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War on Iraq

Iraq Replaces Vietnam as Metaphor for Tragedy

By Andrew Lam, New America Media. Posted February 27, 2007.


Many comparisons have been made about the Iraq and Vietnam wars. But what Iraq may have finally done is not so much remind us of Vietnam as ultimately usurp it from our national psyche.
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New America Media EDITOR'S NOTE: With the ghosts of Vietnam still haunting the United States, the nation is doomed to repeat its misadventures abroad, in Iraq and beyond, until a profound reckoning with its bellicose heart of darkness occurs.

For almost three decades after U.S. helicopters flew over a smoke-filled Saigon, Vietnam served as a vault of tragic metaphors for every American to use. In movies, in literature, someone who went to 'Nam was someone who came back a wreck, a traumatized soul who has seen or committed too many horrors to ever return to normal life. In politics, Vietnam was a hard-learned lesson that continued to influence U.S. foreign policies. It was an unhealed wound, the cause of post-traumatic stress, the stuff bad dreams were made of, hell in a small place.

Then came Iraq. Many comparisons have been made about the two wars. But what Iraq may have finally done is not so much remind us of Vietnam as ultimately usurp it from our national psyche.

Fighting the Vietnam War brought a multitude of symbols and icons to the American mind. A new set is now being acquired in the current war. One can almost imagine one era being replaced by another in the way that two kids might trade cards: "I'll take My Lai for your Haditha"; "I'll take 'Hearts and Minds' for 'Operation Iraqi Freedom'"; "Let's have Vo Nguyen Giap and Ho Chi Minh for Muqtada al-Sadr and Osama Bin Ladin"; "I'll take Tiger Cage for Abu Graib"; and "Let's have your Gulf of Tonkin for my WMD."

In another generation, when a future U.S. president sends troops to occupy some intransigent country on a dubious objective, American pundits will most likely ask this familiar question made new: "Will it be another Iraq?"

Yet, for a long time, Vietnam functioned as a benchmark for spectacular American failure, and despite subsequent successful U.S. overseas ventures, it remained a deep, searing wound. It took some time after the war's end before movies were made and books sold on the topic. There was a willful repression of America's only military defeat, followed by a flourish of Vietnam novels and movies. Together they constructed a mythic reality around the nation's experience in Vietnam that challenged our old notion of manifest destiny and examined our loss of innocence.

In the 1980s, conservatives began to claim that the Vietnam Syndrome -- which they saw as an undesirable pacifism on the part of the American public and the U.S. government -- has been "kicked." Most famous of them all was George Bush Sr., who declared in 1991 after victory in the Persian Gulf War that "the ghosts of Vietnam had been laid to rest beneath the sands of the Arabian desert."

But Bush Sr. spoke too soon. The glory of winning did not translate into a second presidential term, and Vietnam continued to haunt our national psyche. When president Clinton withdrew troops from Somalia after 18 soldiers were killed in Mogadishu in 1993, diplomat Richard Holbrooke called it the new "Vietmalia syndrome." Later, Clinton was reluctant to deploy military force in Bosnia. Sen. John Kerry, a Vietnam vet, lost his bid for the presidential election in 2004 because of his ambiguous relationship with Vietnam: During the campaign he billed himself as a war hero despite his stint as an anti-war protestor after the war. Sen. John McCain, who was tortured in Hanoi as a POW during the war, caused an uproar when he used the term "gook" to describe his Vietnamese captives during his 2000 presidential campaign bid. Nor does it seem to help his presidential efforts this time around when the senator, who felt Vietnam could have been won had it not been hampered by politics, is supporting the military surge in Iraq while most Americans desire troop withdrawal.

What we are learning now with the enormous failure of Iraq -- the lies and deception from the White House, the images of Iraqis wailing beside their dead loved ones, the shattered homes, bloody sidewalks, tortured prisoners, body parts in market stalls, burnt-out cars, roadside bombs, downed helicopters and horribly maimed American soldiers -- is that tragedy cannot simply be overcome with some supposed military victory, but with another tragedy of equal if not greater proportion.

