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Title: Visions of Righteousness Author: Noam Chomsky Date: 1986 Language: en Topics: Imperialism, US foreign interventions Source: Retrieved on 8th June 2021 from http://www.jstor.org/stable/1354163 Notes: Published in Cultural Critique, No. 3, American Representations of Vietnam (Spring, 1986), pp. 10–43. doi:10.2307/1354163 Some of these remarks are adapted from my articles: “Dominoes,” Granta 15, (1985): 129–133; and “Forgotten History of the War in Vietnam,” In These Times 9, no. 24 (15–21 May 1985): 11.
In one of his sermons on human rights, President Carter explained that
we owe Vietnam no debt and have no responsibility to render it any
assistance because “the destruction was mutual.”[1] If words have
meaning, this must stand among the most astonishing statements in
diplomatic history. What is most interesting about this statement is the
reaction to it among educated Americans: null. Furthermore, the
occasional reference to it, and what it means, evokes no comment and no
interest. It is considered neither appalling, nor even noteworthy, and
is felt to have no bearing on Carter’s standing as patron saint of human
rights, any more than do his actions: dedicated support for Indonesian
atrocities in Timor and the successful terrorist campaign undertaken in
El Salvador to destroy the popular organizations that were defended by
the assassinated Archbishop; a huge increase in arms flow to Israel in
parallel with its 1978 invasion of Lebanon, its subsequent large-scale
bombing of civilians, and its rapid expansion into the occupied
territories; etc. All of this is a tribute to the successes of a system
of indoctrination that has few if any peers.
These successes permit the commissars to issue pronouncements of quite
impressive audacity. Thus, Zbigniew Brzezinski thunders that the Soviet
invasion of Afghanistan is
a classical foreign invasion, waged with Nazi-like brutality. Scorched
villages, executed hostages, massive bombings, even chemical warfare ...
[with] several hundred thousand killed and maimed by Soviet military
operations that qualify as genocidal in their intent and effect.... It
needs to be said directly, and over and over again, that Soviet policy
in Afghanistan is the fourth greatest exercise in social holocaust of
our contemporary age: it ranks only after Stalin’s multimillion
massacres; after Hitler’s genocide of the European Jews and partially of
the Slavs; and after Pol Pot’s decimation of his own people; it is,
moreover, happening right now.[2]
While the descriptive words are fair enough, when issuing from this
source they merit all the admiration accorded similar pronouncements by
Brzezinski’s Soviet models with regard to American crimes, which he
somehow seems to have overlooked in his ranking of atrocities of the
modern age. To mention a few: the U.S. wars in Indochina, to which his
condemnation applies in full except that there were many millions
“killed and maimed” and the level of destruction was far greater; the
Indonesian massacres of 1965 backed enthusiastically by the U.S.with
half a million murdered; the Timor massacres conducted under
Brzezinski’s aegis with hundreds of thousands “killed and maimed” and
the remnants left in the state of Biafra and the Thai-Cambodian border,
an operation that is “happening right now” thanks to U.S. silence and
support; the murder, often with hideous torture and mutilation, of over
100,000 people in El Salvador and Guatemala since 1978, operations
carried out thanks to the support ofthe U.S. and its proxies, and most
definitely “happening right now.” But the readers of the National
Interest will find nothing amiss in Brzezinski’s presentation, since in
Vietnam “the destruction was mutual” and the other cases, if known at
all, have been easily assimilated into the preferred model of American
benevolence. An auspicious opening for a new “conservative” journal of
international affairs.
“It is scandalous,” Brzezinski writes, “that so much of the
conventionally liberal community, always so ready to embrace victims of
American or Israeli or any other unfashionable ‘imperialism,’ is so
reticent on the subject” of Afghanistan. Surely one might expect
liberals in Congress or the press to desist from their ceaseless efforts
on behalf of the PLO and the guerillas in El Salvador long enough to
notice Soviet crimes; perhaps they might even follow Brzezinski to the
Khyber Pass so that they can strike heroic poses there before a camera
crew. One should not, incidentally, dismiss this characterization of the
“liberal community” on the grounds of its transparent absurdity. Rather,
it should be understood as a typical example of a campaign carefully
designed to eliminate even the limited critique of crimes by the U.S.
and its clients that sometimes is voiced, a campaign that reflects the
natural commitments of the totalitarian right, which regards anything
less than full subservience as an intolerable deviation from political
correctness.
Some feel that there was a debt but that it has been amply repaid. Under
the headline “The Debt to the Indochinese Is Becoming a Fiscal Drain,”
Bernard Gwertzman of the New York Times quotes a State Department
official who “said he believed the United States has now paid its moral
debt for its involvement on the losing side in Indochina.” The remark,
which passed without comment, is illuminating: we owe no debt for mass
slaughter and for leaving three countries in ruins, no debt to the
millions of maimed and orphaned, to the peasants who still die today
from unexploded ordnance. Rather, our moral debt results only from the
fact that we did not win or as the Party Line has it, that South Vietnam
(namely, the client regime that we established as a cover for our attack
against South Vietnam, which had as much legitimacy as the Afghan regime
established by the USSR) lost the war to North Vietnam the official
enemy, since the U.S. attack against the south cannot be conceded. By
this logic, if the Russians win in Afghanistan, they will have no moral
debt at all. Proceeding further, how have we paid our moral debt for
failing to win? By resettling Vietnamese refugees fleeing the lands we
ravaged, “one of the largest, most dramatic humanitarian efforts in
history” according to Roger Winter, director of the U.S. Committee for
Refugees. But “despite the pride,” Gwertzman reports, “some voices in
the Reagan Administration and in Congress are once again asking whether
the war debt has now been paid...”[3]
Invariably, the reader of the press who believes that the lowest depths
have already been reached is proven wrong. In March 1968, as U.S.
atrocities in South Vietnam were reaching their peak, the Times ran an
item headed “Army Exhibit Bars Simulating Shooting at Vietnamese Hut,”
reporting an attempt by demonstrators to disrupt an exhibit in the
Chicago Museum of Science and Industry: “Beginning today, visitors can
no longer enter a helicopter for simulated firing of a machine gun at
targets in a diorama of the Vietnam Central Highlands. The targets were
a hut, two bridges and an ammunition dump, and a light flashed when a
hit was scored.” The Times is bitterly scornful of the peaceniks who
demonstrated in protest at this amusing exhibit, which was such great
fun for the kiddies, even objecting “to children being permitted to
‘fire’ at the hut, even though no people appear... “ Citing this item at
the time, I asked whether “what is needed in the United States is
dissent or denazification,” a question that elicited much outrage; the
question stands, however.[4]
To see how the moral level has improved since, we may turn to the Times
sixteen years later, where we find a report on a new board game designed
by a Princeton student called “Vietnam: 1965–1975.” One player “takes
the role of the United States and South Vietnam, and the other
represents North Vietnam and the Vietcong.” The inventor hopes the game
will lead people to “experiment with new ideas, new approaches” to the
war. We may ask another question: how would we react to a report in
Pravda of a board game sold in Moscow, in which one player “takes the
role of the USSR and Afghanistan, and the other represents Pakistan, the
CIA, China, and the rebels,” designed to lead people to “experiment with
new ideas, new approaches” to the war perhaps supplied with some
accessory information concerning the “bandits terrorizing Afghanistan,”
who, according to Western sources, initiated their attacks from Pakistan
with support from this U.S.Chinese ally in 1973, six years before the
USSR sent forces to “defend the legitimate government?”[5]
The American system of indoctrination is not satisfied with “mutual
destruction” that effaces all responsibility for some of the major war
crimes of the modern era. Rather, the perpetrator of the crimes must be
seen as the injured party. We find headlines in the nation’s press
reading: “Vietnam, Trying to be Nicer, Still has a Long Way to Go.”[6]
“It’s about time the Vietnamese demonstrated some good will,” said
Charles Printz of Human Rights Advocates International, referring to
negotiations about Amerasian children who constitute a tiny fraction of
the victims of the savage U.S. aggression in Indochina. Crossette adds
that the Vietnamese have also not been sufficiently forthcoming on the
matter of remains of American soldiers, though their behavior is
improving somewhat: “There has been progress, albeit slow, on the
missing Americans.” The unresolved problem of the war is what they did
to us. This point of view may be understood by invoking the terminology
contrived by Adlai Stevenson the hero of Brzezinski’s “liberal
community” at the United Nations in May 1964, when he explained that we
were in South Vietnam to combat “internal aggression,” that is, the
aggression of South Vietnamese peasants against U.S. military forces and
their clients in South Vietnam. Since we were simply defending ourselves
from aggression, it makes sense to consider ourselves the victims of the
Vietnamese.[7]
This picture of aggrieved innocence, carefully crafted by the propaganda
system and lovingly nurtured by the educated classes, must surely count
as one of the most remarkable phenomena of the modern age. Its roots lie
deep in the national culture. “The conquerors of America glorified the
devastation they wrought in visions of righteousness,” Francis Jennings
observes, “and their descendants have been reluctant to peer through the
aura.”[8] No one who surveys the story of the conquest of the national
territory, or the reaction to it over three and a half centuries, can
doubt the accuracy of this indictment. In Memphis in 1831, Alexis de
Tocqueville watched in “the middle of the winter” when the “cold was
unusually severe” as “three or four thousand soldiers drive before them
the wandering races of the aborigines,” who “brought in their train the
wounded and the sick, with children newly born and old men on the verge
of death,” a “solemn spectacle” that would never fade from his memory:
“the triumphal march of civilization across the desert.” They were the
lucky ones, the ones who had escaped the ravages of AndrewJackson who,
years earlier, had urged his men to exterminate the “blood thirsty
barbarians” and “cannibals” and to “distroy [sic] those deluded victims
doomed to distruction [sic] by their own restless and savage conduct” as
they did, killingwomen and children, stripping the skin from the bodies
of the dead for bridle reins and cutting the tip of each dead Indian’s
nose to count the number of “savage dogs” who had been removed from the
path of civilization. De Tocqueville was particularly impressed by the
way the pioneers could deprive Indians of their rights and exterminate
them “with singular felicity, tranquilly, legally, philanthropically,
without shedding blood, and without violating a single great principle
of morality in the eyes of the world.” It was impossible to destroy
people with “more respect for the laws of humanity.” Still earlier, the
Founding Fathers, in their bill of indictment in the Declaration of
Independence, had accused the King of England of inciting against the
suffering colonies “the merciless Indian Savages, whose known rule of
warfare, is an undistinguished destruction of all ages, sexes and
conditions”; they were referring to the response of the native
population to the genocidal assaults launched against them by the
saintly Puritans and other merciless European savages who had taught the
Indians that warfare, European-style, is a program of mass extermination
of women and children, a lesson that George Washington was soon to teach
the Iroquois as he sent his forces to destroy their society and
civilization, quite advanced by the standards of the era, in 1779.
