http://www.huffingtonpost.com/rick-ayers-/the-curse-of-vietnam-now-_b_695830.html
Rick Ayers
September 8, 2010
A review of recent fiction about Vietnam, specifically the Vietnam
war, points out something important: the US gets involved in fights
around the world, generally with the idea of maintaining our "way of
life" and our economic power; we never seem to take the time to
understand the "other" -- the inscrutable enemies who seem to always
foul up our plans for American style democracy; and our failure to
come to terms with what happened in to us Vietnam -- militarily yes,
but also culturally, psychologically, morally -- condemns us to make
the same mistakes, to be unable to understand or extricate ourselves
from the new counterinsurgency wars -- Iraq and Afghanistan. If we
look at the continuing stream of American fiction coming out with a
focus on Vietnam, we can see how the US has been unable to process or
make amends for that genocidal war -- and we pay for it today.
I am one of those millions of Americans who started out thinking the
war was a bad idea and ended up feeling that the Vietnamese
revolution, like the anti-colonialist wars in Africa (including South
Africa) and Latin America, were on the right side and should be
supported. The US military was not just a bunch of well-meaning guys
who made some blunders. They were perpetrating horrendous crimes. And
people like Henry Kissinger, who calmly calculated the political
effects of carpet bombings of civilians, should be on trial. Again,
does that mean I hated the GIs? Not at all. I worked with GIs
throughout the war and afterwards. They mostly condemned the war, and
we do them a disservice to perpetuate the myths that will get another
generation sent into the maw. I suggest you Netflix the documentary
Sir No Sir, which gives a good picture of the GI and veteran antiwar movement.
As hard as it is to absorb and accept, it is likely that had the GI's
been successful, if they had swept through the countryside and
subdued it, if raping and killing had worked, the world would be a
more dehumanized place, and they would be worse people. They would be
the disgusting braggarts of imperial conquest, happy with the
whorehouses and the tales of atrocities. By losing that war, they
were open to finding their own humanity. I don't mean that I am happy
with even one casualty inflicted on Americans -- I know many who were
and are casualties. But the only thing worse than losing in Vietnam
would have been winning.
While there is a national project of honoring (and narrowly defining)
the Vietnam vets now, it is primarily in order to line up more young
men and women to be wounded and killed in new adventures. And, to our
discredit, there is no ratified cultural process of honoring the many
anti-war activists who also fought in this conflict -- in fact, on
the right side. So the anti-war activists who were cut down at Kent
State and Jackson State, the others who were killed in resistance
actions, the Panthers who were set up and killed in an explicit FBI
project, the GI's who were put on point and blown away for professing
opposition to the war, the suicides, the despair -- these veterans
are ignored or vilified in our mainstream discussions of the war.
All this distance, all this willful ignorance, matters deeply.
Because if you don't have the ability to recognize that you have lost
a war, if you don't try to understand the whys and wherefores of it,
you are certainly not working on correcting the tragic and terrible
choices that made the war happen. Even this, the simple statement
that the US lost the war, is a controversial comment in public
discourse. Americans can barely choke out this obvious fact. And the
many international and national forums that judged US actions and
found them to be criminal and unconscionable are slowly fading from memory.
It is important, however, for us to face this reality. Germany went
through decades of soul-searching, guilt (appropriate guilt) and
struggle after World War II. They did this on both sides, the Eastern
and Western Germanys. They wrote novels, made movies, and carried out
endless public discussions about the horrors they had committed and
how to repair the damage. And they came out of it with some deeper
(imperfect, but better) understandings -- about everything from the
question of what a nation is or should be among other nations, the
limits of power, the ethical responsibilities of individuals, and
much more. And you would never see a German military officer writing
a PhD dissertation on the mistakes that were made in the Eastern
Front -- how they might have done better on the siege of Leningrad,
and more effective plans for the invasion of England. Such a
discourse would be impossible now.
