The Vietnam War
A film directed by
Ken Burns &
Lynn Novick
A review
The
Burns—Novick documentary titled The
Vietnam War has many problems. When we begin to view this film, the very
title, The Vietnam War, appears to be
a problem.
The
nation known as the United States of America became a nation because of a
revolutionary war for independence. The Declaration
of Independence outlined the reasons for the revolution. The following words were taken from that document.
“Prudence, indeed, will dictate that Governments long
established should not be changed for light and transient causes; and
accordingly all experience hath shewn, that mankind are more disposed to
suffer, while evils are sufferable, than to right themselves by abolishing the
forms to which they are accustomed. But when a long train of abuses and
usurpations, pursuing invariably the same Object evinces a design to reduce
them under absolute Despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw
off such Government, and to provide new Guards for their future security.”
Looking
at the totality of this film, we see how there was indeed a “long train of
abuses” established by puppet governments that were supported by the French and
United States governments. So, a more accurate title of this so-called
documentary would have been, The
Vietnamese Revolution. However, that title would have undermined the theme
of the film.
This
is just one of many examples of how the theme of this film contradicts the
story that the film portrays. So, first I will look at the theme of the film,
and then I’m going to look at the story portrayed by the film.
First,
we can say that most of this film is portrayed from the perspective of the
United States. Yes, there are extensive interviews with the Vietnamese where we
see a bit of their perspective. However, a basic theme of this film is about
how the United States government made a series of horrendous mistakes that led
to it’s defeat in Vietnam.
For
me, the theme of this film was best portrayed in the funeral of Pascal Cleatus
Poolaw Sr. who was a United States soldier who lost his life in Vietnam. Poolaw
was a decorated soldier in World War II, Korea, and Vietnam. His three sons
were also soldiers who served in Vietnam. He was also a Native American of the
Kiowa nation.
At
his funeral, his wife Irene had this to say:
“He
has followed the trail of the great chiefs.
His
people hold him in honor and highest esteem.
He
has given his life for the people and country he loved so much.”
So,
we see a clear and unequivocal message in this funeral. A highly respected member
of the Kiowa nation gave his life because he loved the United States as well as
all the people who live here.
This
documentary failed to mention the history of the Kiowa people. The Kiowa are
one of hundreds of Native American nations who actively fought against a
genocidal war of the United States government for over 100 years. Their leaders
were murdered and sent to prison. The government signed treaties with the Kiowa
that allowed them to live on reservations. The U.S. government has acknowledged
that it violated hundreds of these treaties with Native Americans.
So,
while I respect Pascal Poolaw’s decision to support the war against Vietnam, I
do not agree that this war supported the interests of the people of this
country.
What are the facts this film uncovers that in no way support
the theme presented by Burns and Novick?
We
can start with the number of people of Southeast Asia who were murdered because
of the war. The film gives a number of five-million deaths during about eight
years of the war against Vietnam. This number is equivalent to about half of
the population of the cities of New York or Los Angeles.
We
can also look at this horrendous number of five-million deaths from the point
of view of the My Lai Massacre. On March 16, 1968 soldiers from Charlie Company
under the command of Lieutenant William Calley murdered about 500 unarmed
Vietnamese civilians. These murders only stopped when Warrant Officer Hugh
Thompson landed his helicopter between the murdered Vietnamese and Charlie Company.
Thompson said that his crew would fire on Charlie Company if they continued to
murder the Vietnamese.
Several
members of Charlie Company went on trial for these murders. Only Lieutenant
William Calley served time for this horrendous crime. Calley served three years
under house arrest.
The
Burns–Novick documentary failed to do the basic arithmetic that places the My
Lai Massacre in perspective. The war against Vietnam lasted about eight years.
Burns and Novick estimated that about five-million people lost their lives
because of the war. Most, if not all these deaths were because of the United
States invasion of the region.
So,
if we divide five-million by 365 days of a year, and then divide that number by
the eight years of the war, we get a number of 1,712 deaths for every day of
the war. This means that there were the equivalent of more than three My Lai
Massacres for every day of the eight years of the war against Vietnam.
We
can also see from the facts presented by Burns and Novick that this massive
number of deaths was no accident of war. The documentary shows how the U.S.
government had a goal of reaching a “crossover point.” This crossover point was
a goal to murder so many Vietnamese that the liberation forces would be unable
to continue the war.