Rarely have hypocrisy and moral cowardice been so explicit, and admired
with such awe for centuries.[9]
The story continues with no essential change in later years. The
American conquest of the Philippines, led by men who had learned their
craft in the Indian wars, ranks among the most barbaric episodes of
modern history. In the island of Luzon alone, some 600,000 natives
perished from the war or diseases caused by it. GeneralJacob Smith, who
gave orders to turn the island of Samar into a “howling wilderness,” to
“kill and burn” “the more you kill and burn the better you will please
me” was retired with no punishment by President Roosevelt, who made it
clear that Smith’s only sin was his “loose and violent talk.” Roosevelt,
who went on to receive the Nobel Peace Prize, explained that “I also
heartily approve of the employment of the sternest measures necessary”
against the cruel and treacherous savages who “disregard... the rules of
civilized warfare,” and who had furthermore “assailed our sovereignty”
(President McKinley) in an earlier act of internal aggression. The
director of all Presbyterian missions hailed the conquest as “a great
step toward the civilization and the evangelization of the world,” while
another missionary explained that the notorious “water cure” was not
really “torture” because “the victim has it in his own power to stop the
process” by divulging what he knows “before the operation has gone far
enough to seriously hurt him,” and a leading Episcopal Bishop lauded
General Smith’s tactics as necessary “to purge the natives,” who were
“treacherous and barbarous,” of the “evil effects” of”a degenerate form
of Christianity.” The press chimed in with similar sentiments. “Whether
we like it or not,” the New York Criterion explained, “we must go on
slaughtering the natives in English fashion, and taking what muddy glory
lies in the wholesale killing until they have learned to respect our
arms. The more difficult task of getting them to respect our intentions
will follow.” Similar thoughts were expressed as we were slaughtering
the natives of South Vietnam, and we hear them again today, often in
almost these words, with regard to our current exploits in Central
America. The reference of the “English fashion” will be understood by
any student of American history.
For Theodore Roosevelt, the murderers in the Philippines were fighting
“for the triumph of civilization over the black chaos of savagery and
barbarism,” while President Taft observed that “there never was a war
conducted, whether against inferior races or not, in which there were
more compassion and more restraint and more generosity” than in this
campaign of wholesale slaughter and mass torture and terror. Stuart
Chreighton Miller, who records these horrors and the reaction to them in
some detail and observes that they have largely disappeared from
history, assures the reader that “the American interventions both in
Vietnam and in the Philippines were motivated in part by good intentions
to elevate or to aid the victims”; Soviet scholars say the same about
Afghanistan, with comparable justice.”[10]
General Smith’s subordinate Littleton Waller was acquitted in
courtmartial proceedings, since he had only been following orders:
namely, to kill every male Filipino over the age of ten. He went on to
become a Major-General, and to take charge of Woodrow Wilson’s
atrocities as he celebrated his doctrine of self-determination by
invading Haiti and the Dominican Republic, where his warriors murdered,
raped, burned villages, established concentration camps that provided
labor for U.S. companies, reinstituted virtual slavery, demolished the
political system and any vestige of intellectual freedom, and generally
reduced the countries to misery while enriching U.S. sugar companies.
According to the approved version, these exploits not only illustrate
the Wilsonian doctrine of self-determination to which we are dedicated
as a matter of definition, but also serve as a notable example of how
“the overall effect of American power on other societies was to further
liberty, pluralism, and democracy.” So we are informed by Harvard
scholar Samuel Huntington, who adds that “No Dominican could doubt but
that his country was a far, far better place to live in 1922 than it was
in 1916,” including those tortured by the benefactors and those whose
families they murdered or whose villages they burned for the benefit of
U.S. sugar companies.[11]
The record of U.S. intervention in Central America and the Caribbean, to
the present day, adds further shameful chapters to the story of terror,
torture, slavery, starvation and repression, all conducted with the most
touching innocence, and with endless benevolence particularly with
regard to the U.S. investors whose representatives design these
admirable exercises. The worst period in this sordid history was
initiated by the Kennedy Administration, which established the basic
structure of state terrorism that has since massacred tens of thousands
as an integral part of the Alliance for Progress; this cynical program,
devised in fear of”another Castro,” fostered a form of “development” in
which crop lands were converted to export for the benefit of U.S.
corporations and their local associates while the population sank into
misery and starvation, necessitating an efficient system of state terror
to ensure “stability” and “order.” We can witness its achievements
today, for example, in El Salvador, where Presidents Carter and Reagan
organized the slaughter of some 60,000 people, to mounting applause in
the United States as the terror appeared to be showing signs of success.
During the post-World War II period, as U.S. power greatly expanded,
similar projects were undertaken over a much wider range, with massacres
in Greece, Korea (prior to what we call “the Korean War,” some 100,000
had been killed in South Korea, primarily in U.S.-run counterinsurgency
campaigns undertaken as part of our successful effort to destroy the
indigenous political system and install our chosen clients), Southeast
Asia, and elsewhere, all with inspiring professions of noble intent and
the enthusiastic acclaim of the educated classes, as long as violence
appears to be successful.[12]
In brief, a major theme of our history from the earliest days has been a
combination of hideous atrocities and protestations of awesome
benevolence. It should come as no great surprise to students of American
history that we are the injured party in Indochina.
Contrary to much illusion, there was little principled opposition to the
Indochina war among the articulate intelligentsia. One detailed study
undertaken in 1970, at the peak of antiwar protest, revealed that the
“American intellectual elite” came to oppose the war for the same
“pragmatic reasons” that had convinced business circles that this
investment should be liquidated. Very few opposed the war on the grounds
that led all to condemn the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia: not that
it failed, or that it was too bloody, but that aggression is wrong. In
striking contrast, as late as 1982 after years of unremitting propaganda
with virtually no dissenting voice permitted expression to a large
audience over 70% of the general population (but far fewer “opinion
leaders”) still regarded thewaras “fundamentally wrong and immoral,” not
merely “a mistake.”[13]
The technical term for this failure of the indoctrination system is the
“Vietnam syndrome,” a dread disease that spread over the population with
such symptoms as distaste for aggression and massacre, what Norman
Podhoretz calls the “sickly inhibitions against the use of military
force,” which he hopes were finally overcome with the grand triumph of
American arms in Grenada.[14] The malady, however, persists, and
continues to inhibit the state executive in Central America and
elsewhere. The major U.S. defeat in Indochinawas at home: much of the
population rejected the approved stance of passivity, apathy and
obedience. Great efforts were made through the 1970s to overcome this
“crisis of democracy,” as it was called, but with less success than
reliance on articulate opinion would suggest.
