Vietnamese Reparations
Tour: A Night of Sadness, Anger and Partial Redemption
December 12
2005
Counterbias.com
by Jack
Dalton
On
December 7, 2005, I went to Portland State University’s
Multi-Cultural Center to hear a presentation by
three people from Vietnam, who are a part of the group of
Vietnamese seeking reparations from America over its use of Agent
Orange. It turned out to be a night I will never forget.
Mrs. Dang This Hong Nhut, 69; Mr. Ho Sy Hai, 61; and Dr. Nguyen
Trong Nhan, 75, were the speakers. (A brief bio of each of them can
be read
here.)
There was a fourth man who was supposed to accompany these three on
their presentation: Mr. Nguyen Muoi — born August 10, 1983, suffers
from spina bifida. His father, Nguyen Dinh Thanh, born April 10,
1946, was a former soldier in the former South Vietnamese army
(ARVN) who was exposed to toxic chemicals in approximately June
1970. Mr. Thanh suffered from headaches, nausea and vomiting, colic,
and dyspnea. Nguyen Muoi’s mother had two miscarriages in 1974 and
1976. His visa was denied by the U.S. government.
It was difficult to sit through the slide and film presentation,
detailing exactly what over 20 million gallons of Agent Orange has
done to Vietnam, and what it has, and is
doing to the Vietnamese people to this day. But sit
through it I did, mostly thru tear filled eyes. They were the tears
of sadness that come with the realization of just what this country
has done to the Vietnamese people and their land.
It was very difficult to listen to Mrs. Dang Thi Hong Nhut when she
was speaking. She talked of things I have first hand knowledge
of—torture! She talked of the over six years she was held as a
“prisoner” by U.S. and ARVN (South Vietnamese Army) during which she
was tortured repeatedly. The torturing of those in captivity in
Vietnam was not simply “bad apples” acting on their own in Vietnam
any more than the torture of those in captivity in Iraq are a result
of just a “few bad apples”--the entire apple barrel is rotten! Never
again is here again! Actually, “never again” never went away.
Mr. Ho Sy Hai was a supply truck driver in the North Vietnamese
Army. He was driving supplies from the North to the South thru
Quang Tri Province in 1965 and 1966. I wondered, with
deep anguish, if it was me and my friends who sprayed him with Agent
Orange. I broke into tears again as I sat and listened to him... and
struggled with my sense of responsibility that it may have been me
who left him in the condition he is in, with cancer—or the
miscarriages his wife has had; or the three children he has that
through the father were crippled by Agent Orange. Who knows—that
area was a madhouse. But then that’s what war is, one great big
madhouse—Conrad’s “Heart of Darkness” coming to life. Great guilt,
great sadness…
That guilt and sadness did not last long however, as it
was replaced by anger:
Anger at having allowed myself to be so deceived, like so many
others, into believing that the Vietnamese, in their own country,
were our “enemies” and as such deserved anything we did to them—like
chemical warfare. For that was, and is, what Agent Orange usage is—Chemical
Warfare. Think War Crime on a grand scale (as it is now
in Iraq and Afghanistan with the use of
Depleted Uranium—chemical/nuclear warfare).
Anger came from learning that America knew from day one what Agent
Orange was and what it would do to human beings. We know this from
the statement of Dr. James R. Clary (among many others), a former
senior scientist at the Chemical Weapons Branch (Air Force Armament
Development Lab in Florida) who wrote:
“When we initiated the herbicide program in the 1960’s, we were
aware of the potential for damage due to dioxin contamination in the
herbicide. We were even aware that the military formulation had a
higher concentration than the civilian version due to lower costs
and speed of manufacture. However, because the material was to be
used on the enemy, none of us were overly concerned."
The racism inherent in
this quote characterizes the continued use of Agent Orange against
the Vietnamese people and the failure to compensate them. They
didn’t care about the Vietnamese, and they sure didn’t care much
about us either, as they knew we were all being poisoned at the same
time. But then when I was in Vietnam my friends and I didn’t care
about the Vietnamese either—would that that could be taken back!
They didn’t care then, and the “they’s” today don’t care. We must
make them care.
Two U.S. zoologists went to
Vietnam in 1969 and then wrote:
“The chemical weapons of a technologically advanced society are
being used massively for the first time in a guerilla war… [Our]
military efforts are aimed at increasing the toll of fatalities,
denying food to the enemy, and depriving him of the concealment
provided by natural growth. This type of warfare is, therefore,
enormously destructive, both on human life and the environment.”
Agent Orange was not
the only chemical used on Vietnam and the Vietnamese people during
the American War on Vietnam. Not by a long shot. Dwight D.
Eisenhower was the first to start the destruction of Vietnam by
chemicals. John F. Kennedy built on what Eisenhower started when in
1961/62 he signed off on Operation Ranch Hand. That took the
chemical spraying of Vietnam to an all new level. It also included
other “agents” such as Agent Blue, Agent Pink, Agent White, and
Agent Green. You could tell which was which from the color of the
band around the 55 gallon drum (each with skull and crossbones on
it).
“Teams of international
scientists working in Vietnam have now discovered that Agent Orange
contains one of the most virulent poisons known to man, a strain of
dioxin called TCCD which, 28 years after the fighting ended, remains
in the soil, continuing to destroy the lives of those exposed to it.
