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A mini-Tet offensive ?
The Washington Times ^ | April 16, 2004 | Arnaud de Borchgrave

Posted on 04/16/2004 7:50:52 PM PDT by neverdem

The Washington Times
www.washingtontimes.com

A mini-Tet offensive ?

By Arnaud de Borchgrave
THE WASHINGTON TIMES
Published April 16, 2004

Any seasoned reporter covering the Tet offensive in Vietnam 36 years ago is well over 60 and presumably retired or teaching journalism at one of America's 4,200 colleges and universities. Before plunging into an orgy of erroneous and invidious historical parallels between Iraq and Vietnam, a reminder about what led to the U.S. defeat in Southeast Asia is timely.


    Iraq will only be another Vietnam if the home front collapses, as it did following the Tet offensive that began on the eve of the Chinese New Year, Jan. 31, 1968. The surprise attack was designed to overwhelm some 70 cities and towns, and 30 other strategic objectives simultaneously. By breaking a previously agreed truce for Tet festivities, master strategist Gen. Vo Nguyen Giap in Hanoi calculated South Vietnamese troops would be caught with defenses down.


    After the first few hours of panic, the South Vietnamese troops reacted fiercely. They did the bulk of the fighting and took some 6,000 casualties. Viet Cong units not only did not reach a single one of their objectives -- except when they arrived by taxi at the U.S. Embassy in Saigon, blew their way through the wall into the compound and guns blazing made it into the lobby before they were wiped out by U.S. Marines. But they lost some 50,000 killed and at least as many wounded.


    Gen. Giap had thrown some 70,000 troops into a strategic gamble that was also designed to overwhelm 13 of the 16 provincial capitals and trigger a popular uprising. But Tet was an unmitigated military disaster for Hanoi and its Viet Cong troops in South Vietnam. Yet that was not the way it was reported in U.S. and other media around the world.


    It was television's first war. And some 50 million Americans at home saw the carnage of dead bodies in the rubble, and dazed Americans running around.


    As the late veteran war reporter Peter Braestrup documented in "Big Story" -- a massive, two-volume study of how Tet was covered by American reporters -- the Viet Cong offensive was depicted as a military disaster for the United States. By the time the facts emerged a week or two later from Rand Corp. interrogations of prisoners and defectors, the damage had been done. Conventional media wisdom had been set in concrete. U.S. public opinion perceptions changed accordingly.


    Rand made copies of these POW interrogations available. But few reporters seemed interested. In fact, the room where they were on display was almost always empty. Many Vietnamese civilians who were fence-sitters or leaning toward the Viet Cong, especially in the region around Hue City, joined government ranks after they witnessed Viet Cong atrocities.


    Several mass graves were found with some 4,000 unarmed civil servants and other civilians, stabbed or with skulls smashed by clubs. The number of communist defectors, known as "chieu hoi," increased fourfold. And the "popular uprising" anticipated by Giap, failed to materialize. The Tet offensive also neutralized much of the clandestine communist infrastructure.


    As South Vietnamese troops fought Viet Cong remnants in Cholon, the predominantly Chinese twin city of Saigon, reporters, sipping drinks in the rooftop bar of the Caravelle Hotel, watched the fireworks 2 miles away. America's most trusted newsman, CBS' Walter Cronkite, appeared for a standup piece with distant fires as a backdrop.


    Donning helmet, Mr. Cronkite declared the war lost. It was this now famous television news piece that persuaded President Lyndon Johnson six weeks later, on March 31, not to run for re-election. His ratings had plummeted from 80 percent when he assumed the presidency upon John F. Kennedy's death to 30 percent after Tet. Approval of his handling of the war dropped to 20 percent, his credibility shot to pieces.


    Until Tet, a majority of Americans agreed with Presidents Kennedy and Johnson that failure was not an option. It was Kennedy who changed the status of U.S. military personnel from advisers to South Vietnamese troops to full-fledged fighting men. By the time of Kennedy's Nov. 22, 1963, assassination, 16,500 U.S. troops had been committed to the war. Johnson escalated all the way to 542,000.


    But defeat became an option when Johnson decided the war was unwinnable and that he would lose his bid for the presidency in November 1968. Hanoi thus turned military defeat into a priceless geopolitical victory.


    With the Viet Cong wiped out in the Tet offensive, North Vietnamese regulars moved south down the Ho Chi Minh trails through Laos and Cambodia to continue the war. Even Giap admitted in his memoirs that news media reporting of the war and the antiwar demonstrations that ensued in America surprised him. Instead of negotiating what he called a conditional surrender, Giap said they would now go the limit because America's resolve was weakening and the possibility of complete victory was within Hanoi's grasp.


    Hanoi's Easter offensive in March 1972 was another disaster for the communists. Some 70,000 North Vietnamese troops were wiped out -- by the South Vietnamese who did all the fighting. The last American soldier left Vietnam in March 1973. And the chances of the South Vietnamese army being able to hack it on its own were reasonably good. With one proviso: Continued U.S. military assistance with weapons and hardware, including helicopters.


    But Congress balked, first by cutting off military assistance to Cambodia, which enabled Pol Pot's Khmer Rouge communists to take over, which, in turn, was followed by a similar congressional rug pulling from under the South Vietnamese, that led to rapid collapse of morale in Saigon.


    The unraveling, with Congress pulling the string, was so rapid even Giap was caught by surprise. As he recounts in his memoirs, Hanoi had to improvise a general offensive -- and then rolled into Saigon two years before they had reckoned it might become possible.


    That is the real lesson for the U.S. commitment to Iraq. Whatever one thought about the advisability of Operation Iraqi Freedom, the United States is there with 100,000 troops and a solid commitment to endow Iraq with a democratic system of government. While failure is not an option for Mr. Bush, it clearly is for Sen. Edward Kennedy, Massachusetts Democrat, who called Iraq the president's Vietnam. It is, of course, no such animal. But it could become so if congressional resolve dissolves.


