, as Nick Turse’s work has shown—hundreds of unarmed civilians were slaughtered in the hamlet of My Lai on this day forty-seven years ago. News of the attack was slow to come to light, but by January of 1970 Richard Falk (now a member of The Nation’s editorial board) was writing about the attack, in an essay titled “The Circle of Responsibility.”

The dramatic disclosure of the Song My massacre has aroused public concern over the commission of war crimes in Vietnam by American military personnel. Such a concern, while certainly appropriate, is insufficient if limited to inquiry and prosecution of the individual servicemen who participated in the monstrous events that may have taken the lives of more than 500 civilians in the My Lai No. 4 hamlet of Song My village on March 16, 1968. Song My stands out as a landmark atrocity in the history of warfare, and its occurrence is a moral challenge to the entire American society….

Given the perils and horrors of the contemporary world, it is time that individuals everywhere called their governments to account for indulging or ignoring the daily evidences of barbarism. We are destroying ourselves by destroying the environment that permits life to flourish, and we are destroying our polity by destroying the values of decency that might allow men eventually to live together in dignity. The obsolete pretensions of sovereign prerogative and military necessity had better be challenged soon if life on earth is to survive.

https://www.scribd.com/doc/258445033/March-16-1968