The
administration of Lyndon Johnson reached this crossover point and believed that
they were winning the war in 1967. Then, the Vietnamese launched the Tet
Offensive and attacked the over 500,000 U.S. soldiers at every location where
they were stationed.
This
horrendous number of deaths needs to be contrasted to the claims by the United
States government that this war was about giving aid to Vietnam. Clearly there
were many U.S. soldiers in Vietnam like Warrant Officer Hugh Thompson who
honestly wanted to aid the Vietnamese. As we have seen, Thompson threatened
Charlie Company if they continued the My Lai Massacre.
The
U.S. forces also constructed infrastructure projects that helped modernize the
country. President Johnson argued that the Mekong River could be used to
generate massive amounts of electricity.
However,
Johnson’s hypocrisy was exposed in a private conversation he had with the CEO
of the CBS broadcasting company. One of CBS’s reporters, Maurice Shaffer,
reported on a story of how U.S. soldiers were burning the homes of Vietnamese
civilians.
After
this story went on the air, President Johnson made a phone call to the CEO of
CBS. Johnson asked this CEO, “Are you trying to f––– me?" Johnson then
demanded that CBS fire Shaffer because he reported this story. The Johnson
administration then labeled CBS as the “Communist Broadcast Service.”
What
was the horrendous crime Maurice Shaffer committed? He reported the truth about
what was happening in Vietnam. Given President Johnson’s response to this
story, we see how reporting the truth was completely unacceptable to the United
States government.
We
can also think about a statement by President Eisenhower. The United Nations
had mandated Vietnam to have an election while Eisenhower was president. The
U.S. government prevented this election from taking place. Eisenhower argued
that if these elections had been allowed, the leader of the liberation forces,
Ho Chi Minh, would have won about 90% of the vote.
The liberation of Vietnam
A
legitimate question to be asked is: How did the Vietnamese people manage to
decisively defeat the most powerful armed force in the history of the world?
First,
we can say that the U.S. government did manage to use their influence and
military might to overturn several democratically elected governments in the
world. Some of those governments include: Arbenz in Guatemala, Lumumba in the
Congo, Mosaddegh in Iran, and Allende in Chile.
However,
the Vietnamese people had experienced literally centuries of foreign rule by
the Chinese, Japanese, French, and the United States. Yes, we can find many
problems with the leadership of the National Liberation Front in Vietnam.
However, their leadership combined with the will of the Vietnamese people to
resist further foreign domination proved to be a force a United States was
unable to defeat.
In
this film, a U.S. officer was asked about the fighting capabilities of the
Vietnamese liberation soldiers. He responded that they were the best soldiers
he had ever seen and wished that he could have 200 soldiers with their
abilities and determination.
We
should also mention the challenges the NLF soldiers faced. The U.S. had an
immense advantage in the fact that it dominated the air war. When U.S. soldiers
were trapped they could make a call to headquarters and order a bombing raid of
the Vietnamese positions.
Oftentimes
the U.S. air force dropped napalm on these targets. One U.S. airman observed
Vietnamese soldiers firing at his aircraft moments before napalm bombs burned
them to death.
In
the book The Tunnels of Cu Chi by
John Penycate and Tom Mangold we see how the Vietnamese built an extensive
tunnel system. They used these tunnels to ambush their enemies and then retreat
without ever being discovered. Some Vietnamese soldiers lived in these tunnels
for years. These tunnels were also equipped with machine shops and
hospitals.
Because
of the U.S. advantage in the air, Vietnamese forces developed a strategy of
engaging with their enemy in close quarters. This strategy neutralized the
advantage of the air because air raids would kill U.S. soldiers as well as the
Vietnamese.
We
also see how the Vietnamese mobilized to rebuild the north after massive U.S.
bombing raids. The U.S. government thought that these raids would neutralize
the NLF. Washington would learn that it was the U.S. armed forces that would be
forced to leave Vietnam.
The international anti-war movement
Initially
the overwhelming majority of the population in the United States supported the
war. As the war continued, growing numbers of people were won to the demand of
total, complete, and immediate withdrawal of all U.S. forces from Vietnam.
While
the U.S. government increased the number of soldiers they sent to Vietnam,
people viewed televised reports of the gruesome realities of the war. Under
these circumstances, it was only natural that large numbers of people joined in
demonstrations opposed to the war. Towards the end, about eighty percent of the
U.S. population opposed the war and supported the demand of bringing the troops
home.
