Phil Carter saves me from the pain of Ricardo Sanchez’s memoir. Last year we saw Sanchez spit unhinged invective about how everyone who isn’t in a uniform is a sybaritic and valueless coward. Phil finds Sanchez up to his old tricks. This time, he blames the loss of South Vietnam on… his countrymen. Phil responds so well I’ll quote him at length:
Ah yes, the “stabbed in the back narrative.” … No amount of America firepower could have crushed the North Vietnamese people’s will. It’s true that we made many missteps in waging the Vietnam War, and that we might have achieved a better outcome in the short term had we backed better South Vietnamese leaders, implemented smarter counterinsurgency strategies sooner, and pursued Vietnamization earlier. But the ultimate outcome was ordained long before 1973, and probably long before American combat troops arrived in 1965. Most of the histories I’ve read suggest the die was cast sometime around when the French surrender at Dien Bien Phu in 1954. We didn’t lose the Vietnam War because of any “stab in the back.” We lost because we failed to see the strategic environment correctly, and we chose a war of a time, place and manner that we could not win.
This narrative came to mean a great deal to the cohort of American military officers who shepherded the services through the post-Vietnam years. They vowed to never again fight a war like Vietnam. These generals embraced the Weinberger-Powell doctrine prescribing when, how and why they would fight. They rejected counterinsurgency efforts and small wars, choosing instead conventional wars with defined objectives and familiar features. And they rebuilt the Army with capabilities to fight these wars, marginalizing those who thought about small wars and pushing them into the special forces, civil affairs, military police and intelligence communities. Even during the 1990s, when the Army deployed for peacekeeping operations around the world, these missions remained peripheral.
On the very next page, Sanchez criticizes the decision to send “unprepared and improperly trained soldiers” into the “guerilla warfighting conditions” of Vietnam. He appears to miss the connection, however, between his misunderstanding of the Vietnam war and the Army’s lack of preparedness for Iraq, which flowed from that deeply flawed view.
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May 11th, 2008 at 11:43 am
This attempt at re-writing history is so spectacularly stupid.
The original reason for going into Vietnam was if we didn’t succeed in installing our guy (whoever that was at the moment), we’d be fighting to protect the next set of “dominoes” in Thailand, the Philippines and ultimately in Hawaii.
Added to this were the constant reassurances year after year that all was going well and “light was at the end of the tunnel”.
Both the original rationale and the ongoing happy-talk turned out to be pathetically untrue. Any discussion that tries to detach these from the eventual outcome is totally a-historical and irrelevant.
May 11th, 2008 at 12:07 pm
@Patachon, right you are, great point. Rick Perlstein’s book Nixonland rehashes LBJ’s long-forgotten assurances that eventually the Commaniss menace would make its way to San Francisco if it wasn’t stopped in Vietnam.