There was, to be sure, debate over the wisdom of the war. The hawks,
such as Joseph Alsop, argued that with sufficient violence the U.S.
could succeed in its aims, while the doves doubted this conclusion,
though emphasizing that “we all pray that Mr. Alsop will be right” and
that “we may all be saluting the wisdom and statesmanship of the
American government” if it succeeds in subjugating Vietnam (what we
would call: “liberating Vietnam”) while leaving it “a land of ruin and
wreck” (Arthur Schlesinger). Few would deny that the war began with
“blundering efforts to do good” (Anthony Lewis) in “an excess of
righteousness and disinterested benevolence” John King Fairbank), that
it was “a failed crusade” undertaken for motives that were “noble”
though “illusory” and with the “loftiest intentions” (Stanley Karnow, in
his best-selling history). These are the voices of the doves. As noted,
much of the population rejected the hawkdove consensus of elite circles,
a fact of lasting significance. It was that part of the population that
concerned the planners in Washington, for example, Defense Secretary
Robert McNamara, who asked in a secret memo of May 19, 1967 whether
expansion of the American war might “polarize opinion to the extent
that’doves’ in the US will get out of hand massive refusals to serve, or
to fight, or to cooperate, or worse?”[15]
It is worth recalling a few facts. The U.S. was deeply committed to the
French effort to reconquer their former colony, recognizing throughout
that the enemy was the nationalist movement of Vietnam. The death toll
was about 1/2 million. When France withdrew, the U.S. dedicated itself
at once to subverting the 1954 Geneva settlement, installing in the
south a terrorist regime that had killed perhaps 70,000 “Viet Cong” by
1961, evoking resistance which, from 1959, was supported from the
northern half of the country temporarily divided by the 1954 settlement
that the U.S. had undermined. In 1961–2, President Kennedy launched a
direct attack against rural South Vietnam with large-scale bombing and
defoliation as part of a program designed to drive millions of people to
camps where they would be “protected” by armed guards and barbed wire
from the guerrillas whom, the U.S. conceded, they were willingly
supporting. The U.S. maintained that it was invited in, but as the
London Economist accurately observed, “an invader is an invader unless
invited in by a government with a claim to legitimacy.” The U.S. never
regarded the clients it installed as having any such claim, and in fact
regularly replaced them when they failed to exhibit sufficient
enthusiasm for the American attack or sought to implement the neutralist
settlement that was advocated on all sides and was considered the prime
danger by the aggressors, since it would undermine the basis for their
war against South Vietnam. In short, the U.S. invaded South Vietnam,
where it proceeded to compound the crime of aggression with numerous and
quite appalling crimes against humanity throughout Indochina.
The Economist, of course, was not referring to Vietnam but to a similar
Soviet fraud concerning Afghanistan. With regard to official enemies,
Western intellectuals are able to perceive that 2 + 2 = 4. Their Soviet
counterparts have the same clear vision with regard to the United
States.
From 1961 to 1965, the U.S. expanded the war against South Vietnam while
fending off the threat of neutralization and political settlement, which
was severe at the time. This was regarded as an intolerable prospect,
since our “minnow” could not compete politically with their “whale,” as
explained by Douglas Pike, the leading government specialist on the
National Liberation Front (in essence, the former Viet Minh, the
anti-French resistance, “Viet Cong” in U.S. propaganda). Pike further
explained that the NLF “maintained that its contest with the GVN [the
U.S.-installed client regime] and the United States should be fought out
at the political level and that the use of massed military might was in
itself illegitimate” until forced by the United States “to use
counter-force to survive.” The aggressors succeeded in shifting the
conflict from the political to the military arena, a major victory since
it is in that arena alone that they reign supreme, while the propaganda
system then exploited the use of “counter-force to survive” by the South
Vietnamese enemy as proof that they were “terrorists” from whom we must
defend South Vietnam by attacking and destroying it. Still more
interestingly, this version of history is now close to received
doctrine.
In 1965, the U.S. began the direct land invasion of South Vietnam, along
with the bombing of the north, and at three times the level, the
systematic bombardment of the south, which bore the brunt of U.S.
aggression throughout. By then, probably some 170,000 South Vietnamese
had been killed, many of them “under the crushing weight of American
armor, napalm, jet bombers and, finally, vomiting gases,” in the words
of the hawkish military historian Bernard Fall. The U.S. then escalated
the war against the south, also extending it to Laos and Cambodia where
perhaps another 1/2 million to a million were killed, while the
Vietnamese death toll may well have reached or passed 3 million, while
the land was destroyed and the societies demolished in one of the major
catastrophes of the modern era[16] a respectable achievement in the days
before we fell victim to the “sickly inhibitions against the use of
military force.”
The devastation that the United States left as its legacy has been
quickly removed from consciousness here, and indeed, was little
appreciated at the time. Its extent is worth recalling. In the south,
9,000 out of 15,000 hamlets were damaged or destroyed along with some 25
million acres of farmland and 12 million acres of forest; 1.5 million
cattle were killed; and there are 1 million widows and some 800,000
orphans. In the north, all six industrial cities were damaged (three
razed to the ground) along with 28 of 30 provincial towns (12 completely
destroyed), 96 of 116 district towns, and 4,000 of some 5,800 communes;
400,000 cattle were killed and over a million acres of farmland were
damaged. Much of the land is a moonscape, where people live on the edge
of famine with rice rations lower than Bangladesh. In a recent study
unreported here in the mainstream, the respected Swissbased
environmental group IUCN (International Union for Conservation of Nature
and Natural Resources) concluded that the ecology is not only refusing
to heal but is worsening, so that a “catastrophe” may result unless
billions of dollars are spent to “reconstruct” the land that has been
destroyed, a “monumental” task that could be addressed only if the U.S.
were to offer the reparations that it owes, a possibility that cannot be
considered in a cultural climate as depraved and cowardly as ours.
Forests have not recovered, fisheries remain reduced in variety and
productivity, cropland productivity has not yet regained normal levels,
and there is a great increase in toxin-related disease and cancer, with
4 million acres affected by the 19 million gallons of poisons dumped on
cropland and forest in U.S. chemical warfare operations. Destruction of
forests has increased the frequency of floods and droughts and
aggravated the impact of typhoons, and war damage to dikes (some of
which, in the south, were completely destroyed by U.S. bombardment) and
other agricultural systems have yet to be repaired. The report notes
that “humanitarian and conservationist groups, particularly in the
United States, have encountered official resistance and red tape when
requesting their governments’ authorization to send assistance to
Vietnam” naturally enough, since the U.S. remains committed to ensure
that its victory is not threatened by recovery of the countries it has
destroyed.[17]
Throughout 1964, as the U.S. planned the extension of its aggression to
North Vietnam, planners were aware that heightened U.S. military actions
might lead to North Vietnamese “ground action in South Vietnam or Laos”
in retaliation (William Bundy, November 1964). The U.S. later claimed
that North Vietnamese troops began leaving for the south in October
1964, two months after the U.S. bombing of North Vietnam during the
fabricated Tonkin Gulf incident. As late as July 1965, the Pentagon was
still concerned over the “probability” that there might be North
Vietnamese units in or near the south five months after the regular
bombing of North Vietnam, three months after the direct U.S. land
invasion of the south, over three years after the beginning of U.S.
bombing of the south, ten years after the U.S. subversion of the
political accords that were to unify the country, and with the death
toll in the south probably approaching 200,000. Thankfully, North
Vietnamese units finally arrived as anticipated, thus making it possible
for the propaganda system to shift from defense of South Vietnam against
internal aggression to defense against North Vietnamese aggression. As
late as the Tet offensive in January 1968, North Vietnamese troops
appear to have been at about the level of the mercenary forces (Korean,
Thai) brought in by the U.S. from January 1965 as part of the effort to
subjugate South Vietnam, and according to the Pentagon there still were
only South Vietnamese fighting in the Mekong Delta, where the most
savage fighting took place at the time. U.S. military forces of course
vastly exceeded all others in numbers, firepower, and atrocities.
The Party Line holds that “North Vietnam, not the Vietcong, was always
the enemy,” as John Corry observes in reporting the basic message of an
NBC “White Paper” on the war.[18] This stand is conventional in the
mainstream. Corry is particularly indignant that anyone should question
this Higher Truth propounded by the state propaganda system. As proof of
the absurdity of such “liberal mythology,” he cites the battle of Ia
Drang valley in November 1965: “It was clear then that North Vietnam was
in the war. Nonetheless, liberal mythology insisted that the war was
being waged only by the Vietcong, mostly righteous peasants. “ Corry
presents no example of anyone who denied that there were North
Vietnamese troops in the south in November 1965, since there were none,
even among the few opponents of the war, who at that time and for
several years after included very few representatives of mainstream
liberalism. As noted earlier, principled objection to the war was a
highly marginal phenomenon among American intellectuals even at the
height of opposition to it. Corry’s argument for North Vietnamese
aggression, however, is as impressive as any that has been presented.
The NBC “White Paper” was one of a rash of retrospectives on the tenth
anniversary of the war’s end, devoted to “The War that Went Wrong, The
Lessons it Taught.”[19] They present a sad picture of U.S. intellectual
culture, a picture of dishonesty and moral cowardice. Their most
striking feature is what is missing: the American wars in Indochina. It
is a classic example of Hamlet without the Prince of Denmark. Apart from
a few scattered sentences, the rare allusions to the war in these
lengthy presentations are devoted to the suffering of the American
invaders. The Wall Street Journal, for example, refers to “the $180
million in chemical companies’ compensation to Agent Orange victims”
U.S. soldiers, not the South Vietnamese victims, whose suffering was and
is vastly greater.[20] It is difficult to exaggerate the significance of
these startling facts.