Many
veterans of the war joined in the anti-war demonstrations and became leaders of
the movement. There were reports that returning veterans were spit on by those
who opposed the war. Apparently these reports were a complete lie designed to
slander the anti-war movement. As far as I know, there was not a single
incident where a soldier was spit on by someone who opposed the war.
To
the contrary, anti-war protesters were murdered by the U.S. armed forces at
Kent State, Jackson State, and in Los Angeles, California. These murders
demonstrated that the government was more interested in stopping the anti-war
demonstrations than they were interested in defending the constitutional right
of freedom of speech.
The
best source of information on the anti-war movement in the United States is by
a leader of the movement, Fred Halstead, titled Out Now: A participant’s account of the movement in the United States
against the Vietnam War.
Rebellions erupt in cities across the United States
We
might also mention that at the same time as the Vietnamese were fighting for
their liberation, Black people engaged in literally hundreds of rebellions in
cities across this country.
We
can start by recalling the Montgomery Bus Boycott. On December 1, 1955 Rosa
Parks was arrested for refusing to sit in the back of a bus in Montgomery,
Alabama. The ensuing Montgomery Bus Boycott lasted 385 days and Black workers
of that city walked for miles to work rather than sit on segregated buses.
We
might also think about the fact that on May 7, 1954 the French military forces
stationed at Dien Bien Phu surrendered to the Vietnamese. This French defeat
was the beginning of the end of the French occupation of Vietnam.
By
1965 the civil rights movement had so much influence that the government was
effectively forced to adopt the Civil Rights and Voting Rights Acts. These laws
effectively overturned the segregationist Jim Crow laws that had denied Black
people citizenship rights.
However,
discrimination continued to exist throughout the United States. Black people
were fed up with discrimination in housing, employment, and education. It was
the issue of police brutality sparked open rebellions.
The
recent film Detroit documented how
police officers of that city kidnapped and then murdered unarmed residents in
the year 1967. These officers were never convicted of those murders. Over 50
people lost their lives in the Detroit rebellions largely because of the
National Guard invasion of that city.
In
this same year a rebellion broke out in my hometown of Newark, New Jersey. I
was fourteen years old at the time. At the time the National Guard had tanks
running up and down the streets of Newark. Out of more than twenty people who
were murdered during the rebellions, three were children.
If I
had a different skin color and lived a short distance from our residence, I
might have been one of the children murdered by the National Guard. Yet, when I
graduated from high school a few years later, the government required me to
register for the draft to fight in the war against Vietnam.
We
might also consider that while the U.S. government was ordering federal troops
into the cities of this country, this same government ordered the Air Force to
carry out Operation Rolling-Thunder in
Vietnam. This was a bombing campaign aimed a crippling the economy of North
Vietnam. As the rebellions in this country continued the Vietnamese forces of
the NLF carried out their Tet Offensive where
they attacked every U.S. military base in their homeland.
One
Black soldier who was interviewed in the film said that he lost his fear in
Vietnam. While he was stationed there, he felt that death was almost a
certainty.
When
this soldier returned to this country, he was ordered to join the National Guard
troops that were occupying the Black community. He refused to obey this order.
Martin
Luther King gave a speech in 1967 where he opposed the war. In this speech King
argued that given the immense damage the U.S. had done to their country, the
people of Vietnam must have thought that the U.S. armed forces were “strange
liberators.”
Malcolm
X talked about the Vietnamese freedom fighters in the following passage:
“You
think you can win in South Vietnam? The French were deeply entrenched. They had
the best weapons of warfare, a highly mechanized army, everything that you
would need. And the guerrillas come out of the rice paddies with nothing but
sneakers on and a rifle and a bowl of rice. And you know what they did in Dien
Bien Phu. They ran the French out of there. And if the French were deeply
entrenched and couldn’t stay there, then how do you think someone else is going
to stay there who isn’t even there yet?”
Why did the United States government go to war against Vietnam?
This
question was answered in a pamphlet written by Vladimir Illyich Lenin in the
year 1917 decades before the war against Vietnam erupted. The title of this
pamphlet is Imperialism: The Highest
Stage of Capitalism.
Lenin
was raised in tsarist Russia and learned first hand about the effects of
imperialist exploitation. At that time the French working class had made gains
and French capitalists responded to these gains by building factories in
Russia.
The
working conditions in these factories were so horrendous it is difficult to
even imagine. We are talking about sixteen hour working days where women
received wages that were half of what men were paid. Women worked through their
pregnancies and oftentimes delivered their children in the factory. Children
routinely staved to death because their mothers were malnourished.
