Bush Invokes Vietnam to Argue Against U.S. Troop Withdrawal from Iraq (presidential propaganda use - Swanny Note)
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President Bush warned Wednesday that a withdrawal of U.S. troops from
Iraq would lead to mass bloodshed similar to what happened in Southeast
Asia after the Vietnam War. He urged critics of the current war to
"learn something from history" and "resist the allure of retreat." We
speak with historian and investigative journalist, Gareth Porter.
[includes rush transcript]
President Bush has compared the current wars in Iraq and
Afghanistan to earlier US wars against Japan, Korea, and Vietnam. He
spoke Wednesday at the Veterans of Foreign Wars convention in Kansas
City. The president warned that a US withdrawal from Iraq could result
in a similar outcome to what happened in Vietnam and Cambodia after the
withdrawal of US troops.
- President Bush, speaking in Kansas City, August 22nd, 2007.
The president also pointed to Japan and Korea in his
speech as examples of past US military successes. He urged critics of
the current war to "learn something from history" and "resist the
allure of retreat."
- Gareth Porter, a historian and investigative journalist. He
is a specialist in U.S. military and foreign policy and was the
director of the IndoChina resource center towards the end of the
Vietnam War. He now writes regularly on Iraq and Iran for Inter Press
Service and maintains a blog on The Huffington Post. His most recent book is "Perils of Dominance: Imbalance of Power and the Road to War in Vietnam."
RUSH TRANSCRIPT
JUAN GONZALEZ: President Bush has compared the current wars
in Iraq and Afghanistan to earlier US wars against Japan, Korea and
Vietnam. He spoke Wednesday at the Veterans of Foreign Wars convention
in Kansas City. The President warned that a US withdrawal from Iraq
could result in a similar outcome to what happened in Vietnam and
Cambodia after the withdrawal of US troops.
PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH: The Khmer Rouge began a
murderous rule in which hundreds of thousands of Cambodians died by
starvation and torture and execution. In Vietnam, former allies of the
United States and government workers and intellectuals and businessmen
were sent off to prison camps, where tens of thousands perished.
Hundreds of thousands more fled the country on rickety boats, many of
them going to their graves in the South China Sea.
Three decades later, there is a legitimate debate about how we
got into the Vietnam War and how we left. There’s no debate in my mind
that the veterans from Vietnam deserve the high praise of the United
States of America. Whatever your position is on that debate, one
unmistakable legacy of Vietnam is that the price of America's
withdrawal was paid by millions of innocent citizens whose agonies
would add to our vocabulary new terms like “boat people,” “re-education
camps” and “killing fields.”
JUAN GONZALEZ: President Bush, comparing the costs of
withdrawing US troops from Iraq to the withdrawal from Vietnam over
thirty years ago. The President also pointed to Japan and Korea in the
speech as examples of past US military successes. He urged critics of
the current war to “learn something from history” and “resist the
allure of retreat.”
AMY GOODMAN: Gareth Porter is a historian and
investigative journalist. He’s a specialist in US military and foreign
policy and was the director of the Indochina Resource Center towards
the end of the Vietnam War. He now writes regularly on Iraq and Iran
for Inter Press Service and maintains a blog on the Huffington Post. His most recent book is Perils of Dominance: Imbalance of Power and the Road to War in Vietnam. Gareth Porter joins us from Washington, D.C.
Gareth, welcome to Democracy Now! Your response to President Bush's speech?
GARETH PORTER: Well, you know, it reminds me very much of
the way in which, of course, Richard Nixon used the threat of a
bloodbath in Vietnam as the primary argument for continuing that war
for four more years after he came to power in 1969. And really, it
seems to me, the lesson of the Vietnam War that should be now debated
and discussed is really the way in which Nixon could have ended that
war when he came to power, negotiated a settlement and avoided the
extension of that war into Cambodia, which happened because Nixon did
not do that.
Had Nixon listened to the antiwar movement and the American
people by 1969 and ended that war, there would not have been the
overthrow of Norodom Sihanouk in 1970. There would not have been the
extension of the war into Cambodia. There would not have been the rise
of the Khmer Rouge. When Sihanouk was overthrown, we tend to forget
that the Khmer Rouge was really an insignificant movement. They were
about 2,500 or 3,000 very poorly armed soldiers or guerillas. And it
was really the extension of the Vietnam War into Cambodia which made
the Khmer Rouge the powerful movement that they were.
So really, you know, the lesson of Vietnam that we should be
hearing, which we should have heard for the last three decades, but we
haven’t, is that government officials in the White House simply do not
pay attention to the real consequences of the wars that they wage. They
seem to be totally unable to take account of the destabilizing ways
that the wars that they wage affect not only the country in which the
war is being waged, but then the neighboring countries, as well.
JUAN GONZALEZ: Gareth Porter, Senator Kerry, in
reacting to the President's words yesterday -- John Kerry -- said that
they were as irresponsible as it is ignorant of the realities of both
of those wars. And he noted that half the soldiers whose names are on
the Vietnam Memorial died after the politicians knew our strategy would
not work. Your reaction to Kerry's words?
GARETH PORTER: Well, you know, the problem, of course,
with that view is that we -- I mean, it’s ambiguous -- essentially
ambiguous whether Nixon and Kissinger believed that they could salvage
something in Vietnam and Southeast Asia and in the world or not. I
mean, it depends on how you look at it. I think that it’s true that
Kissinger and Nixon did not believe that they could really produce a
stable, long-lasting South Vietnamese anti-communist regime. That’s
pretty clear on the record.
