August 30th, 2007

Could Iraq become another Vietnam?

 by Chuck Morse  
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In March of 1975 the anti-war Congress voted to cut off all aid to South Vietnam, thus sealing the fate of our ally.

Democrats use terms like "quagmire" and "failed" to describe the American military involvement in Iraq as they invoke the painful memory of Vietnam. Now, President Bush has set the record straight in a groundbreaking speech he delivered on August 22 to the Veterans of Foreign Wars National Convention in Kansas City.

In his remarks, the President stated, "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.'"

The parallels between the two conflicts, Vietnam and Iraq, are substantial but not in the way the Democrats would have us think. Today, President Bush faces virtually the same set of circumstances in Iraq that President Gerald Ford faced in Vietnam in 1975. Back then, liberal anti-war Democrats won the mid-term election of 1974 and took over Congress as they did again last year in 2006. Democrats elected to Congress back in 1974, who are still leaders of the anti-war position, include Patrick Leahy (D-VT), Tom Harkin (D-IA), Max Baucus (D-MT), George Miller (D-CA), Henry Waxman (D-CA), James Oberstar (D-MN), and Jack Murtha (D-PA). Congress clamored back then, as it is doing presently, for a policy of withdrawal. While an end of the conflict should obviously be the long-term goal, what would be the consequences of immediate withdrawal? Let's examine the consequences of disengagement from Vietnam.

After the 1973 Paris Peace Accord, South Vietnam depended on American aid to stabilize their country and fend off the communist North Vietnamese, comparable to Iran, and to fight the infiltration of the Viet Cong, comparable to the terrorists disturbing the peace in Iraq. Emboldened by the new liberal Democratic majority in Congress in 1975, Senator Ted Kennedy (D-MA) led an effort to cut off all aid to South Vietnam by denying the Pentagon a request to spend surplus funds that had already been appropriated.

In March of 1975, the anti-war Congress, in fact, voted to cut off all aid to South Vietnam, thus sealing the fate of our ally. Typifying the attitude of many Democrats in Congress at the time, and in response to a Ford Administration official who asked, "Do you want Cambodia to fall," Rep. Don Frasier (D-MN) answered, "Yes, under controlled circumstances to minimize the loss of life."

In his remarks to the VFW, President Bush continued. "In Cambodia, the Khmer Rouge began a murderous rule, in which hundreds of thousands of Cambodians died by starvation and torture and execution." It should be noted that President Jimmy Carter, the great moralist in the White House at the time of the Cambodian genocide which followed the cutoff in aid to South Vietnam, never uttered a single public word of acknowledgement regarding the Cambodian Genocide, even as the doctrinaire Marxist Pol Pot stepped over skulls while carrying around a copy of the Communist Manifesto stuffed into his hip pocket.

"In Vietnam," President Bush continued, "former allies of the United States and government workers and intellectuals and businessmen were sent off to prison camps, where tens of thousand perished. Hundreds of thousands more fled the country on rickety boats, many of them going to their graves in the South China Sea."

Would the consequences be any less dire today for the people of Iraq than it was for the people of Southeast Asia if Congress withdrew support? If such a withdrawal of support were to take place today, as a result of Congress cutting off aid, would the high-minded Left turn as blind an eye to the resulting slaughter and human suffering as they largely did back then? Would American traditions of standing up for human rights and fighting against oppression be any less compromised today as it was in 1975 by such action? These are questions that hopefully we will not have to answer, if we learn the lessons of history.

Foreign Affairs: Iraq War



Chuck Morse is the afternoon drive-time radio talk show host and an account executive at WEIM AM-1280 in Fitchburg/Leominster. Formerly the Chief Executive of City Metro Enterprises and an executive with Clear Channel, Chuck has hosted radio shows and authored published columns since 1996. Chuck campaigned for Congress in the 4th district of MA in 2004.
chuck@weim.com
http://www.chuckmorse.com/

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  1. I don't think the use of the word "quagmire" is distinctly a Democratic swear word.

    I believe Ron Paul has also used this term, correctly might I add.

    Oh yeah, and one other guy, Dick Cheney himself, was he also a Democrat in '94?

    Here's the video, see for yourself: http://youtube.com/watch?v=6BEsZMvrq-I

    What changed in Cheney's head since that statement? Special interests?

    More of our serving men and women have donated more money to Ron Paul's campaign than any other Candidate. What does that tell you? He was against this war from the start, and still wants to get our troops out of harms way. And the argument that there will be a "bloodbath" doesn't hold up, if the main reason they're fighting is because one side or the other supports US being there. Let's get out of this war, and use our military here at home to protect US.

    Lets restore integrity to the White House. Support Ron Paul.

    http://www.RonPaul2008.com

    Comment by Bob Dylan | September 7, 2007

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