But the US military, bolstered by a public relations campaign that
suggests we were the injured party in Vietnam, that defeat was
snatched from the jaws of victory by appeasers and weak-willed
politicians, did go right back to the drawing boards to plan the next
Vietnam. General Petraeus was allowed to write a PhD dissertation
that looked at how to fight the next counterinsurgency war. And he
was unleashed to try out this fine idea on the backs of hundreds of
thousands of dead Iraqis and Afghans -- as well as more US soldiers.
The elements of this so-called strategy, it seems, are simple matters
of upping the violence and tamping down political opposition. Some of
the brilliant "new" ideas of this military genius include:
controlling the media through the process of embedding and co-opting
reporters; eliminating the draft so the middle and upper classes do
not feel the direct effects of the war; implementing massive
assassination projects and unmanned drone missile attacks; utilizing
advanced electronic surveillance; and creating pacification zones in
the name of defending the civilian population. Since civilians are
mostly in danger from the invading forces, however, this last element
is mostly a publicity effort but something that gains no traction on
the ground in these countries.
While American idiocy in the Middle East maps on well to the disaster
of Vietnam, clearly there are huge differences between the Vietnamese
and the Afghan or Iraqi resistance. What they have in common is
America's blinkered inability to understand them. What do the
Taliban, the Mahdi Army, or the Sunni insurgency have in common?
Their ability to defeat the US by simply not surrendering. A
low-level, asymmetrical, resistance war that grinds out the years,
that slowly learns to adapt to US measures, will ultimately throw out
the invaders. No one knows what kind of regime will be in place after
the US is worn down and leaves, but we can be pretty sure it will be
something worse than what it would have been if the US had built
relations that respect cultures and peoples. That is something
Americans never learned from Vietnam.
Which brings me to the fiction on Vietnam. Usually we can count on
our artists, our fiction writers, to reveal deeper truths than the
historians. But somehow the American imagination falls short. Yes,
some incredible work has been done in the past, such as Tim O'Brien's
The Things They Carried; and must include films like Full Metal
Jacket and Apocalypse Now. But even these, while extremely insightful
on the pitiful and tragic error of US war making, fail to give even a
glimpse of the "other," of the Vietnamese themselves. Recent books
are even a greater disappointment. Leaving aside policy
considerations and political debates for a minute, I tried to explore
whether we have managed, in our cultural processing of the war
through fiction, to shine any more light on the Vietnamese
perspective of the war. I set out to read American fiction on Vietnam.
I recently reviewed Karl Marlantes' novel Matterhorn: A Novel of the
Vietnam War. While it was a gripping account of the horrors of
combat, in the end I found myself disgusted with the book:
America can heal the wounds of war when it comes to terms with the
crime of the war and faces them... Marlantes' project is retrograde,
seeking to redeem the war by recounting the sacrifices, even if the
purpose was utterly indefensible... We tend to think that people who
have experienced such extreme hardship, who have faced life and
death, may be able to come back and tell us something important. They
experienced, they are learned. But it's sad to say that Marlantes has
learned nothing.
Often, I think, feel that those who have suffered in war are the
wiser for it. The opposite may be true: Some try to justify a
horrible crime of a war in order to make the sacrifice seem meaningful.
The first thing that is egregiously missing from Marlantes' story is
any depiction, or even any remote understanding or feeling, for the
Vietnamese -- their lives, their history, their culture and their
tradition of resistance. Indeed, Americans have wallowed in self-pity
and recriminations about the defeat in Vietnam without really
considering, soberly and honestly, the meaning of the three million
Vietnamese the US invasion and occupation killed there and the many
more still suffering the effects of Agent Orange.
Three more books that came to my attention as perhaps dealing with
"both sides" in the conflict were Tatiana Soli's The Lotus Eaters,
Robert Olen Butler's A Good Scent from a Strange Mountain, and David
Rabe's A Girl by the Road at Night. I thoroughly enjoyed reading each
of these books. And the authors' attempts, through research,
relationships, or imagination, to capture the Vietnamese experience
were evident. Still, I found myself disappointed.