There is an occasional glimpse of reality. Time opens its inquiry by
recalling the trauma of the American soldiers, facing an enemy that
“dissolved by day into the villages, into the other Vietnamese. They
maddened the Americans with the mystery of who they were the unseen man
who shot from the tree line, or laid a wire across the trail with a
Claymore mine at the other end, the mama-san who did the wash, the child
concealing a grenade.” No doubt one could find similar complaints in the
Nazi press about the Balkans.
The meaning of these facts is almost never perceived. Time goes so far
as to claim that the “subversion” was “orchestrated” by Moscow, so that
the U.S. had to send troops to “defend” South Vietnam, echoing the
fantasies concocted in scholarship, for example, by Walt Rostow, who
maintains that in his effort “to gain the balance of power in Eurasia,”
Stalin turned “to the East, to back Mao and to enflame the North Korean
and Indochinese Communists.”[21] Few can comprehend surely not the
editors of Time the significance of the analysis by the military command
and civilian officials of the aggressors:
The success of this unique system of war depends upon almost complete
unity of action of the entire population. That such unity is a fact is
too obvious to admit of discussion: how it is brought about and
maintained is not so plain. Intimidation has undoubtedly accomplished
much to this end, but fear as the only motive is hardly sufficient to
account for the united and apparently spontaneous action of several
millions of people .... [The only collaborators are] intriguers,
disreputable or ignorant, who we had rigged out with sometimes high
ranks, which became tools in their hands for plundering the country
without scruple.... Despised, they possessed neither the spiritual
culture nor the moral fibre that would have allowed them to understand
and carry out their task.
The words are those of General Arthur McArthur describing the Philippine
war of national liberation in 1900 and the French residentminister in
Vietnam in 1897,[22] but they apply with considerable accuracy to the
U.S. war against Vietnam, as the Time quote illustrates, in its own way.
Throughout, the familiar convenient innocence served admirably, as in
the days when we were “slaughtering the natives” in the Philippines,
Latin America and elsewhere, preparing the way to “getting them to
respect our intentions.” In February 1965, the U.S. initiated the
regular bombardment of North Vietnam, and more significantly, as Bernard
Fall observed, began “to wage unlimited aerial warfare inside [South
Vietnam] at the price of literally pounding the place to bits,” the
decision that “changed the character of the Vietnam war” more than any
other.[23] These moves inspired the distinguished liberal commentator of
the New York Times, James Reston, “to clarify America’s present and
future policy in Vietnam”:
The guiding principle of American foreign policy since 1945 has been
that no state shall use military force or the threat of military force
to achieve its political objectives. And the companion of this principle
has been that the United States would use its influence and its power,
when necessary and where it could be effective, against any state that
defied this principle.
This is the principle that was “at stake in Vietnam,” where “the United
States is now challenging the Communist effort to seek power by the more
cunning technique of military subversion” (the United States having
blocked all efforts at political settlement because it knew the
indigenous opposition would easily win a political contest, and after
ten years of murderous repression and three years of U.S. Air Force
bombing in the south).[24]
In November 1967, when Bernard Fall, long a committed advocate of U.S.
support for the Saigon regime, pleaded for an end to the war because
“Viet-Nam as a cultural and historic entity... is threatened with
extinction .. [as] ... the countryside literally dies under the blows of
the largest military machine ever unleashed on an area of this size,”
Reston explained that America
is fighting a war now on the principle that military power shall not
compel South Vietnam to do what it does not want to do, that man does
not belong to the state. This is the deepest conviction of Western
Civilization, and rests on the old doctrine that the individual belongs
not to the state but to his Creator, and therefore, has “inalienable
rights” as a person, which no magistrate or political force may
violate.[25]
The same touching faith in American innocence and benevolence in
Indochina as elsewhere throughout our history persists until today in
any commentary that can reach a substantial audience, untroubled by the
plain facts. Much of the population understood and still remembers the
truth, though this too will pass as the system of indoctrination erases
historical memories and establishes the “truths” that are deemed more
satisfactory.
By 1967, popular protest had reached a significant scale, although elite
groups remained loyal to the cause, apart from the bombing of North
Vietnam, which was regarded as a potential threat to us since it might
lead to a broader war drawing in China and the USSR, from which we might
not be immune the “toughest” question, according to the McNamara memo
cited earlier, and the only serious question among “respectable” critics
of the war. The massacre of innocents is a problem only among emotional
or irresponsible types, or among the “aging adolescents on college
faculties who found it rejuvenating to play ‘revolution’,” in Stuart
Chreighton Miller’s words. Decent and respectable people remain silent
and obedient, devoting themselves to personal gain, concerned only that
we too might ultimately face unacceptable threat a stance not without
recent historical precedent elsewhere. In contrast to the war
protestors, two commentators explain, “decent, patriotic Americans
demanded and in the person of Ronald Reagan have apparently achieved a
return to pride and patriotism, a reaffirmation of the values and
virtues that had been trampled upon by the Vietnam-spawned
counterculture,”[26] most crucially the virtues of marching in the
parade chanting praises for their leaders as they conduct their
necessary chores, as in Indochina and El Salvador.
The U.S. attack reached its peak of intensity and horror after the Tet
offensive, with the post-Tet pacification campaigns actually mass murder
operations launched against defenseless civilians, as in Operation
Speedy Express in the Mekong Delta and mounting atrocities in Laos and
Cambodia, called here “secret wars,” a technical term referring to
executive wars that the press does not expose though it has ample
evidence concerning them, and that are later denounced with much
outrage, when the proper time has come, and attributed to evil men whom
we have sternly excluded from the body politic, another sign of our
profound decency and honor. By 1970, if not before, it was becoming
clear that U.S. policy would “create a situation in which, indeed, North
Vietnam will necessarily dominate Indochina, for no other viable society
will remain.”[27] This predictable consequence of U.S. savagery would
later be used as a post hoc justification for it, in another propaganda
achievement that Goebbels would have admired.
It is a most revealing fact that there is no such event in history as
the American attack against South Vietnam launched by Kennedy and
escalated by his successors. Rather, history records only “a defense of
freedom,”[28] a “failed crusade” (Stanley Karnow) that was perhaps
unwise, the doves maintain. At a comparable level of integrity, Soviet
party hacks extol the “defense of Afghanistan” against “bandits” and
“terrorists” organized by the CIA. They, at least, can plead fear of
totalitarian violence, while their Western counterparts can offer no
such excuse for their servility.
The extent of this servility is revealed throughout the tenth
anniversary retrospectives, not only by the omission of the war itself,
but also by the interpretation provided. The New York Times writes
sardonically of the “ignorance” of the American people, only 60 percent
of whom are aware that the U.S. “sided with South Vietnam”[29] as Nazi
Germany sided with France, as the USSR now sides with Afghanistan. Given
that we were defending South Vietnam, it must be that the critics of
this noble if flawed enterprise sided with Hanoi, and that is indeed
what the Party Line maintains; that opposition to American aggression
entails no such support, just as opposition to Soviet aggression entails
no support for either the feudalist forces of the Afghan resistance or
Pakistan or the United States, is an elementary point that would not
surpass the capacity of an intelligent ten-year old, though it
inevitably escapes the mind of the commissar. The Times alleges that
North Vietnam was “portrayed by some American intellectuals as the
repository of moral rectitude.” No examples are given, nor is evidence
presented to support these charges, and the actual record is, as always,
scrupulously ignored. Critics of the anti-war movement are quoted on its
“moral failure of terrifying proportions,” but those who opposed U.S.
atrocities are given no opportunity to explain the basis for their
opposition to U.S. aggression and massacre or to assign these critics
and the New York Times their proper place in history, including those
who regard themselves as “doves” because of their occasional twitters of
protest when the cost to us became too great. We learn that the
opponents of the war “brandished moral principles and brushed aside
complexity,” but hear nothing of what they had to say exactly as was the
case throughout the war. A current pretense is that the mainstream media
were open to principled critics of the war during these years, indeed
that they dominated the media. In fact, they were almost entirely
excluded, as is easily demonstrated, and now we are permitted to hear
accounts of their alleged crimes, but not, of course, their actual
words, exactly as one would expect in a properly functioning system of
indoctrination.