The problem, of course, is that the real reason that those
leaders continued that war for four years had very little, if anything,
to do with Vietnam itself. They were more concerned with, really, their
own credibility, the credibility of the US military machine, the
credibility of the United States as the world's preeminent superpower,
and that's why they continued that war. And I think that’s another
parallel, really, that needs to be discussed between Vietnam and Iraq,
because I think the same thing is true now of George Bush and the Bush
administration, that they really -- that their concern is not about
Iraq, per se. They cry crocodile tears about the Iraqi people,
as Bush did about the Cambodian people, but they really don't care
about the people. What they care about is the “credibility,”
quote/unquote, of the United States.
And if you look at the Op-Ed piece by Peter Rodman in the New York Times
last June, which Bush quoted yesterday -- and Rodman, by the way is the
direct link between Henry Kissinger, who he worked for during the
Vietnam War, and George Bush, who he worked for during the Iraq war --
Rodman and William Shawcross really were more concerned --
AMY GOODMAN: Shawcross, who wrote Sideshow --
GARETH PORTER: That’s right.
AMY GOODMAN: -- about Cambodia.
GARETH PORTER: About Cambodia. And it’s bizarre that
Shawcross is associating himself now with Henry Kissinger’s viewpoint
on Cambodia and Vietnam. But what Shawcross and Rodman expressed in
that Op-Ed piece was really mostly concern about “credibility,”
quote/unquote. It’s as though, you know, we’re in a time warp, and
we’re still living in a world with two superpowers, and the United
States has to impress the Soviet Union with its military prowess. You
know, it’s really bizarre, because, you know, Rodman and Shawcross
really sort of expressed the kind of worldview that was prevalent
during the Cold War and which today we should understand is really
irrelevant. I mean, the idea that we can impress the Muslim world by
defeating people in Iraq and that that’s going to make us more secure,
the American people don't even believe that anymore.
AMY GOODMAN: Gareth Porter, I want to play an excerpt
from the new documentary by Norman Solomon and the Media Education
Foundation. It’s called War Made Easy: How Presidents and Pundits Keep Spinning Us to Death. This clip features Presidents George W. Bush, Lyndon Johnson and Richard Nixon.
PRESIDENT RICHARD NIXON: Withdrawal of all American forces from Vietnam would be a disaster.
PRESIDENT LYNDON JOHNSON: Let no one think for a moment that retreat from Vietnam would bring an end to conflict.
PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH: We're not leaving, so long as I’m the President. That would be a huge mistake.
PRESIDENT RICHARD NIXON: Our allies would lose confidence in America.
PRESIDENT LYNDON JOHNSON: To yield to force in Vietnam would weaken that confidence.
PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH: Any sign that says we're going to leave before the job is done simply emboldens terrorists.
PRESIDENT RICHARD NIXON: A retreat of the United States
from Vietnam would be a communist victory, a victory of massive
proportions and would lead to World War III.
PRESIDENT LYNDON JOHNSON: If this little nation goes
down the drain and can't maintain independence, ask yourself what's
going to happen to all the other little nations.
PRESIDENT RICHARD NIXON: It would not bring peace. It would bring more war.
AMY GOODMAN: An excerpt of War Made Easy. Gareth
Porter, final comment, and could you include what you’ve been writing
about, which is your belief that the US might well attack Iran?
GARETH PORTER: Well, I mean, that’s right exactly. The linkage between Bush's speech, the Rodman article in the New York Times
and the current situation regarding policy toward Iran is precisely
that Rodman argues very specifically in his piece -- again, Rodman
being a former Bush administration official, as well as a former
assistant to Kissinger -- that we have to prevail in Iraq so that we
can impress Iran with our determination and strength, our credibility.
He says, in fact, that the United States cannot be strong against Iran
or anywhere, if we accept defeat in Iraq. So these people are really
girding for the potential war with Iran. I think that Rodman probably
is part of that group that would like to have a war with Iran, as well.
And so, I think that this is another indicator that Bush is certainly
preparing for a potential war against Iran. I think that’s a very grave
danger at this moment.
JUAN GONZALEZ: And this new ad campaign, once again
attempting to link the attack on the World Trade Center to the war on
Iraq in the minds of the American people, your reaction?
GARETH PORTER: Well, that, of course, has been
completely discredited, you know, by the facts as we now understand
them. Documentation makes it very clear that there was no relationship
between going into Iraq and the rationale for Iraq and 9/11, except
that it was a convenient moment for the neoconservatives in the
administration to press their advantage, which, you know, they chose
the target that they had already wanted to bring down -- Saddam Hussein
-- before -- long before 9/11, as we now know. So this is simply a
continuation of the now-proven lie that the Bush administration has
been giving the American people now for three years.
AMY GOODMAN: We just have ten seconds, but Cheney's role in pushing for attacking Iran, Gareth Porter?
GARETH PORTER: Dick Cheney, we know, is determined to use
the excuse of alleged Iranian training camps -- that’s camps supposedly
in Iran, where Hezbollah is training the troops of Muqtada al-Sadr’s
Mahdi Army -- as an excuse to attack Iran, with the hope that the
Iranians would then retaliate and make possible then a strategic attack
against Iran's -- not only the nuclear fatalities, but against economic
and military targets. The aim of the Bush administration is to weaken
Iran as a power in the Middle East.
AMY GOODMAN: Gareth Porter, we want to thank you very much for being with us, investigative journalist and historian, writes a blog on the Huffington Post . His book is Perils of Dominance: Imbalance of Power and the Road to War in Vietnam.
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