Soli's novel explores the adventures and growing education of an
American woman photographer at the height of the Vietnam War. Through
a love affair, first with a hard-bitten American freelancer and,
after he's killed, with a Vietnamese journalist who reports for the
US press, she comes closer and closer to Vietnamese life. Her
Vietnamese character Linh is, apparently, roughly based on the true
story of Pham Xuan An -- a Vietnamese interpreter and fixer who
became a main contact for US journalists and revealed himself, only
after the war ended, as an agent for the National Liberation Front
(what the western media called the Viet Cong).
In the end, though, The Lotus Eaters was a disappointment to me. It
held on to a deeply American prejudice, an absolute inability to
imagine why anyone would be on the communist side. Clearly anyone who
opposed the US must be the victim of blackmail or terror. Linh's
communist contact, Mr. Bao, is the most silly caricature -- a
ridiculous, corrupt, and selfish man. A heroin smuggler. But everyone
knows that heroin was a specialty of the Saigon government and
military forces.
The point is that the Vietnamese have not been silent. We have just
not been paying attention. There are many sources that offer more
insight to the Vietnamese reality. There is a biography of Pham Xuan
An (Larry Berman's Perfect Spy: The Incredible Double Life of Pham
Xuan An, Time Magazine Reporter and Vietnamese Communist Agent). You
can also get the wartime accounts of such women as, Dinh Thi Van,
Xuan Phuong, and Nguyen Thi Dinh. Nguyen Khac Vien patiently
explained the Vietnamese world view to western readers, even during
the war. Other powerful Vietnamese writing comes from Bao Ninh, whose
The Sorrow of War is an anti-war plea from a former North Vietnamese
soldier, and Ho Anh Thai.
A few Western writers have tried to bring some truths to the
self-delusional discourse on Vietnam. You can read the insightful
writing of Daniel Ellsberg of Pentagon Papers fame -- he describes an
American patrol in his book Secrets; then there is John Paul Vann and
his exposé of the war, A Bright Shining Lie; Australian journalist
Wilfred Burchett explained the war while it was going on with clarity
and should have reached a wider audience; Milton Bates examined our
own cultural conflicts around the war in The Wars We Took to Vietnam;
and Jerry Lembecke debunked the myth of veterans being spat upon in
his well researched book, The Spitting Image, Myth, Memory and the
Legacy of Vietnam.
But I am always disappointed when these fiction authors fall into the
typical US myths about what the National Liberation Front and the
North Vietnamese forces were like. The June 10, 2010, issue of the
New York Review of Books has an interesting article on the stupidity
of US leadership during the war, particularly McGeorge Bundy. When
asked in 1996 what was most surprising about the war, Bundy replied:
"The endurance of the enemy." Right. The US war makers had no idea.
But it's not that no one had an idea. We young people, for instance,
pretty much understood that. Other architects of the war, such as
Robert McNamara have also had their second and third thoughts, as
seen in the documentary of his late apologies for the debacle, The Fog of War.
As for other recent fiction, it is less satisfying. Robert Olen
Butler's A Good Scent from a Strange Mountain, is an affecting bit of
writing, a series of short stories centered in the
Vietnamese-American community of Versailles in eastern New Orleans.
Each story is from another person's point of view. And I suppose
Butler shows a certain literary courage (or arrogance) to imagine he
can inhabit the consciousness of a South Vietnamese officer, a bar
girl, a businessman, and so on. As often happens in such cases, the
author must sacrifice some of the narrative to make an
anthropological observation, or background explanation, for his
American readers -- referencing and explaining certain Vietnamese
historical or mythological touchstones. Sometimes this approach
becomes didactic, losing the Vietnamese voice for the lecture to the
foreign reader.
