The Two
Author: Jim Guirard – TrueSpeak.org
http://truespeak.org/contents/view/thetwovietnamwars
Source: AmericanThinker.com
On Friday of last week, much of the establishment media
reminded us of the awful 35th anniversary of the so-called "End
of the Vietnam War" -- on
On Friday and throughout the weekend, familiar
pictures were shown of American helicopters lifting people off the roof of
the U.S. Embassy in
Since this snapshot of so-called "history" is
highly misleading, it becomes vital that the entire story of
Unfortunately, we live in an age when far too little attention is paid to history -- real history. What actually happened back then is often rewritten to satisfy political or ideological appetites of "Scamalot" revisionists -- who may be journalists, or academics, or deceitful governments, or religious zealots, or even occupants of high political office.
Evidence of this deceit can be found in
But sadly, back in January, we saw not a single
historically correct commentary about the end of "Vietnam
One" in any major
Remembered and loudly acclaimed, instead, is the infamous anniversary date more than two years later of the tragic end of "Vietnam Two" -- which
(a) began in January 1975,
(b) involved no
(c) came to a tragic end on
That was when
The deceitful tactic: Loudly and relentlessly
propagandize a first-ever "Defeat of
Two Sharply Different Wars
The many differences between these "two Vietnam
Wars" -- and their "lessons learned," if any, for the ongoing
battles for peace, stability, and democracy in
1) Beginning in 1961, all significant increases in U.S. combat forces in South Vietnam occurred during the administrations of John Kennedy and Lyndon Johnson (to a peak of 543,400 in late 1968) -- while all significant reductions (down to only 20,000 in late 1972 and to virtually zero by mid-1973) occurred in the administration of Richard Nixon.
These large reductions were made possible both by the steady weakening of North Vietnamese and by significant strengthening of South Vietnamese forces, especially during and following the widely and cynically misinterpreted Tet Offensive of 1968 -- which was an unmitigated disaster for the North.
2) During their dozen years in South Vietnam, U.S. combat forces did not lose a single major battle, despite the marginally insane (i.e., politically correct) rules of engagement to which they were subjected by Lyndon Johnson, Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara, and their "best and brightest" entourage -- and then by a similar, but less intrusive, micro-management by Richard Nixon and Henry Kissinger.
Clearly,
3) The biggest and longest battle of the entire Vietnam War
-- the Tet Offensive of early 1968 -- was the biggest
victory for
4) That part of the conflict in which US combat forces
participated ended with the Paris Peace Accords of
At that point, American and South Vietnamese forces had thwarted the Soviet-supported North. They had both militarily and diplomatically achieved the same status quo ante as the one which ended the Korean War twenty years earlier -- not a clear-cut victory, but surely not the shameful defeat which today's revisionists contend.
Enter
5) As stated above, it was not until January 1975 that the Soviet-backed North began "The Second Vietnam War," or Vietnam Two, against a largely abandoned South. This was a war made possible and winnable for the communists by three principal factors:
a) the post-Watergate, August 1974 resignation of President Richard Nixon;
b) the dominance of the antiwar congressional Democrats (pressured by Blame America First radicals of the Ted Kennedy, John Kerry, George McGovern, and Frank Church varieties), who in 1973-74 slashed aid to South Vietnam by more than half; and
c) the Moscow-Hanoi certainty that an unelected and politically insecure President Gerald Ford would not dare to intervene if the North were to invade the South.
6) The final Blitzkrieg-style victory of the
Soviet-supported North Vietnamese came on
7) The predicted "communist bloodbath" in
8) The long-anticipated "domino effect" also
occurred over the next five years (1975-80), during which a
"no-more-Vietnams" retreat by the
Ten plainly Marxist-Leninist states:
Ten more socialist, single-party "client states," which were close enough to communist tyranny as no longer to require so-called "liberation": Libya, Syria, Algeria, Iraq, Tanzania, Seychelles, Madagascar, Guinea-Bissau, Cape Verde, Sao-Tome/Principe, and the Congo.
9) It was not until Ronald Reagan became president in
January 1981 that this veritable avalanche of "dominoes" into the
Evil Empire ceased falling. The trend was reversed by the preemptive
"roll-back" liberation of
10) Whether or not Vietnam One was either strategically wise or militarily winnable (which this writer strongly believes it was), it was most certainly a "moral" and "just" cause. As with the case of World War II, such a determination can be based only on an objective analysis of the character and motivations of the enemy against whom the war was fought.
In total context, was this enemy the "good guy" who deserved to win, or the "bad guy" who should have lost? In this case, that Soviet-sponsored enemy -- Ho Chi Minh's North Vietnam -- proved quite clearly in the postwar period to be far more imperialist than "nationalist," far more repressive than "liberationist," and far more fascist-Left than "people's democratic."
This is why so many Americans have always believed that by any objective standard, "the wrong side won." And this is why we must remind everyone, in the name of truth-in-history, that this "wrong side" victory came against a cut-and-run U.S. Congress -- and not against American combat forces in Vietnam One, which ended imperfectly but honorably in early 1973.
Of course, that historic truth is regretted to this day by
many of the anti-liberation left, who would have preferred that "arrogant
A final note: The idea that there would be no "domino
effect" to a defeat of American and Coalition forces in
Review #8 above for a truth-in-history reminder of the twenty post-Vietnam dominoes which fell in a period of only five short years -- four of them during the pathetic Carter-Mondale years -- followed then by the 1980s decade of the "roll-back of communism," which was applauded by many (and demeaned by many others) as the Reagan Revolution.
A DC-area
attorney and national security strategist, Jim Guirard
was longtime Chief of Staff to former U.S. Senators Allen Ellender
and Russell Long. His TrueSpeak.org website focuses on truth-in-language and
truth-in-history in public discourse.