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    Southeast Asia
     Sep 25, 2012


US pivots, Vietnam forgets the past
By Lien Hoang

HO CHI MINH CITY - When American veterans, tourists, businesspeople, and others first visit Vietnam, they often are struck by a common observation, "Where's the war?"

Officially, Vietnam remembers the conflict that ended in 1975 on two levels: first, for citizens, through textbooks and holidays that exalt the communists' glorious victory; and second, for foreigners, through tours of places like the War Remnants Museum or the Cu Chi tunnels.

Beyond that, though, many US visitors feel as though something is missing. Americans traveling to Vietnam know that more than three decades have passed since their countries went to war. But many expect that the violence that once so ravaged this nation

 

would have left more discernible marks on modern daily life.

They find instead that not only do locals lack hostility toward their former foes, they generally seem to like Americans. If the discovery is disarming, it is because most US visitors come from such different backgrounds, where the Vietnam War (known to Vietnamese as the "American War") is associated with only painful memories. Most Vietnamese appear to have moved on while Americans are several decades later still haunted by the war.

That's a crucial distinction as the US "pivots" towards Asia and bids to convert former battlefield adversaries into new strategic allies in a diplomatic gambit to contain China's regional rise. Vietnam is on the frontline of that campaign as it looks towards the US in its tussle with China over contested territories in the South China Sea. While many would expect grass roots Vietnamese to reject closer ties to the US, the reality is that many welcome the budding bilateral embrace.

To be sure, Vietnamese have their own painful war memories. But they also claim something Americans can not: military victory. For all the costs of the conflict, including an estimated three million killed citizens and fighters, Vietnam emerged in 1975 with a unified and independent country; the US, on the other hand, had little to show for the 58,000 lives lost and estimated $111 billion spent.

An entire generation of US veterans returned home with guilt, post-traumatic stress disorder, and the sense that they and their country had fought without purpose. The guilt was amplified by the fact a relatively unknown people in a far off land had dealt one of the world's then two superpowers an embarrassing defeat. The guilt lingered as many Americans who encountered post-war Vietnamese apologized "for what we did to your country."

Justice vs normalization
Victory helped Vietnamese move on, as did a Buddhist tradition that accepts suffering and conceals animosity. But they also had more pragmatic motives to bury the past. By the 1980s, Vietnam faced food rationing, political isolation and an economic landscape as devastated as its physical one.

Part of the solution required normalizing relations with the US, thereby ending an embargo and opening the war-torn country to the first trickles of foreign aid and investment. Somewhat ironically, Americans had the upper hand at the bargaining table despite their defeat two decades earlier.

Leading up to 1995, when the battlefield adversaries made diplomatic amends, the US had plenty of domestic push-back from anti-communist camps. The US had just triumphed ideologically in the Cold War with the collapse of the Soviet Union, which had helped to subsidize Vietnam's post-war command economy. Then as now, a vocal faction of anti-communist South Vietnamese refugees were staunchly opposed to any warming of ties with the Socialist Republic of Vietnam.

These dynamics led to what Bill Hayton refers to as "official forgetting" in his 2010 book Vietnam: Rising Dragon. The former BBC correspondent in Hanoi describes in a chapter headed "Enemies into Friends" how Hanoi overlooked Washington's war crimes in order to improve their relationship and open the country to the world.

That meant encouraging soldiers to forget about the atrocities they witnessed. Later, citizens were discouraged against criticizing American visitors. It also meant playing down the US's excessive use of the toxic defoliant Agent Orange, which resulted in widespread health complications including severe birth defects, in the areas where it was used.

"Vietnam had to put aside issues of justice," says John McAuliff, who founded the New York-based Fund for Reconciliation and Development in 1985 to boost bilateral normalization efforts. "It couldn't have both normalization and justice."

Asymmetric ties
For practical or personal reasons, older Vietnamese had to bury their bitter war memories. For those born after the war - now more than 60% of the country's 91 million population - America is perceived quite differently.

While young Vietnamese learn in school that the ruling Communist Party drove out imperialist Americans, outside of school the spread of US soft power, seen in proliferating KFC restaurants, Hollywood films, and knock-off iPhones, has offered a sort of pro-US education.

This younger generation is less likely to view the US through the lens of history, and more likely through the prism of desirable cultural exports. They blare old Backstreet Boys hit songs from their shop fronts, flock to Batman premieres at local cinemas, and share with one another copies of the Twilight book series.

This is sharply contrasted with the US's still dominant war literature (Dispatches, The Things They Carried) and films (Full Metal Jacket, Apocalypse Now) that Americans largely continue to associate with Vietnam. That, coupled with their exposure to embittered South Vietnamese who lost the war and settled in the US, have largely shaped American perceptions of the country.

That Americans' awareness is often limited to the war is thus logical. One cannot expect a symmetric relationship between a global hegemon with a gross domestic product of US$15 trillion and a small, liberalizing Southeast Asian nation slowly emerging from least developed country status.

Vietnamese might read a half-dozen articles about the US in their newspapers on any given day. That's more than Americans probably will read about Vietnam in one month, and even then the stories often deal with the return of US veterans' remains or still ongoing efforts to rid the country of unexploded ordnance, land mines and Agent Orange left over from the war.

One upshot of those divergent information flows is that your average Vietnamese knows a lot more about the US than the past conflict. For the US, media attention is still often drawn to the visceral memories of war. But even in the US there will come a time when the majority of the population has been born after the Vietnam War, allowing for an easier convergence of interests and perceptions.

Lien Hoang is a reporter covering Southeast Asia. Connect with her at Twitter.com/lienh.

(Copyright 2012 Asia Times Online (Holdings) Ltd. All rights reserved. Please contact us about sales, syndication and republishing).


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