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Bush compares Iraq, Vietnam wars
Foreign Desk Report
HANOI—President Bush, on his first visit to a country where America lost
a two-decade-long fight against communism, said Friday the Vietnam War’s
lesson for today’s confounding Iraq conflict is that freedom takes time
to trump hatred.
Embracing a former enemy that remains communist but is allowing
capitalism to surge, Bush opened a four-day stay here that was fueling
an already raging debate over his war policy. Democrats who won control
of Congress say last week’s elections validate their call for U.S.
troops to start coming home soon, while Bush argues — as he did again
Friday — for patience with a mission he says can’t be ended until Iraq
can remain stable on its own. A baby boomer who came of age during the
turbulent Vietnam era and spent the war stateside as a member of the
Texas Air National Guard, the president called himself amazed by the
sights of the onetime war capital. He pronounced it hopeful that the
United States and Vietnam have reconciled differences after a war that
ended 31 years ago when the Washington-backed regime in Saigon fell.
“My first reaction is history has a long march to it, and societies
change and relationships can constantly be altered to the good,” Bush
said after speeding past signs of both poverty and the commerce produced
by Asia’s fastest-growing economy. The president said there was much to
be learned from the divisive Vietnam War — the longest conflict in U.S.
history — as his administration contemplates new strategies for the
increasingly difficult war in Iraq, now in its fourth year. But his
critics see parallels with Vietnam — a determined insurgency and a death
toll that has drained public support — that spell danger for dragging
out U.S. involvement in Iraq. “It’s just going to take a long period of
time for the ideology that is hopeful — and that is an ideology of
freedom — to overcome an ideology of hate,” Bush said after having lunch
at his lakeside hotel with Australian Prime Minister John Howard, whose
country has been one of America’s strongest allies in Iraq, Vietnam and
other conflicts.
“We’ll succeed,” Bush added, “unless we quit.” In a day of meetings with
Vietnamese leaders, the Vietnam-Iraq comparisons gave way to a focus on
areas of cooperation. Those include continuing military-to-military
links, work on AIDS and bird flu, trade, and cooperation on information
about more than 1,300 U.S. military personnel still unaccounted for from
the Vietnam War. Bush was visiting the U.S. military’s Joint POW/MIA
Accounting Command here on Saturday. He met in succession with
Vietnamese President Nguyen Minh Triet at the bright orange presidential
palace, with Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung next door, and with the
country’s most powerful leader, Communist Party chief Nong Duc Manh, at
the ruling party headquarters across the street. Each time, he and his
hosts sat under a large bronze bust of Ho Chi Minh, the victorious
North’s revolutionary communist leader.
Nong said the president had “opened a new page in the relationship.” In
the evening, Bush was feted at a state banquet. “For decades, you have
been torn apart by war,” Bush said, toasting his hosts. “And today the
Vietnamese people are at peace and seeing the benefits of reform.” The
president’s welcome by the public was much less enthusiastic than the
rock-star treatment afforded President Clinton when he came in 2000.
Happy crowds thronged Clinton, who normalized relations with Vietnam.
But Bush encountered a country where many with long memories deeply
disapprove of the U.S. invasion of Iraq — even as they yearn for
continued economic progress to stamp out still-rampant poverty. With all
traffic halted, many Hanoi residents gaped at his long motorcade from
their motorbikes. Other clusters of onlookers gathered before
storefronts, a few waving but most merely looking on impassively. Huynh
Tuyet, 71, a North Vietnamese veteran who had his hand blown off
fighting the Americans, recalled his own lesson. “Even though the
Americans were more powerful with all their massive weapons, the main
factor in war is the people,” he said. |