Vietnam War: “It was their country. They deserve respect.”
Dan Southerland
2006-03-24
When Hollywood made a movie about the dramatic rescue of a downed American pilot during the Vietnam War, it left one man out: the South Vietnamese navy officer who was a key member of the rescue team.
Nguyen Van Kiet in a
recent photograph. Photo: RFA
Lubbock, Texas—When Hollywood
made a movie about the dramatic rescue of a
downed American pilot during the Vietnam War, it
left one man out: the South Vietnamese navy
officer who was a key member of the rescue team.
In April 1972, during the largest search and
rescue operation of the war, Petty Officer
Nguyen Van Kiet spent 11 days behind enemy lines
helping to locate and extract the U.S. airman.
Kiet’s story was highlighted among many others
honoring the South Vietnamese military during a
recent two-day conference organized by The
Vietnam Center at Texas Tech University. The
center’s main goal is to collect archives
representing all aspects of the war, including
the work of those who supported the war as well
as those who opposed it.
Why was the heroism of Petty Officer Kiet and so
many others ignored by the U.S. media and
numerous historians during and after the war?
It was easier to cover American actions
First of all, it was easier to cover American
actions and American views on the war than to
report on the Vietnamese. Due partly to the
language barrier, the South Vietnamese were
never good at explaining themselves. The
Communists were better propagandists. Few
American reporters tried to learn Vietnamese and
few covered the Vietnamese armed forces with any
consistency.
I studied the Vietnamese language on and off
during the war and had the good fortune to be
assigned to cover “the Vietnamese side of the
war” by both UPI and The Christian Science
Monitor. I traveled to every province in South
Vietnam.
I reported on Vietnamese successes - and
failures. I reported on crucial battles in 1972,
when the South Vietnamese withstood encirclement
and tank attacks at Kontum and An Loc. I was in
Quang Tri Province when South Vietnamese marines
fought inch by inch to recover a provincial
capital which had been pulverized by North
Vietnamese artillery and tanks.
Nguyen Van Kiet as a
young Navy SEAL in the South Vietnamese
Navy. Photo: RFA
But I now wish that I had done
much more and dug much deeper.
In recent years we have finally begun to gain a
better perspective on the South Vietnamese Army,
or the Army of the Republic of Vietnam (ARVN).
On March 17 and 18, The Vietnam Center in
Lubbock brought together a number of historians,
political scientists, writers, and former South
Vietnamese officers to reexamine the role of the
South Vietnamese military. Drawing on their own
research, many Americans at the meeting
concluded that the South Vietnamese had
performed much better in the war than most
accounts acknowledge.
Hollywood, of course, will probably never get it
right.
“When Hollywood produces a movie, they are under
no obligation to tell the truth,” said Darrel D.
Whitcomb, an author and former Air Force officer
who flew rescue missions in Vietnam, including
support for the 1972 rescue effort. He led one
of the panels at the Lubbock conference.
Increased respect for them is more than deserved
But historians have an obligation to tell the
truth. And three decades after the end of the
war, they are producing work that challenges the
conventional wisdom on Vietnam and restores
credit to the South Vietnamese.
April 10, 1972: Kiet
participates in a search of an abandoned
North Vietnamese Army (NVA) tank along
Highway 9, near the Mieu Giang River.
Photo: RFA
Take for example, Lewis Sorley’s
fine book, A Better War, published in 1999, that
documents improvements in the ARVN over the
years. The South Vietnamese paid a price for
fighting hard. They lost more than 230,000 men
during this terrible war. Increased respect for
them is more than deserved.
A conference on “Vietnam and the Presidency,”
the first of its kind, held March 10 and 11 in
Boston, featured prominent American figures from
the Vietnam War: Henry Kissinger, Alexander Haig,
and Jimmy Carter among others. Unfortunately, no
Vietnamese were invited to speak. I understand
that some leading Vietnamese-Americans tried to
get invitations but were turned down.
One topic at the meeting was “Lessons Learned.”
One lesson that should have been learned: When
talking about Vietnam – even when it concerns
the presidency – it’s useful to talk with and
listen to the Vietnamese themselves. It was
their country. They deserve respect.
Dan Southerland, Vice President and Executive
Editor of Radio Free Asia, covered the wars in
Vietnam, Cambodia, and Laos in the 1960s and
70s. He left Saigon at the end of April 1975 on
one of the last helicopters out of the South
Vietnamese capital as North Vietnamese tanks
entered the city.
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