The Times informs us that Vietnam “now stands exposed as the Prussia of
Southeast Asia” because since 1975 they have “unleashed a series of
pitiless attacks against their neighbors,” referring to the Vietnamese
invasion that overthrew the Pol Pot regime (after two years of border
attacks from Cambodia), the regime that we now support despite pretenses
to the contrary, emphasizing the “continuity” of the current Khmer
Rouge-based coalition with the Pol Pot regime (see below). The Khmer
Rouge receive “massive support” from our ally China, Nayan Chanda
reports, while the U.S. has more than doubled its support to the
coalition. Deng Xiaoping, expressing the Chinese stand (which we tacitly
and materially support), states: “I do not understand why some want to
remove Pol Pot. It is true that he made some mistakes in the past but
now he is leading the fight against the Vietnamese aggressors.” [30] As
explained by the government’s leading specialist on Indochinese
communism, now director of the Indochina archives at the University of
California in Berkeley, Pol Pot was the “charismatic” leader of a
“bloody but successful peasant revolution with a substantial residue of
popular support,” under which “on a statistical basis, most [peasant]
... did not experience much in the way of butality.”[31] Though the
Times is outraged at the Prussian-style aggression that overthrew our
current Khmer Rouge ally, and at the current Vietnamese insistence that
a political settlement must exclude Pol Pot, the reader of its pages
will find little factual material about any of these matters. There are,
incidentally, countries that have “unleashed a series of pitiless
attacks against their neighbors” in these years, for example, Israel,
with its invasions of Lebanon in 1978 and 1982. But as an American
client state, Israel inherits the right of aggression so that it does
not merit the bitter criticism that Vietnam deserves for overthrowing
Pol Pot; and in any event, its invasion of Lebanon was a “liberation,”
as the Times explained at the time, always carefully excluding Lebanese
opinion on the matter as obviously irrelevant.[32]
The Times recognizes that the United States did suffer “shame” during
its Indochina wars: “the shame of defeat.” Victory, we are to assume,
would not have been shameful, and the record of aggression and
atrocities supported by the Times obviously evokes no shame. Rather, the
United States thought it was “resisting” Communists “when it intervened
in Indochina”: how we “resist” the natives in their land, the Times does
not explain.
That the U.S. lost the war in Indochina is “an inescapable fact” (Wall
Street Journal), repeated without question throughout the retrospectives
and in American commentary generally. When some doctrine is universally
proclaimed without qualification, a rational mind will at once inquire
as to whether it is true. In this case, it is false, though to see why,
it is necessary to escape the confines of the propaganda system and to
investigate the rich documentary record that lays out the planning and
motives for the American war against the Indochinese, which persisted
for almost 30 years. Those who undertake this task will discover that a
rather different conclusion is in order.
The U.S. did not achieve its maximal goals in Indochina, but it did gain
a partial victory. Despite talk by Eisenhower and others about
Vietnamese raw materials, the primary U.S. concern was not Indochina,
but rather the “domino effect,” the demonstration effect of successful
independent development that might cause “the rot to spread” to Thailand
and beyond, possibly ultimately drawing Japan into a “New Order” from
which the U.S. would be excluded. This threat was averted. The countries
of Indochina will be lucky to survive: they will not endanger global
order by social and economic success in a framework that denies the West
the freedom to exploit, infecting regions beyond, as had been feared. It
might parenthetically be noted that although this interpretation of the
American aggression is supported by substantial evidence, there is no
hint of its existence, and surely no reference to the extensive
documentation substantiating it, in the standard histories, since such
facts do not conform to the required image of aggrieved benevolence.
Again, we see here the operation of the Orwellian principle that
Ignorance is Strength.
Meanwhile, the U.S. moved forcefully to buttress the second line of
defense. In 1965, the U.S. backed a military coup in Indonesia (the most
important “domino,” short of Japan) while American liberals lauded the
“dramatic changes” that took place there the most dramatic being the
massacre of hundreds of thousands of landless peasants as a proof that
we were right to defend South Vietnam by demolishing it, thus
encouraging the Indonesian generals to prevent any rot from spreading
there. In 1972, the U.S. backed the overthrow of Philippine democracy
behind the “shield” provided by its successes in Indochina, thus
averting the threat of national capitalism there with a
terror-and-torture state on the preferred Latin American model. A move
towards democracy in Thailand in 1973 evoked some concern, and a
reduction in economic aid and increase in military aid in preparation
for the military coup that took place with U.S. support in 1976.
Thailand had a particularly important role in the U.S. regional system
since 1954, when the National Security Council laid out a plan for
subversion and eventual aggression throughout Southeast Asia in response
to the GenevaAccords, with Thailand “as the focal point of U.S. covert
and psychological operations,” including “covert operations on a large
and effective scale” throughout Indochina, with the explicit intention
of”making more difficult the control by the Viet Minh of North Vietnam.”
Subsequently Thailand served as a major base for the U.S. attacks on
Vietnam and Laos.[33]
In short, the U.S. won a regional victory, and even a substantial local
victory in Indochina, left in ruins. That the U.S. suffered a “defeat”
in Indochina is a natural perception on the part of those of limitless
ambition, who understand “defeat” to mean the achievement only of major
goals, while certain minor ones remain beyond our grasp.
Postwar U.S. policy has been designed to ensure that the victory is
maintained by maximizing suffering and oppression in Indochina, which
then evokes furtherjoy and gloating here. Since “the destruction is
mutual,” as is readily demonstrated by a stroll through New York,
Boston, Vinh, Quang Ngai Province, and the Plain of Jars, we are
entitled to deny reparations, aid and trade, and to block development
funds. The extent of U.S. sadism is noteworthy, as is the (null)
reaction to it. In 1977, when India tried to send 100 buffalos to
Vietnam to replenish the herds destroyed by U.S. violence, the U.S.
threatened to cancel “food for peace” aid while the press featured
photographs of peasants in Cambodia pulling plows as proof of Communist
barbarity; the photographs in this case turned out to be fabrications of
Thai intelligence, but authentic ones could no doubt have been obtained,
throughout Indochina. The Carter administration even denied rice to Laos
(despite a cynical pretense to the contrary), where the agricultural
system was destroyed by U.S. terror bombing. Oxfam Americawas not
permitted to send 10 solar pumps to Cambodia for irrigation in 1983; in
1981, the U.S. government sought to block a shipment of school supplies
and educational kits to Cambodia by the Mennonite Church. Meanwhile,
from the first days of the Khmer Rouge takeover in 1975, the West was
consumed with horror over their atrocities, described as “genocide” at a
time when deaths had reached the thousands in mid-1975. The Khmer Rouge
may be responsible for a half-million to a million dead, so current
scholarship indicates (in conformity to the estimates of U.S.
intelligence at the time), primarily in 1978, when the worst atrocities
took place, largely unknown to the West, in the context of the
escalating war with Vietnam.[34]
The nature of the profound Western agony over Cambodia as a
sociocultural phenomenon can be assessed by comparing it to the reaction
to comparable and simultaneous atrocities in Timor. There, the U.S. bore
primary responsibility, and the atrocities could have been terminated at
once, as distinct from Cambodia, where nothing could be done but the
blame could be placed on the official enemy. The excuses now produced
for this shameful behavior are instructive. Thus, William Shawcross
rejects the obvious (and obviously correct) interpretation of the
comparative response to Timor and Cambodia in favor of a”more
structurally serious explanation”: “a comparative lack of sources” and
lack of access to refugees.[35] Lisbon is a two-hour flight from London,
and even Australia is not notably harder to reach than the Thai-Cambodia
border, but the many Timorese refugees in Lisbon and Australia were
ignored by the media, which preferred “facts” offered by State
Department handouts and Indonesian generals. Similarly, the media
ignored readily available refugee studies from sources at least as
credible as those used as the basis for the impotent but ideologically
serviceable outrage over the Khmer Rouge, and disregarded highly
credible witnesses who reached New York and Washington along with
additional evidence from Church sources and others. The coverage of
Timor actually declined sharply as massacres increased. The real reason
for this difference in scope and character of coverage is not difficult
to discern, though not very comfortable for Western opinion, and becomes
still more obvious when a broader range of cases is considered.[36]
The latest phase of this tragicomedy is the current pretense, initiated
by William Shawcross in an inspired Agitprop achievement,[37] that there
was relative silence in the West over the Khmer Rouge. This is a variant
of the Brzezinski ploy concerning the “liberal community” noted earlier;
in the real world, condemnations virtually unprecedented in their
severity extended from mass circulation journals such as the Reader’s
Digest and TV Guide to the New York Review of Books, including the press
quite generally (1976-early 1977). Furthermore, Shawcross argues, this
“silence” was the result of “left-wing skepticism” so powerful that it
silenced governments and journals throughout the West; even had such
“skepticism” existed on the part of people systematically excluded from
the media and mainstream discussion, the idea that this consequence
could ensue is a construction of such audacity that one must admire its
creators, Shawcross in particular.[38]
I do not, incidentally, exempt myself from this critique with regard to
Cambodia and Timor. I condemned the “barbarity” and “brutal practice” of
the Khmer Rouge in 197 7,[39] long before speaking or writing a word on
the U.S.-backed atrocities in Timor, which on moral grounds posed a far
more serious issue for Westerners. It is difficult even for those who
try to be alert to such matters to extricate themselves from a
propaganda system of overwhelming efficiency and power.
Now, Western moralists remain silent as their governments provide the
means for the Indonesian generals to consummate their massacres, while
the U.S. backs the Democratic Kampuchea coalition, largely based on the
Khmer Rouge, because of its “continuity” with the Pol Pot regime, so the
State Department explains, adding that this Khmer Rouge-based coalition
is “unquestionably” more representative of the Cambodian people than the
resistance is of the Timorese.[40] The reason for this stance was
explained by our ally Deng Xiaoping: “It is wise for China to force the
Vietnamese to stay in Kampuchea because that way they will suffer more
and more...[41] This makes good sense, since the prime motive is to
“bleed Vietnam,” to ensure that suffering and brutality reach the
maximum possible level so that we can exult in our benevolence in
undertaking our “noble crusade” in earlier years.