Lenin
understood that these conditions didn’t exist because individual capitalists
made mistakes where they weren’t sensitive to the needs of workers. No, he
argued that these conditions existed because the capitalist system is driven to
cut costs and to obsessively work towards world domination.
Lenin
also saw how the First World War erupted as a direct consequence of this need
by capitalists of competing nations to dominate the world. With the decline of
the British empire, Germany and the United States went to war in order to
decide which nation would dominate the world.
When
we look at the war against Vietnam from this perspective, we can see how
government officials in the United States were driven to win the war in spite
of their clear hesitations about their capability of achieving this goal.
Imperialism doesn’t happen because of bad government decisions, but because it
is necessary to the capitalist system.
Remembering
the days of the war against Vietnam, there was one fact that stood out to me.
The United States spent about 350 billion dollars on the war. Had even one
tenth of that amount been used in unconditional aid to Vietnam, the war not
only would have been avoided, but we would be living in a much better world.
However, I can’t even remember one media outlet that made this argument.
As
Lenin once said: If capitalism were to have a genuine interest in feeding
hungry people, it wouldn’t be capitalism.
Communism
The
U.S. government argued that the reason for the war was to “stop the spread of
communism.” Since I’ve been a communist for the past 45 years, I believe I can
offer some insight to this question.
I
have been lucky that I’ve never served time in prison. This is becoming
increasingly difficult for more and more workers in this country. However, the
socialist Eugene Debs did serve three years in prison for giving a speech
against U.S. participation in the First World War. Eighteen members of the
Socialist Workers Party served time in prison because of their position in
opposition to U.S. participation in the Second World War.
We
might think about the fact that the idea of freedom of speech is supposed to be
guaranteed by the First Amendment of the Constitution.
Today
the nation of Cuba follows a Marxist point of view. Cuba has more doctors and
teachers per capita than any other nation in the world. Education and health
care are rights that every Cuban is
entitled to. Yet Cuba is a relatively underdeveloped nation.
Not
only does Cuba have more doctors and teachers, but that nation has trained
thousands of doctors from all over the world. The only payment Cuba expects
from these doctors is that they give medical care to communities that lack
these services.
I
happened to be in Cuba this year and was a member of 2017 May Day Brigade where
people from all over the world came to learn about the Cuban reality. On May
Day, I witnessed over one million Cubans giving their enthusiastic support to
the government.
The
recent hurricane Irma did a tremendous amount of damage to Cuba. However, Cuba
sent it’s doctors to the other Caribbean islands to aid in their recovery.
The
United States had a different policy with respect to it’s colony in Puerto
Rico. Recently the Puerto Rican government instituted massive cutbacks in order
to pay off an astronomical debt of the island. Then, a hurricane hit Puerto
Rico that eliminated all electrical power and most cell phone service.
Residents now collect rainwater so they might be able to flush their toilets.
The
United States government has responded to this crisis by sending 3,000 troops
to Afghanistan. The war against Afghanistan is already the longest war in U.S.
history.
When
we look at this history there is one inescapable conclusion. Communism in no
way is a threat to working people in this country. In my opinion, what we need
in the United States is a government that makes human needs and not profits the
top priority.
Conclusion
Today
many people in this country have big problems with the seemingly mindless
chatter coming out of the Donald Trump administration. When we think about
these seemingly idiotic statements, we might also think about the reality of
what the government of this country did to Vietnam.
Thinking
about that reality, I believe that we can say clearly that the administration
of Donald Trump isn’t the only problem facing working people in this country
and around the world.
I
believe that we need a government that will never go to war against poor people
ever again. What we need is a government that makes it their top priority to
eliminate poverty throughout the world.
I
will end this blog with one of my favorite quotations from the novelist and
social critic, James Baldwin.
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“Power,
then, which can have no morality itself, is yet dependent on human energy, on
the wills and desires of human beings.
When power translates itself into tyranny, it means that the principles
on which that power depended, and which were its justification, are bankrupt. When this happens, and it is happening now, power
can only be defended by thugs and mediocrities––and seas of blood. The representatives of the status quo are sickened and divided, and
dread looking into the eyes of their young; while the excluded begin to
realize, having endured everything, that they can endure everything. They
do not know the precise shape of the future, but they know that the future
belongs to them. They realize
this––paradoxically––by the failure of the moral energy of their oppressors and
begin, almost instinctively, to forge a new morality, to create the principals
on which a new world will be built.”