Evidence has also emerged that the US government not only knew that
Agent Orange was contaminated, but was fully aware of the killing
power of its contaminant dioxin, and yet still continued to use the
herbicide in Vietnam for 10 years of the war and in concentrations
that exceeded its own guidelines by 25 times. As well as spraying
the North Vietnamese, the US doused its own troops stationed in the
jungle, rather than lose tactical advantage by having them
withdraw.” (Specter
Orange; Guardian LTD; 3-29-03)
The
greatest evil we do is to deny the evil we do:
When we as Americans refuse to seriously look at, balance, weigh and
judge those things our governing body does in our names, we are
complicit in all that is done. If what is done is wrong, illegal,
criminal—we as a people, as a nation, are equally guilty of those
crimes. Silence is acceptance; acquiescence; the greatest sedition
after all, is silence.
It is time for the silence on what this nation did during the War on
Vietnam to end. In the process of poisoning the Vietnamese people,
their land, and their water, we also poisoned ourselves. This is
always the result of allowing ourselves to be lied and deceived into
war. That is true about the invasion and occupation of Iraq today,
just as it was and is true about the War on Vietnam. Both were based
on lies and deceptions on a grand scale. The cost of war is always
high and it always lasts for decades.
Thirty-five years ago, Daniel Ellsberg, in the “Pentagon
Papers”,
told us the event that led to full blown war on Vietnam, the Gulf of
Tonkin incident, did not occur. Ellsberg was attacked by government
and media pundits over this (sound familiar?). Some of us knew he
was right. Today, we have
absolute proof of the deception;
just as we have the proof of the foreknowledge of what Agent Orange
(dioxin) would do to the people who came in contact with it.
My thoughts on our national and individual responsibility
Maybe my own Agent Orange-caused diseases and illnesses are simply
the dues to be paid for being so willing, at that time, to be
deceived and sound the horn of “American Exceptionalism” and
volunteer to go to Vietnam. So many contaminated; so many of my
friends now dead from Agent Orange. As I wrote in a letter to my
girlfriend while on my way to Vietnam: “…I’m going…to kill a commie
for Christ…” and went on to say, “…don’t want them here, so I’ll
help take them out there…”
Obviously, I was a real gung-ho flag waver then. She gave the letter
to her father who gave it to one of the editors of the Oakland
Tribune (I’m originally from the S.F/Oakland Bay Area), who printed
it on the front of the society page (1965) as "Local Marine Supports
Vietnam War", or something to that effect. This also has a today’s
familiar ring (Iraq), does it not? That letter still haunts me
today.
Now I know this: what Agent Orange is doing to the Vietnamese people
concerns me a lot more than what it has and is doing to me
personally. That stems from a sense of responsibility and a little
guilt. This nation’s refusal to acknowledge the ongoing problems
Vietnam's people are faced with due to the years of massive Agent
Orange usage is above just an outrage. It’s a continuation of that
which has yet to end—the War on Vietnam. To bring it to an end, we
must as a nation face what we have done, accept the responsibility
for our actions, and then do something to address that
responsibility, in real terms—reparations to the people of Vietnam.
In the name of our common humanity alone, this is demanded. Nothing
less is acceptable.
There are always consequences and dues to be paid. This has nothing
to do with forgiveness and everything to do with consequences of
actions, whether intentional or not.
It was by all international standards and common human decency, a
war crime. That’s what chemical warfare is, and that’s what Agent
Orange use is. Not living up to our responsibilities to the
Vietnamese people who have, and are suffering so greatly, is an
obscene act of betrayal. And maybe in the process of standing with
them in this fight for justice, we can get justice for Agent Orange
contaminated veterans in this country.
Thirty years ago they were promised $3 billion by our government to
help Vietnam clean up the mess we created. To this day the people of
Vietnam have not seen one penny of that money. What does that say
about us? Why do we continue to sit back and watch our nation’s
government fail to fulfill the pledge that was made to the people of
Vietnam?
The Vietnamese have
appealed a recent Federal Courts denial of their claim.
That appeal should be heard sometime in March 2006. We cannot let
these people be forgotten when they go back to Vietnam, to hold
their breath and wait for justice.
When we left Vietnam we left it a killing field—those not poisoned
by Agent Orange get blown up by
unexploded U.S. ordinance and land mines.
What a legacy.
What the evening meant to me personally
Two men met each other that night: one, a former North Vietnamese
soldier, the other a‘former U.S. Marine. In 1965/66 they fought as
enemies. Forty years later they met in Portland, Oregon, and came
away from that not as enemies, but as two men who were born in the
same year, hurt and damaged by the same war, in the same places at
the same time. They tightly held each other—and I wept.
I went there seeking forgiveness for that which I would not forgive
myself. I came away, not with forgiveness, but with much, much more.
Something I could not put into words if I tried—and I have tried.
I’ll simply say that when I left that night, it was with something
in me that I had left in Vietnam many years ago—it was a part of my
soul. And it was, in part, given back to me by a man I once
considered an enemy, through his embrace. I will never forget Mr. Ho
Sy Hai. I will never again fail to focus on the Vietnamese when
discussing Agent Orange as I have done in the past.
Closing Questions
Invading armies all have said the same thing about the people in the
country they have invaded—"they are the enemy," usually in racist
terms. Today this is being repeated in Iraq. How absurd! We that
went to Vietnam were betrayed by their lies and deceptions of those
who sent us, as was the nation. Those who have been sent to Iraq
have been betrayed by those who sent them, much as we were…
When will we ever keep “never again” from continuing to happen
again? When will this nation be willing to accept responsibility for
its actions—or better stated when we will as individuals be willing
to accept the responsibility for those things done in our names?
We had best answer those questions real soon as “never again” is
still with us...
==
Jack Dalton is a disabled veteran of the American War on Vietnam. He
is an independent writer and political activist who is widely
published on the internet. He was also a contributing writer in the
recently published 'Neo-Conned!Again!'.
His blog is
Jack’s
Straight-Speak
and his email address is:
jack_dalton@comcast.net.