The elementary truths about these terrible years survive in the memories
of those who opposed the U.S. war against South Vietnam, then all of
Indochina, but there is no doubt that the approved version will sooner
or later be established by the custodians of history, perhaps to be
exposed by crusading intellectuals a century or two hence, if “Western
civilization” endures that long.
As the earlier discussion indicated, the creation of convenient “visions
of righteousness” is not an invention of the intellectuals of the
Vietnam era; nor, of course, is the malady confined to the United
States, though one might wonder how many others compare with us in its
virulence. Each atrocity has been readily handled, either forgotten, or
dismissed as an unfortunate error due to our naivete, or revised to
serve as a proof of the magnificence of our intentions. Furthermore, the
record of historical fact is not permitted to disturb the basic
principles of interpretation of U.S. foreign policy over quite a broad
spectrum of mainstream opinion, even by those who recognize that
something may be amiss. Thus, Norman Graebner, a historian of the
“realist” school influenced by George Kennan, formulates as unquestioned
fact the conventional doctrine that U.S. foreign policy has been guided
by the “Wilsonian principles of peace and self-determination.” But he
notices and this is unusual that the United States “generally ignored
the principles of self-determination in Asia and Africa [he excludes the
most obvious case: Latin America] where it had some chance of success
and promoted it behind the Iron and Bamboo curtains where it had no
chance of success at all.” That is, in regions where our influence and
power might have led to the realization of our principles, we ignored
them, while we proclaimed them with enthusiasm with regard to enemy
terrain. His conclusion is that this is “ironic,” but the facts do not
shake the conviction that we are committed to the Wilsonian principle of
selfdetermination.[42] That doctrine holds, even if refuted by the
historical facts. If only natural scientists were permitted such
convenient methods, how easy their tasks would be.
Commentators who keep to the Party Line have an easy task; they need not
consider mere facts, always a great convenience for writers and
political analysts. Thus, Charles Krauthammer asserts that “left
isolationism” has become “the ideology of the Democratic Party”: “There
is no retreat from the grand Wilsonian commitment to the spread of
American values,” namely human rights and democracy, but these
“isolationists” reject the use of force to achieve our noble objectives.
In contrast, “right isolationism” (Irving Kristol, Caspar Weinberger and
theJoint Chiefs, etc.) calls for “retreat from Wilsonian goals” in favor
of defense of interests. He also speaks of “the selectivity of the
fervor for reforming the world” among “left isolationists,” who have an
“obsessive” focus on the Philippines, El Salvador, Korea and Taiwan,
but, he would like us to believe, would never be heard voicing a
criticism of the Soviet Union, Cuba, or Libya. The latter assertion
might be considered too exotic to merit discussion among sane people,
but, as noted earlier, that would miss the point, which is to eliminate
even that margin of criticism that might constrain state violence, for
example, the occasional peep of protest over U.S.-organized terror in El
Salvador which, if truth be told, is comparable to that attributable to
Pol Pot at the time when the chorus of condemnation was reaching an
early peak of intensity in 1977. Crucially, it is unnecessary to
establish that there is or ever was a “grand Wilsonian commitment,”
apart from rhetoric; that is a given, a premise for respectable
discussion.
To take an example from the field of scholarship, consider the study of
the “Vietnam trauma” by Paul Kattenburg, one of the few early dissenters
on Vietnam within the U.S. government and now Jacobson Professor of
Public Affairs at the University of South Carolina.[43] Kattenburg is
concerned to identify the “salient features central to the American
traditions and experience which have made the United States perform its
superpower role in what we might term a particularistic way.” He holds
that “principles and ideals hold a cardinal place in the U.S. national
ethos and crucially distinguish U.S. performance in the superpower role”
a standard view, commonly set forth in the United States, Britain and
elsewhere in scholarly work on modern history. These principles and
ideals, he explains, were “laid down by the founding fathers, those pure
geniuses of detached contemplation,” and “refined by subsequent leading
figures of thought and action” from John Adams to Theodore Roosevelt,
Woodrow Wilson and Franklin Roosevelt; such Kim II Sung-ism with regard
to the “pure geniuses,” etc., is also far from rare. These principles,
he continues, were “tested and retested in the process of settling the
continent [as Indians, Blacks, Mexicans, immigrant workers and others
can testify], healing the North-South breach, developing the economy
from the wilderness in the spirit of free enterprise, and fighting World
Wars I and II, not so much for interests as for the survival of the very
principles by which most Americans were guiding their lives.”
It is this unique legacy that explains the way Americans act “in the
superpower role.” The Americans approached this role, “devoid of
artifice or deception,” with “the mind set of an emancipator”:
In such a mind set, one need not feel or act superior, or believe one is
imposing one’s ethos or values on others, since one senses naturally
that others cannot doubt the emancipator’s righteous cause anymore than
his capacities. In this respect, the American role as superpower,
particularly in the early postwar years, is very analogous to the role
that can be attributed to a professor, mentor, or other type of
emancipator.
Thus, “the professor is obviously capable,” and “he is clearly
disinterested.” “Moreover, like the American superpower, the professor
does not control the lives or destinies of his students: they remain
free to come or go,” just like the peasants of South Vietnam or the
Guazapa mountains in El Salvador. “It will help us understand America’s
performance and psychology as a superpower, and the whys and wherefores
of its Indochina involvement, if we bear in mind this analogy of the
American performance in the superpower role with that of the benevolent
but clearly egocentric professor, dispensing emancipation through
knowledge of both righteousness and the right way to the deprived
students of the world.”
The reader must bear in mind that this is not intended as irony or
caricature, but is rather presented seriously, is taken seriously, and
is not untypical of what we find in the literature, not at the lunatic
fringe, but at the respectable and moderately dissident extreme of the
mainstream spectrum.
The standard drivel about Wilsonian principles of self-determination
unaffected by Wilson’s behavior, for example in Hispaniola, or in
succeeding to eliminate consideration of U.S. domination in the Americas
from the Versailles deliberations by no means stands alone. Kennedy’s
Camelot merits similar acclaim among the faithful. In a fairly critical
study, Robert Packenham writes that Kennedy’s policies toward Latin
America in 1962–3 “utilized principally diplomatic techniques to promote
liberal democratic rule,” and cites with approval Arthur Schlesinger’s
comment that the Kennedy approach to development, based on designing aid
for “take off’ into self-sustaining economic growth, was “a very
American effort to persuade the developing countries to base their
revolutions on Locke rather than on Marx.”[44] In the real world, the
Kennedy administration succeeded in blocking capitalist democracy in
Central America and the Caribbean and laying the basis for the
establishment of a network of National Security States on the Nazi model
throughout the hemisphere; and the aid program, as the facts of aid
disbursement make clear, was designed largely to “improve the
productivity of Central America’s agricultural exporters and at the same
time to advance the sales of American companies that manufacture
pesticides and fertilizer,” which is why nutritional levels declined in
the course of”economic miracles” that quite predictably benefited U.S.
agri-business and their local associates.[45] Locke deserves better
treatment than that. But these again are mere facts, not relevant to the
higher domains of political commentary.
Open the latest issue of any majorjournal on U.S. foreign policy and one
is likely to find something similar. Thus, the lead article in the
current issue of Foreign Affairs, as I write, is by James Schlesinger,
now at Georgetown University after having served as Secretary of
Defense, Director of Central Intelligence, and in other high
positions.[46] He contrasts the U.S. and Russian stance over the years.
“The American desire was to fulfill the promise of Wilsonian idealism,
of the Four Freedoms .... The themes of realpolitik remain contrary to
the spirit of American democracy,” while the Russians, so unlike us, are
guided by “deep-seated impulses never to flag in the quest for marginal
advantages.” The United States seeks all good things, but “almost
inevitably, the Polands and the Afghanistans lead to confrontation, even
if the Angolas and the Nicaraguas do not” and most assuredly, the
Guatemalas, Chiles, Vietnams, Irans, Lebanons, Dominican Republics,
etc., do not have the same effect; indeed, the idea would not be
comprehensible in these circles, given that in each such case the United
States is acting in defense against internal aggression, and with intent
so noble that words can barely express it.
True, one is not often treated to such delicacies as Huntington’s ode to
the Holy State cited earlier, but it is, nevertheless, not too far from
the norm.
The official doctrine as propounded by government spokesmen, the U.S.
media, and a broad range of scholarship is illustrated, for example, in
the report of the National Bipartisan (Kissinger) Commission on Central
America: “The international purposes of the United States in the late
twentieth century are cooperation, not hegemony or domination;
partnership, not confrontation; a decent life for all, not
exploitation.” Similarly, Irving Kristol informs us that the United
States
is not a “have” nation in the sense that it exercises or seeks to
maintain any kind of “hegemony” over distant areas of the globe. Indeed,
that very word, “hegemony,” with all its deliberate vagueness and
ambiguity, was appropriated by latter-day Marxists in order to give
American foreign policy an “imperialist” substance it is supposed to
have but does not.