Indeed, the war in Iraq is showing us that the so-called Vietnam Syndrome cannot be "kicked," as it were, by winning but by losing, as it forces us to face our collective grief and guilt anew. For all the horrors committed in the name of democracy, and all the soul-searching Americans did after the Vietnam War -- remember that '70s mantra, "No More Vietnams!" many screamed from the top of their lungs? -- we failed to alter the bellicose nature of our nation.

Years ago, the poet Robert Bly argued that Americans have yet to experience ablution over past atrocities. "We're engaged in a vast forgetting mechanism and from the point of view of psychology, we're refusing to eat our grief, refusing to really to eat our dark side," Bly told Bill Moyers on national public television. "And therefore what Jung says is really terrifying -- if you do not absorb the things you have done in your life ... then you will have to repeat them."

In this sense, individual karma is not so different from that of a nation. For it's many a country's fate, too, to keep on repeating acts of barbarism until, hopefully, it comes to some profound reckoning with its own heart of darkness.

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Andrew Lam is a NAM editor and author of "Perfume Dreams: Reflections on the Vietnamese Diaspora" (Heyday Books, 2005), which recently won a PEN/Beyond Margins award.

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Why?
Posted by: Thundergod on Feb 27, 2007 1:00 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Bush and Cheney both knew how to get out of Viet Nam...

Why don't they know how to get out of iraq?

Oil?

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The real contrast will show up later...
Posted by: willie.horton on Feb 27, 2007 3:54 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What will be the ultimate difference between Vietnam and Iraq?
When we left Vietnam, they were happy to see us go... and they didn't hold a grudge. The government and the people of Vietnam never sought revenge upon America for the horrible things we did to their nation and their families. They waged neither war nor terror against us.

When we leave Iraq, many of the millions whose lives we have irreparably harmed will not be quite so forgiving.
Our great-great-grandchildren will be punished by their descendants, in ways worse than we can possibly imagine.

Can't say I blame them, much.

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OIF
Posted by: Tom Degan on Feb 27, 2007 5:08 AM   
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I propose that we should turn the acronym for Operation Iraqi freedom, OIF, into a verb:

oif 1. v a disatrous decision resulting in predicted failure 2. v an individual who fails in everything a total oif to fail miserably at things that should be obviously avoided

If ever there was a bunch of oif ups, it is the Bush White House.

Yeah, we're going to have to come up with a new name for this stupid fucking war - no question about it. How stupid as a nation are we going to look with the benefit of ten or twenty years of historical hindsight, after we leave behind the inevitable failed-state theocracy and we're still calling this thing, "Operation Iraqi Freedom" I mean, what's wrong with that picture? It's like Margaret Mitchell scrapping the name of her famous civil war novel and opting, instead for "The 1939 New Jersey Industrial Directory". I mean it makes no sense whatsoever!

Let's come up with a new name for this war: Let's call it The Bush-Cheney War or The Illegal War or The Neo-conflict (my personal favorite). But please don't call it Operation Iraqi Freedom. That only insults my intelligence. Freedom was never the motivation of the Bush Mob. That is self-evident.

On second thought, let's just call the damned thing, Gone With The Wind.

Pray for peace.

Tom Degan
Goshen, NY
"The Rant" by Tom Degan

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» RE: OIF Posted by: MyLeftFoot
» RE: OIF Posted by: Amy27605
Big egos, wasted lives
Posted by: Moonray on Feb 27, 2007 5:11 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Vietnam wasn't about Vietnam and Iraq isn't about Iraq. Both were about exaggerated threats -- communism and terrorism -- and the big egos of the U.S. officials involved. The LBJ/Nixon crowd didn't want to admit they were wrong, and now the Bushies are doing the same -- and again lives are being wasted as a result.

