Posted on 09/15/2008 4:38:58 AM PDT by Renfield
Yesterday's Wall Street Journal carried a page-one story by Yaroslav Trofimov reporting the unlikeliest endorsement of this campaign season:
[T]he jailers who once tortured Sen. McCain are lining up to offer effusive -- if somewhat embarrassing -- endorsements for his presidential candidacy.
"If I had a vote in the U.S., I would choose McCain," beams retired Col. Tran Trong Duyet, the [Hanoi Hilton prison] camp's former commander. "I want him in the White House."
Col. Duyet's sentiment is not an eccentricity:
This unlikely sentiment is widely shared in this fast-growing country of 85 million. "The majority of the people in Vietnam know Sen. McCain and feel comfortable about him," says Duong Trung Quoc, a member of Vietnam's National Assembly and secretary-general of the Association of Vietnamese Historians. "Nobody here knows about Obama."
Col. Duyet denies that McCain was mistreated at the Hanoi Hilton, but Trofimov even made progress on this count:
Among a handful of interviewed former Hoa Lo personnel, only retired Col. Pham Cong Khoi, who served as a cell guard responsible for Sen. McCain, offered a reluctant admission that the "Hanoi Hilton" was not quite the paradise it's made out to be.
"I personally did not beat anyone," he said when asked about Sen. McCain's accounts of frequent thrashings. "But it is very normal that something like this happens in prison, when you question someone and they don't want to answer you." Minutes later, Mr. Khoi returned to toeing the party line. "We saved McCain's life and treated him well," he insisted with a broad smile. "And in return we think McCain will do something good for Vietnam."
It's a strange year.
Vietnam wants to trade with US and Obama is not a free trader.
“But it is very normal that something like this happens in prison, when you question someone and they don’t want to answer you.”
Normal in a communist country.
Vietnamese people in America will support McCain. Like cuban-Americans, they know a Rat when they see one and Obama has the features and the stink.
This makes sense.
McCain has done more to normalize relations with Vietnam than just about anyone else.
There is still a lot of resentment towards Vietnam (or at least uneasy feelings) amoung Americans. If someone like McCain gains the presidency and says “I’ve put it behind me and you should also” it will go a long way to make people view Vietnam in the same light as say South Korea as a trading partner for the US.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.