Among these “Marxists,” he fails to observe, are such figures as Samuel
Huntington, who, accurately this time, describes the 1945–70 period as
one in which the “the U.S. was the hegemonic power in a system of world
order.”[47] And again, the idea that the U.S. does not exercise or seek
any kind of “hegemony,” alone among the great powers of history,
requires no evidence and stands as a Truth irrespective of the
historical facts.
Similar thoughts are familiar among the culturally colonized elites
elsewhere. Thus, according to Michael Howard, Regius Professor of Modern
History at Oxford, “For 200 years the United States has preserved almost
unsullied the original ideals of the Enlightenment: the belief in the
God-given rights of the individual, the inherent rights of free assembly
and free speech, the blessings of free enterprise, the perfectibility of
man, and, above all, the universality of these values.” In this nearly
ideal society, the influence of elites is “quite limited.” The world,
however, does not appreciate this magnificence: “the United States does
not enjoy the place in the world that it should have earned through its
achievements, its generosity, and its goodwill since World War II” as
illustrated in such contemporary paradises as Indochina, the Dominican
Republic, El Salvador and Guatemala, to mention a few of the many
candidates, just as belief in the “God-given rights of the individual”
and the universality of this doctrine for 200 years is illustrated by a
century of literal human slavery and effective disenfranchisement of
blacks for another century, genocidal assaults on the native population,
the slaughter of hundreds of thousands of Filipinos at the turn of the
century and millions of Indochinese, and a host of other examples.[48]
Such commentary, again, need not be burdened by evidence; it suffices to
assert what people of power and privilege would like to believe,
including those criticized, e.g., the “left isolationists” of
Krauthammer’s fancies, who are delighted to hear of their commitment to
Wilsonian goals. Presupposed throughout, without argument or evidence,
is that the United States has been committed to such goals as
self-determination, human rights, democracy, economic development, and
so on. It is considered unnecessary to demonstrate or even argue for
these assumptions, in political commentary and much of scholarship,
particularly what is intended for a general audience. These assumptions
have the status of truths of doctrine, and it would be as pointless to
face them with evidence as it is with doctrines of other religious
faiths.
The evidence, in fact, shows with considerable clarity that the
proclaimed ideals were not the goals of Woodrow Wilson, or his
predecessors, or any of his successors.[49] A more accurate account of
Wilson’s actual goals is given by the interpretation of the Monroe
Doctrine presented to him by his Secretary of State, Robert Lansing, an
argument that Wilson found “unanswerable” though he thought it would be
“impolitic” to make it public:
In its advocacy of the Monroe Doctrine the United States considers its
own interests. The integrity of other American nations is an incident,
not an end. While this may seem based on selfishness alone, the author
of the Doctrine had no higher or more generous motive in its
declaration.[50]
The category of those who function as “an incident, not an end” expanded
along with U.S. power in subsequent years. How planners perceived the
world, when they were not addressing the general public, is illustrated
in a perceptive and typically acute analysis by George Kennan, one of
the most thoughtful and humane of those who established the structure of
the postwar world:
... we have about 50% of the world’s wealth, but only 6.3% of its
population .... In this situation, we cannot fail to be the object of
envy and resentment. Our real task in the coming period is to devise a
pattern of relationships which will permit us to maintain this position
of disparity without positive detriment to our national security. To do
so, we will have to dispense with all sentimentality and day-dreaming;
and our attention will have to be concentrated everywhere on our
immediate national objectives. We need not deceive ourselves that we can
afford today the luxury of altruism and world-benefaction .... We should
cease to talk about vague and for the Far East unreal objectives such as
human rights, the raising of the living standards, and democratization.
The day is not far off when we are going to have to deal in straight
power concepts. The less we are then hampered by idealistic slogans, the
better.[51]
The subsequent historical record shows that Kennan’s prescriptions
proved close to the mark, though a closer analysis indicates that he
understated the case, and that the U.S. did not simply disregard “human
rights, the raising of the living standards, and democratization,” but
evinced a positive hostility towards them in much of the world,
particularly democratization in any meaningful sense, any sense that
would permit genuine participation of substantial parts of the
population in the formation of public policy, since such tendencies
would interfere with the one form of freedom that really counts: the
freedom to rob and to exploit. But again, these are only considerations
of empirical fact, as little relevant to political theology as is the
fact that the United States attacked South Vietnam.
Given these lasting and deep-seated features of the intellectual
culture, it is less surprising perhaps though still, it would seem,
rather shocking that the man who is criticized for his extreme devotion
to human rights should say that we owe Vietnam no debt because “the
destruction was mutual,” without this evoking even a raised eyebrow.
The reasons for the rather general and probably quite unconscious
subordination of large segments of the educated classes to the system of
power and domination do not seem very difficult to discern. At any given
stage, one is exposed to little that questions the basic doctrines of
the faith: that the United States is unique in the contemporary world
and in history in its devotion to such ideals as freedom and
selfdetermination, that it is not an actor in world affairs but rather
an “emancipator,” responding to the hostile or brutal acts of other
powers, but apart from that, seeking nothing butjustice, human rights
and democracy. Intellectual laziness alone tends to induce acceptance of
the doctrines that “everyone believes.” There are no courses in
“intellectual self-defense,” where students are helped to find ways to
protect themselves from the deluge of received opinion. Furthermore, it
is convenient to conform: that way lies privilege and power, while the
rational skeptic faces obloquy and marginalization not death squads or
psychiatric prison, as elsewhere all too often, but still a degree of
unpleasantness, and very likely, exclusion from the guilds. The natural
tendencies to conform are thus refined by institutional pressures that
tend to exclude those who do not toe the line. In the sciences, critical
thought and reasoned skepticism are values highly to be prized.
Elsewhere, they are often considered heresies to be stamped out;
obedience is what yields rewards. The structural basis for conformity is
obvious enough, given the distribution of domestic power. Political
power resides essentially in those groups that can mobilize the
resources to shape affairs of state in our society, primarily an elite
of corporations, law firms that cater to their interests, financial
institutions and the like and the same is true of power in the cultural
domains. Those segments of the media that can reach a large audience are
simply part of the system of concentrated economic-political power, and
naturally enough, journals that are well-funded and influential are
those that appeal to the tastes and interest of those who own and manage
the society. Similarly, to qualify as an “expert,” as Henry Kissinger
explained on the basis of his not inconsiderable experience in these
matters, one must know how to serve power. The “expert has his
constituency,” Kissinger explained: “those who have a vested interest in
commonly held opinions: elaborating and defining its consensus at a high
level has, after all, made him an expert.”[52] We need only proceed a
step further, identifying those whose vested interest is operative
within the social nexus.
The result is a system of principles that gives comfort to the powerful
though in private, they speak to one another in a different and more
realistic voice, offering “unanswerable” arguments that it would be
“impolitic” to make public and is rarely subjected to challenge. There
are departures, when segments of the normally quiescent population
become organized in efforts to enter the political arena or influence
public policy, giving rise to what elite groups call a “crisis of
democracy” which must be combated so that order can be restored. We have
recently passed through such a crisis, which led to an awakening on the
part of much of the population to the realities of the world in which
they live, and it predictably evoked great fear and concern, and a
dedicated and committed effort to restore obedience. This is the source
of the reactionary jingoism that has misappropriated the term
“conservatism” in recent years, and of the general support for its major
goals on the part of the mainstream of contemporary liberalism, now with
a “neo” affixed. The purpose is to extirpate heresy and to restore
domestic and international order for the benefit of the privileged and
powerful. That the mainstream intelligentsia associate themselves with
these tendencies while proclaiming their independence and integrity and
adversarial stance vis a vis established power should hardly come as a
surprise to people familiar with modern history and capable of reasoned
and critical thought.
[1] News conference, 24 March 1977; New York Times, 25 March 1977.
[2] Zbigniew Brzezinski, “Afghanistan and Nicaragua,” The National
Interest 1 (Fall 1985): 48–51.
[3] Bernard Gwertzman, “The Debt to the Indochinese Is Becoming a Fiscal
Drain,” NYT, 3 March 1985.
[4] NYT, 18 March 1968; Chomsky, American Power and the New Mandarins
(New York: Pantheon Books, 1969), 14.
[5] “A Vietnam War Board Game Created by Princeton Senior,” NYT, 1 April
1984; Lawrence Lifschultz, “The Not;So-New Rebellion,” Far Eastern
Economic Review, 30 Jan. 1981, 32–33.
[6] Barbara Crossette, NYT, 10 Nov. 1985.
[7] For documentation and further discussion of the interesting concept
“internal aggression” as developed by U.S. officials, see my For Reasons
of State (New York: Pantheon Books, 1973), 114f.
[8] Francis Jennings, The Invasion of America (Chapel Hill: University
of North Carolina Press, 1975), 6.