But I must argue that Vietnam was not technically a military defeat for the U.S.; it was a foreign policy defeat. Saigon fell in 1975, two years after the last U.S. combat troops withdrew. If you disagree, consider this: Was the communist revolution in China in the late '40s a military defeat for the U.S.? We had troops there propping up the nationalist government, and the communists prevailed a couple of years after those troops left.

In any case, the debacles in Iraq AND Afghanistan should provide many useful lessons to U.S. officials. Unfortunately, it's very likely that those lessons will be ignored in the future.

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Meet the new boss....
Posted by: paschn on Feb 27, 2007 5:36 AM   
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As long as we continue to make "heroes" of men and women duped into fighting for our "freedom" there will be Vietnams, Iraqs, Mexicos, Phillipines.
This "Christian" nation is responsible for liberating more men women and children than any other on earth. Liberating them from their lives that is.
We never seem to tire of being mind screwed into killing for lies and the enrichment of a few slick hucksters, then when all is said and done, call the survivors of the invasions "our boys, who fought to protect our freedom."
From the Boston tea Party, ( which was a revolt against corporations buying our leaders ), to Iraq / Israel, ( which SHOULD be a revolt against corporations / Israel buying our leaders ), the drones of this country rally 'round the corporate stars and stripes, invade other countries, kill other peoples then propogate the idiocy by deifying those too stupid to see they're being used. Which ultimately instills in the NEXT generation of drones, a desire to "serve" so they too can be called heroes by the wrinkled living heritage of a mindless nation of drones' NEXT call to "our boys who fought to protect our freedom".
A nation of sheep, led by a cartel of whores, controlled by big business. Welcome,... to the REAL Evil Empire.

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Our failure is to ignore the experience of allies who had sense enough to leave.
Posted by: Sojourner on Feb 27, 2007 5:37 AM   
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The French got their troops out of Indo-China. The Brits got out of the Middle East. Yet our politicians (except for a tiny handful; read Senator Byrd's speeches against the Iraq invasion) paid no attention to the conclusiveness of that.

What are the options? Americans elect stupid leaders!

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IT'S GETTING OLD
Posted by: VZEQICVA on Feb 27, 2007 8:06 AM   
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The War in Iraq is now a 'metaphor' and a 'learning experience'. Lately, references are in the past tense. People running out of things to say and write about. It ought to be over. Our soldiers are worn out and seem to have no real direction. They serve at the pleasure of a rich brat who has no regard for human life. Viet Nam was awful but it's over. The American people ended it and now we have to put an end to Iraq. Thanks, ANNA

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Moratorium on Taxan Presidents
Posted by: NoPCZone on Feb 27, 2007 8:44 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Elect a Texan and get a war. Despite all the fingers of blame pointed at Kennedy and Eisenhower, Vietnam was really Mr. Johnson's war. Gulf 1 was Daddy Bush's and the current twin-bill quagmire is Dubya's.

Now that both Ann Richards and Molly are gone, I propose a moratorium on the election of any Texan to the Presidency. Further, they should not be allowed to serve as party leader in either house or Speaker of the House. I think we have had enough Texans in leadership for at least a generation or so.

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Let's start
Posted by: kelt65 on Feb 27, 2007 9:18 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Let's start by not insulting the victims of the United States by referring to them as "metaphors."

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Shock and Awe about a lack of math skills
Posted by: eddie torres on Feb 27, 2007 9:24 AM   
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30 years after US involvement in Vietnam ended, the pro- and anti-war cheerleaders who still obsess over it can't seem to quote a single significant dollar amount related to that war. Because the numbers paint a picture that doesn't quite match the rhetoric from either pro- or anti-war camps:

Vietnam war spending (single year), 1968: $121 billion
US GDP, 1968: $910 billion
13%

Iraq war spending (single year), 2005: $67 billion
US GDP, 2005: $12,500 billion ($12.5 trillion)
0.5%

The Shock and the Awe is Americans lack of understanding of human nature due to years of "Free Market" indoctrination.