Still, I would grant him the benefit of the doubt and congratulate
him in his attempt to see the Vietnamese point of view. From Butler
we get only the anti-communist Vietnamese, however, only the ones who
describe "our country" as "falling" to the communists. In other
words, only the perspective on the war shared by the small minority
that sided with the US and the Americans themselves. Granted, this is
the story of a Vietnamese exile community in the US, but even here a
truer version would include the complexity of loyalties and
perspectives that exist. And the one story that tries to capture the
thoughts of a Viet Cong fighter, "Salem," actually shows a cadre who
secretly turned against the Viet Cong, who doubted the resistance movement.
So once again, American fiction finds the view of the Vietnamese
resistance unfathomable. Even in imaginative writing, most authors
cannot come to terms with the people who defeated the US military.
So we come to David Rabe's A Girl by the Road at Night, which is
another disappointment, at least in the department of cross-cultural
understanding. Rabe juxtaposes the lives of a young draftee, Private
Joseph Whitaker, with a poor prostitute, Quach Ngoc Lan, in the area
of Bien Hoa outside of Saigon. Of course their paths cross, of course
they have sex. But nothing is good -- the communication, the
understandings, even the sex. In fact, there is nothing
transformative to recommend the story, nothing to make you even care
much about anyone. And, when Lan is raped and killed by some creepy
South Vietnamese Army soldiers, Whitaker learns nothing. Indeed, he
never even learns that she has been killed.
Perhaps this is Rabe's harsh message: These people crossed paths in
brutal moments but never were curious about each other, never cared
to know about each other. In the end, though, it is just another
Big-Western-Man-Screws-Eroticized-Asian-Woman tale, which has a
pathetic tradition that includes Madame Butterfly, South Pacific, The
Quiet American, and so many more. One has to ask: Have we not had
enough? Is this all you've got? Again, Rabe advances no understanding
of the Vietnamese revolution, the anti-American resistance, no
understanding of much of anything at all.
It matters that we continue the debate over Vietnam, the war to
explain the war, because our ignorance continues to have dire
consequences for millions of people and for the prospect of ever
reaching world peace. If the other side is a perpetual mystery, if we
frame them with either demonizing stereotypes (they live through
mindless terror) or patronizing soft tones (they all secretly want to
be like us), we never manage to come to terms with the intractable
morass of conflict we are mired in. We need to think differently. And
we need artists -- because the political chatting classes are
incapable of it -- to imagine a different set of possibilities. As
they say in the slogan of the World Social Forum, "Another world is possible."
.
2 comments:
As a navy vet who was served a westpack cruise from 68-71 I was in more countries than I had been in states in our country. I learned what it was to be a minority, different color, didn't speak the language I tended to stick out. I met many people from all over the world as a young person. Back to my mailing you I could go on for along time. A book that I read quite sometime ago was Fire in The Lake it helped me to better understand things after I got back to the world. I haven't had time for reading lately because life is complecated for me now I'm spending alot of time on the net with other vets from yesterdays wars to the ongoing mess we are in. The people of our country do not have a clue about people from the rest of the world. I just today found your site and look forward to visting it again. Bruce Winland
Your's is a brilliant essay, Rick.
But to generalize, do you really expect Americans to get real about anything?
Order up 'Apocalypse Now' on Netflix and give it another watch. I was a 'Deerhunter' junkie when that movie first came out. I must have seen it twenty times at revival houses in L.A. Now, I can't bear to watch it. A sequel at this late date could be VERY interesting. Particularly if Coppola were to write/direct.
But Apocalypse!!!!! One can see more each time that you see it and it was such an astounding experience to see it at the Cinerama Dome in Hollywood when it first premiered. The one unfortunate aspect is that Martin Sheen's performance has been so overlooked all these years. It is perhaps the greatest and most unacknowledged cinematic performance of all time, in my view.
Post a Comment