[9] Alexis de Tocqueville, Democracy in America (New York: Knopf, 1945),
I; General Andrew Jackson, General Orders, 1813; cited by Ronald Takaki,
Iron Cages (New York: Knopf, 1979), 80–81, 95–96. See Richard Drinnon,
Facing West: The Metaphysics of Indian-Hating and Empire-Building
(Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1980), for a penetrating
discussion of these matters. For an upbeat and enthusiastic account of
the destruction of the Iroquois civilization, see Fairfax Downev, Indian
Wars of the U.S. Army (Garden City, N.Y.: Doubledav, 1963), 32f.
[10] Daniel Boone Schirmer, Republic or Empire (Cambridge, Ma.:
Schenkman, 1972), 231; Stuart Chreighton Miller, ‘Benevolent
Assimilation’ (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1982), 220, 255, 248f.,
78, 213, 269; David Bain, Sitting in Darkness (Boston: Houghton Miffin,
1984), 78.
[11] Samuel Huntington, “American Ideals versus American Institutions,”
Political Science Quarterly 97, no. 1 (Spring 1982): 25; Correspondence,
97, no. 4 (Winter 1982–3): 753. On Wilson’s achievements, see Lester
Langley, The Banana Wars (Lexington: University of Kentucky Press,
1983); Bruce Calder, The Impact of Intervention (Austin: University of
Texas Press, 1984).
[12] For extensive discussion of these matters and their sources in U.S.
planning, see my Turning the Tide (Boston: South End Press, 1985), and
sources cited there.
[13] For references to material not specifically cited, here and below,
and discussion in more general context, see my Towards a New Cold War
(New York: Pantheon Books, 1982), Turning the Tide, and sources cited
there.
[14] Norman Podhoretz, “Proper Uses of Power,” NYT, 30 Oct. 1983.
[15] Mark McCain, Boston Globe, 9 Dec. 1984; memo released during the
Westmoreland-CBS libel trial.
[16] Bernard Fall, “Viet Cong: The Unseen Enemy in Vietnam,” New
Society, 22 April 1965, 10–12; Paul Quinn-Judge, “The Confusion and
Mystery Surrounding Vietnam’s War Dead,” Far Eastern Economic Review, 11
Oct. 1984, 49.
[17] Ton That Thien, “Vietnam’s New Economic Policy,” Pacific Affairs
56, no. 4 (Winter 1983–4): 691–708; Chitra Subramaniam, PNS, 15 Nov.
1985; both writing from Geneva. For detailed discussion of the effects
of U.S. chemical and environmental warfare in Vietnam, unprecedented in
scale and character, see SIPRI, Ecological Consequences of the Second
Indochina War (Stockholm: Almqvist Wiskell, 1976), concluding that “the
ecological debilitation from such attack is likely to be of long
duration.”
[18] John Corry, NYT, 27 April 1985.
[19] Time, 15 April 1985, 16–61.
[20] WSJ, 4 April 1985. An exception was Newsweek, 15 April 1985, which
devoted four pages of its 33-page account to a report by Tony Clifton
and Ron Moreau on the effects of the war on the “wounded land.”
[21] Walt W. Rostow, The View from the Seventh Floor (NewYork: Harper&
Row, 1964), 244. On the facts concerning Indochina, see the
documentation reviewed in For Reasons of State. Rostow’s account of Mao
and North Korea is also fanciful, as the record of serious scholarship
shows.
[22] Cited in American Power and the New Mandarins, 253, 238.
[23] “Vietnam Blitz: A Report on the Impersonal War,” New Republic, 9
Oct. 1965, 19.
[24] James Reston, NYT, 26 Feb. 1965.
[25] Bernard Fall, Last Reflections on a War (Garden City, N.Y.:
Doubleday, 1967),33, 47; James Reston, NYT, 24 Nov. 1967.
[26] Allan E. Goodman and Seth P. Tillman, NYT, 24 March 1985.
[27] Chomsky, At War with Asia (New York: Pantheon Books, 1970), 286.
[28] Charles Krauthammer, “Isolationism, Left and Right,” New Republic,
4 March 1985, 18–25.
[29] NYT, 31 March 1985.
[30] Nayan Chanda, “CIA No, US Aid Yes,” “Sihanouk Stonewalled,” Far
Eastern Economic Review, 16 Aug. 1984, 16–18; 1 Nov. 1984, 30.
[31] Douglas Pike, St. Louis Post-Dispatch, 29 Nov. 1979; Christian
Science Monitor, 4 Dec. 1979. Cited by Michael Vickery, Cambodia
(Boston: South End Press, 1983), 65–6.
[32] On Lebanese opinion and the scandalous refusal of the media to
consider it, and the general context, see my Fateful Triangle (Boston:
South End Press, 1983).
[33] Chomsky and Edward S. Herman, Political Economy of Human Rights, I
(Boston: South End Press, 1979), chapter 4.
[34] The major scholarly study of the Pol Pot period, Vickery’s
Cambodia, has been widely and favorably reviewed in England, Australia
and elsewhere, but never here. The one major governmental study, by a
Finnish Inquiry Commission, was also ignored here: Kimmo Kiljunen, ed.,
Kampuchea: Decade of the Genocide (London: Zed Books, 1984). See
Kiljunen, “Power Politics and the Tragedy of Kampuchea in the ‘70s,”
Bulletin of Concerned Asian Scholars 17, no. 2 (April-June 1985): 49–64,
for a brief account of the Finnish study, and my “Decade of Genocide in
Review,” Inside Asia 2 (Feb.-Mar. 1985), 31–34, for review of this and
other material. Note that the Finnish study is entitled Decade of the
Genocide, in recognition of the fact that killings during the U.S.-run
war were roughly comparable to those under Pol Pot. The facts are of
little interest in the U.S., where the Khmer Rouge have a specific role
to play: namely, to provide a justification for U.S. atrocities.
[35] Shawcross, in David Chandler and Ben Kiernan, eds., Revolution and
Its Afiermath in Kampuchea (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1983); see
my “Decade of Genocide” for further discussion.
[36] See Political Economy of Human Rights and Edward S. Herman, The
Real Terror Network, for extensive evidence.
[37] Shawcross, Revolution and Its Aftermath in Kampuchea and Quality of
Mercy (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1984); see my”Decade of Genocide” for
discussion. Perhaps I may take credit for suggesting this clever idea to
him. In a 1978 essay (reprinted in Towards a New Cold War; see p. 95), I
wrote that “It is not gratifying to the ego merely to march in a parade;
therefore, those who join in ritual condemnation of an official enemy
must show that they are engaged in a courageous struggle against
powerful forces that defend it. Since these rarely exist, even on a
meager scale [and in the case of the Khmer Rouge, were undetectable
outside of marginal Maoist groups], they must be concocted; if nothing
else is at hand, those who propose a minimal concern for fact will do.
The system that has been constructed enables one to lie freely with
regard to the crimes, real or alleged, of an official enemy, while
suppressing the systematic involvement of one’s own state in atrocities,
repression, or aggression ...” These comments accurately anticipate the
subsequent antics.
[38] On Shawcross’s fabrication of evidence in support of his thesis,
see my “Decade of Genocide” and Christopher Hitchens, “The Chorus and
Cassandra: What Everyone Knows About Noam Chomsky,” Grand Street 5, no.
1 (Autumn 1985): 106131.
[39] Nation, 25 June 1977.
[40] John Holdridge of the State Department, Hearing before the
Subcommittee on Asian and Pacific Affairs of the Committee on Foreign
Affairs, House of Representatives, 97^(th) Congress, second session, 14
Sept. 1982, 71.
[41] Cited by Ben Kiernan, Tribune (Australia), 20 March 1985.
[42] Norman A. Graebner, Cold War Diplomacy (New York: Van Nostrand
Books, 1962).
[43] Paul M. Kattenburg, The Vietnam Trauma in American Foreign Policy,
1945–75 (New Brunswick, N.J.: Transaction Books, 1982), 69f.
[44] Robert A. Packenham, Liberal America and the Third World
(Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1973), 156, 63.
[45] Lester Langley, Central America: The Real Stakes (New York: Crown,
1985), 128; see Turning the Tide for discussion and further sources on
these matters.
[46] James Schlesinger, “The Eagle and the Bear: Ruminations on Forty
Years of Superpower Relations,” Foreign Affairs 63, no. 5 (Summer 1985):
938, 939, 940, 947.
[47] Irving Kristol, “Foreign Policy in an Age of Ideology,” The
National Interest 1 (Fall, 1985); Huntington, in M.J. Crozier, S.P.
Huntinglon, andJ. Watanuki, The Crisis of Democracy (New York: New York
University Press, 1975).
[48] Michael Howard, “The Bewildered American Raj,” Harper’s 270, no.
1618. March 1985, 55–60.
[49] For a review of the facts of the matter, see Turning the Tide and
sources cited.
[50] Gabriel Kolko, Main Currents in American History (New York:
Pantheon Books, 1984), 47.
[51] Policy Planning Study (PPS), 23, 24 Feb. 1948, FRUS 1948, I (part
2); reprinted in part in Thomas Etzold and John Lewis Gaddis,
Containment (New York: Columbia Univesity Press, 1978), 226f.
[52] Henry Kissinger, American Foreign Policy (New York: Norton, 1969),
28.