Shock? No Iraqi was ever shocked that the US invaded - they knew all along, and they planned the insurgency for it, on a few million dollars a day. The US spends $200 million per day on a war they don't agree on how they got into or know how to get out of.

Awe? No Iraqi was ever awed by US-delivered death and destruction - Iraqis just went out and found a way to resist. And the CPA handed them truckloads of cash to do it.

The Shock and the Awe was perpetrated on US Citizens - keep disinterested and we'll continue supplying you with SUVs, cheap gasoline, and 4000 square foot McMansions.

You sure know how much those things cost.

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» Good points... Posted by: eddie torres
Vietnam didn't have 100 billion barrels of proven reserves, did it?
Posted by: thoughtcriminal on Feb 27, 2007 9:43 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
To really understand Vietnam, you have to go back to the end of World War II, when the Japanese politely handed control of Vietnam back to the French - the Vietnamese appealed to the United States for support for their national independence, but the US decided to 'support their French friends' - and this was the post WWII reality - it was just more colonialism, in the standard model described by Joseph Conrad in Heart of Darkness.

However, Iraq is all about the oil. See "Big Oil in, stability out under new Iraqi law, Asia Times Online,
By Antonia Juhasz and Raed Jarrar Feb 28, 2007"


Not every aspect of the law is harmful to Iraq. However, the current language favors the interests of foreign oil corporations over the economic security and development of Iraq. The law's key negative components harm Iraq's national sovereignty, financial security, territorial integrity and democracy...

...The exploration and production contracts give firms exclusive control of fields for up to 35 years, including contracts that guarantee profits for 25 years. A foreign company, if hired, is not required to partner with an Iraqi company or reinvest any of its money in the Iraqi economy. It's not obligated to hire Iraqi workers, train Iraqi workers or transfer technology.

The current law remains silent on the type of contracts that the Iraqi government can use. The law establishes a new Iraqi Federal Oil and Gas Council with ultimate decision-making authority over the types of contracts that will be employed. This council will include, among others, "executive managers from important related petroleum companies". Thus it is possible that foreign oil-company executives could sit on the council. It would be unprecedented for a sovereign country to have, for instance, an executive of ExxonMobil on the board of its key oil-and-gas decision-making body.


Compare that to the sanitized New York Times reporting on this story: Iraqi Cabinet Approves Draft of Oil Law - no mention of oil companies, just glowing approval of the need to 'stimulate foreign investment in Iraq'.

The AP actually does a decent job of covering the story: Iraqi Cabinet approves draft oil law By ROBERT H. REID, Associated Press Writer
At least the central issue is mentioned, unlike in the NYT:
Many Iraqis fear the measure will effectively hand the country's major natural resources over to foreign oil companies.

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» article by Juhasz and Jarrar Posted by: MyLeftFoot
Iraq spelled any other way is Palestine
Posted by: edsmith on Feb 27, 2007 1:19 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Occupations both. On tv you can't tell from Izraeli soldiers killing Arabs in Palestine from US soldiers killing Arabs in Iraqinam.

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remember WWI?
Posted by: underground on Feb 27, 2007 11:28 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
it amazes me no one talks about WWI anymore as metaphore for tragedy. thousands of men running over the tops of trenches in line formation straight into enemy machine guns? on the insanity scale that one exceeds all others...

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Vietnam all over again: Homeless Iraq War Veterans
Posted by: Support the vets on Mar 1, 2007 5:18 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Vietnam War left over 150,000 Vietnam Vets homeless - the latest estimate from the VA is that nearly 1,000 Iraq War vets are homeless. Check out this trailer for a new documentary called WHEN I CAME HOME.... it is seriously eye-opening. Its all about homeless Iraq War vets in NYC.

www.whenicamehome.com

Support the Vets!

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