    Bui Tin, who served on the general staff of the North Vietnamese army, received South Vietnam's unconditional surrender on April 30, 1975. In an interview with the Wall Street Journal after his retirement, he made clear the antiwar movement in the United States, which led to the collapse of political will in Washington, was "essential to our strategy."


    Visits to Hanoi by Jane Fonda and former Attorney General Ramsey Clark and various church ministers "gave us confidence that we should hold on in the face of battlefield reverses."


    America lost the war, concluded Bui Tin, "because of its democracy. Through dissent and protest, it lost the ability to mobilize a will to win." Kennedy should remember that Vietnam was the war of his brother who saw the conflict in the larger framework of the Cold War and Nikita Khrushchev's threats against West Berlin. It would behoove Kennedy to see Iraq in the larger context of the struggle to bring democracy, not only to Iraq, but the entire Middle East.


    


    Arnaud de Borchgrave is editor at large for The Washington Times and United Press International. He covered Tet as Newsweek's chief foreign correspondent and had seven tours in Vietnam between 1951 under the French and 1972, during the U.S. involvement.


    



Copyright © 2004 News World Communications, Inc. All rights reserved.


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TOPICS: Editorial; Foreign Affairs; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; US: District of Columbia; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: arnauddeborchgrave; democratparty; iraq; kennedy; lbj; tet; vietnam
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This was posted over a week ago with a slightly different title. I thinks it's good enough to be reposted. It's too bad it couldn't be reposted by the NY and LA Times, the audiences that really need to understand it and the supposed Vietnam analogy.

Analysis: A mini-Tet offensive ?

1 posted on 04/16/2004 7:50:52 PM PDT by neverdem
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To: Cannoneer No. 4
PING
2 posted on 04/16/2004 7:52:06 PM PDT by neverdem (Xin loi min oi)
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To: neverdem
It was a coup by news correspondents, led by Uncle Walter.
3 posted on 04/16/2004 7:58:31 PM PDT by Cicero (Marcus Tullius)
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To: swilhelm73
PING A related article, that's equally good.
4 posted on 04/16/2004 7:58:38 PM PDT by neverdem (Xin loi min oi)
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To: neverdem
missed it first time around, thanks for reposting
5 posted on 04/16/2004 8:02:40 PM PDT by Texas_Jarhead
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To: Cicero
Uncle Walter and Uncle Ho, the cost - priceless.... especially to our reputation, for which we still pay today.
6 posted on 04/16/2004 8:03:45 PM PDT by neverdem (Xin loi min oi)
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To: Cicero
Uncle Walter and Uncle Ho, the cost - priceless.... especially to our reputation, for which we still pay today.
7 posted on 04/16/2004 8:04:08 PM PDT by neverdem (Xin loi min oi)
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To: neverdem
Spreading it.
8 posted on 04/16/2004 8:05:28 PM PDT by Bogey78O (I voted for this tagline... before I voted against it.)
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To: fourdeuce82d
HANGFIRE!
9 posted on 04/16/2004 8:06:16 PM PDT by neverdem (Xin loi min oi)
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To: neverdem
The democRATS are doing their best to see that the home front collapses for the Iraq portion of the war on terrorism. The leader is ted kennedy.
10 posted on 04/16/2004 8:08:05 PM PDT by Parley Baer
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To: neverdem
Good article. Thanks for the re-post. I missed the first one.
11 posted on 04/16/2004 8:11:49 PM PDT by elbucko
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To: neverdem
It's too bad it couldn't be reposted by the NY and LA Times, the audiences that really need to understand it and the supposed Vietnam analogy.

Too early, the election is an eternity away, in political time. Bush and his people will make the point clear in September and October, when the minds of the mushy middle are focused more clearly on what this election means.

12 posted on 04/16/2004 8:12:44 PM PDT by hunter112
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To: neverdem
It's too bad it couldn't be reposted by the NY and LA Times, the audiences that really need to understand it and the supposed Vietnam analogy.

Too early, the election is an eternity away, in political time. Bush and his people will make the point clear in September and October, when the minds of the mushy middle are focused more clearly on what this election means.

13 posted on 04/16/2004 8:12:53 PM PDT by hunter112
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To: neverdem
The so called 'Vietnam' comparison is wrong is so many ways, but the only way that matters to me is that Vietnam didn't kill 3000 of us, on our own soil to start a war.

And to whomever, don't waste bandwidth on the Gulf of Tonkin incident...

5.56mm

14 posted on 04/16/2004 8:13:27 PM PDT by M Kehoe
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To: neverdem
bumpity bump bump. Can't be posted too often.
15 posted on 04/16/2004 8:15:32 PM PDT by lonevoice (Some things have to be believed to be seen)
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Comment #16 Removed by Moderator

To: Jake - Dallas
Welcome to FR.

Where are you?

5.56mm

17 posted on 04/16/2004 8:27:42 PM PDT by M Kehoe
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To: neverdem
In the sixties, the left-wing America-haters helped swing public opinion the enemy's way. Scary thought: today these same people (the ones that didn't o.d.) are now serving in congress, the state department, major media, you name it. I think they were more harmlesss when they were marching in the streets in torn-up blue jeans.
18 posted on 04/16/2004 8:33:55 PM PDT by scottinoc
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To: Jake - Dallas
This time though, things are different and the media don't stand a chance. Why? The Internet, which tragically did not exist back in '68. Free Republic, Rush Limbaugh et. al., will get the TRUTH out!!!
19 posted on 04/16/2004 8:40:39 PM PDT by Frank_2001
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Comment #20 Removed by Moderator


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