Gordon Campbell on the Vietnam vets apology
Gordon Campbell on the Vietnam vets
apology
On compassionate grounds, the apology extended to the troops who fought in Vietnam was justified – so long as it was not extended or regarded as a re-appraisal of the morality of the conflict, which the Government has been careful not to do. For the Government to have been crystal clear about what was, and wasn’t, being apologized for would have run the risk of re-opening old wounds and would have undermined the point of the apology. There may be another occasion when the other shoe – an apology to the people of Vietnam – can be allowed to fall.
There is no doubt that the
decades-long shameful treatment of the Vietnam vets over
their exposure to Agent Orange merits an apology.
Successive governments bear that shame. There is no conflict
on that point. In fact, some of the anti-war protestors were
partly responsible for bringing the Vietnam war role of the
IWD plant in New Plymouth - and the terrible impacts of
Agent Orange - out into the open daylight.
The
trickier part of the apology hinges on the reception given
to the troops on their return home. By the mid 1970s, troops
who had volunteered – these were not conscripts - to serve
in a war whose morality and strategic worth had been widely
challenged for the best part of a decade, could hardly have
expected to be greeted with open arms by an entire, grateful
nation.
On the other hand, New Zealand had agreed,
however grudgingly during Sir Keith Holyoake’s term as
Prime Minister, to send troops to Vietnam. Those troops
were, in that sense, carrying out this country’s
foreign policy. The abuse directed at the individual troops
on their return home can with hindsight, be regretted. It
would be helpful if the veterans themselves now saw fit, by
using the same degree of hindsight, to apologise to the
Vietnam people. Many Vietnamese share the same legacy from
an Agent Orange that we brought to their country.
The
apology, while merited on some grounds, does not rewrite
history, though. Certainly, those who protested in New
Zealand against the war – and against the domino theory
of Communist advance, which was widely seen as a fantasy
even at the time – have nothing to apologise about
concerning their opposition to the war. The unification of
Vietnam and its subsequent positive role as a trade and
tourism partner within South East Asia were just what the
protestors had envisaged would happen, post war. They have
been entirely vindicated.
There is also evidence that
during the war, the protests in New Zealand played a useful
and highly effective role in helping to end the war. In
1967, US Defense Secretary Clark Clifford and General
Maxwell Taylor made a tour of the Pacific allies to gauge
the level of support for continuing the war.
Here is what Clifford wrote in Foreign
Affairs magazine, July 1969 :
“In New Zealand, we spent the better part of a day conferring with the Prime Minister and his cabinet, while hundreds of students picketed the Parliament Building carrying signs bearing peace slogans. These officials were courteous and sympathetic, as all the others had been, but they made it clear that any appreciable increase was out of the question. New Zealand at one time had 70,000 troops overseas in the various theaters of World War II. They had 500 men in Viet Nam. I naturally wondered if this was their evaluation of the respective dangers of the two conflicts.
I
returned home puzzled, troubled, concerned. Was it possible
that our assessment of the danger to the stability of
Southeast Asia and the Western Pacific was exaggerated? Was
it possible that those nations which were neighbors of Viet
Nam had a clearer perception of the tides of world events in
1967 than we? Was it possible that we were continuing to be
guided by judgments that might once have had validity but
were now obsolete? In short, although I still counted myself
a staunch supporter of our policies, there were nagging,
not-to-be-suppressed doubts in my mind…”
So, domestically, the New Zealand
anti-Vietnam protests helped create a climate where large
numbers of our troops could not be committed – which means
that without their efforts, even more New Zealand soldiers
and their families would be suffering from the effects of
Agent Orange today. Internationally, it imposed its
presence on the perceptions of the US Defense Secretary, and
caused him to re-think the wisdom of the war. Not a bad
effort.
ENDS