Matt Huynh |
Bob Kerrey and the ‘American Tragedy’ of Vietnam
Viet Thanh Nguyen is the
author of “The Sympathizer,” which won the 2016 Pulitzer Prize for fiction, and
“Nothing Ever Dies: Vietnam and the Memory of War.”
International New York Times | 20 June 2016
Los Angeles — EVEN today, Americans argue over
the Vietnam War: what was done, what mistakes were made, and what were the
lasting effects on American power.
This sad history returns because of Bob
Kerrey’s appointment as chairman of the American-sponsored Fulbright University
Vietnam, the country’s first private university. That appointment has also
prompted the Vietnamese to debate how former
enemies can forgive and reconcile.
What is not in dispute is that in 1969 a team
of Navy SEALs, under a young Lieutenant Kerrey’s command, killed 20 unarmed
Vietnamese civilians, including women and children, in the village of Thanh
Phong. Mr. Kerrey, who later became a senator, a governor, a presidential
candidate and a university president, acknowledged his role in the atrocity in
his 2002 memoir, “When I Was a Young Man.”
Those in the
United States and Vietnam who favor Mr. Kerrey’s appointment see it as an act
of reconciliation: He has confessed, he deserves to be forgiven because of his
efforts to aid Vietnam, and his unique and terrible history makes him a potent
symbol for how both countries need to move on from their common war.
I disagree. He is
the wrong man for the job and regarding him as a symbol of peace is a failure
of moral imagination.
It is true that Americans have been more forthcoming about some of their crimes than anyone in the Vietnamese government and Communist Party. But it is equally true that Americans tend to remember the war as an American tragedy, as I saw distinctly while watching “Platoon,” “Apocalypse Now” and other movies as a boy growing up in California.
I lived among
many Vietnamese refugees for whom this war was a Vietnamese tragedy. President
Obama’s speech on
the war’s 50th anniversary in 2012 focused on the deaths of over 58,000
American soldiers; I wondered why more than 200,000 South Vietnamese and more
than one million North Vietnamese and Vietcong fighters who died were not
mentioned, nor the countless thousands of civilians who perished.
With Mr. Kerrey’s new position, we are returning to the familiar story about an American soldier’s redemption. Many Vietnamese are also focused on that story now, even as it comes at the expense of remembering Vietnamese suffering. Some opinion polls show a majority of Vietnamese endorsing Mr. Kerrey’s appointment, and some North Vietnamese veterans, like the renowned novelist Bao Ninh, have voiced their support.
Some in the
United States have said that Mr. Kerrey is also a victim — of an unjust war and
disastrous leadership — but such a claim seems ironic, if not outright ludicrous,
when one compares Mr. Kerrey’s prominence to the obscurity in which the
survivors of the attack he led and the relatives of those killed now live. His
life and career have barely been impeded, except for any personal regrets.
Indeed, as Mr.
Kerrey was once in Vietnam as an expression of United States power, he now
arrives in a different guise but still as a symbol of Western influence, this
time as a leader of a university.
Many Vietnamese
hope the university will deliver free-market values to a nominally Communist
country eager to continue its capitalist development. But such hope must be
tempered with the understanding that Western-style universities are ambivalent
places when it comes to encouraging greater equality.
At their best,
they cultivate humane thinking. At their worst, they both practice and promote
an economic inequality that supports the interests of the 1 percent:
exploitation of underpaid adjunct teachers; tremendous increases in student
debt; emphasizing the production of workers rather than learners.
Which role will
Fulbright play? This question foreshadows how Vietnam’s capitalist development,
guided by institutions like this one, could leave behind the country’s most
vulnerable.
If Mr. Kerrey
does continue as chairman, Americans and Vietnamese together should insist on
symbolic and material measures to make amends to his victims and address his
past.
First, he should
visit Thanh Phong and apologize to the survivors and the families of the dead.
Reconciliation between the two countries should be about more than the drama of
one American veteran; it should also include the tragedy of 20 dead Vietnamese
villagers.
Second, the
Fulbright campus in Ho Chi Minh City should include a prominent memorial to
Thanh Phong’s dead. Already visible throughout Vietnam are “martyrs’
cemeteries” commemorating more than one million soldiers who died for the
Communist revolution. Memorials to the even greater number of civilian dead are
rare, possibly because remembering their deaths might raise troublesome questions
about who killed them.
Third, Fulbright
should create educational programs to benefit Thanh Phong’s youth and prepare
them for a path that will lead to full scholarships at the school. The people
of Thanh Phong, and the many people throughout Vietnam like them, should
benefit from the university as much as Mr. Kerrey does from his chairmanship’s
prestige.
Fourth, the
school’s board should include spiritual leaders, peace activists and teachers
who support a humane vision of education, not just a corporate one.
The dead of Thanh
Phong, and all the civilian dead, demand an answer to the question of whether,
and how, a wealthier Vietnam will remember them, and whether United
States-style economic development will benefit all the citizens of Vietnam, or once
again make victims of the weakest and the poorest.
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