Flashback to the 60’s: A Sinking Sensation of Parallels Between Iraq and Vietnam

WASHINGTON, Jan. 28 – Not quite 38 years ago, enmeshed in a drawn-out war whose ultimate outcome was deeply in doubt, Lyndon B. Johnson met on Guam with the fractious generals who were contending for leadership of South Vietnam and told them: “My birthday is in late August. The greatest birthday present you could give me is a national election.”

George W. Bush’s birthday is in early July, but his broad goals for the Iraqi elections on Sunday are much the same as the Johnson administration’s in 1967: to confer political legitimacy and credibility on a government that Iraqis themselves will be willing and able to fight to defend, and that American and world public opinion will agree to help nurture.

“I think one lesson is that there be a clear objective that everybody understands,” Mr. Bush said in an interview with The New York Times this week, reflecting on the relevance of Vietnam today. “A free, democratic Iraq, an ally in the war on terror, with an Iraqi army, all parts of it – Iraqi forces, army, national guard, border guard, police force – able to defend itself. Secondly, that people understand the connection between that goal and our future.”

But the difficulties of achieving such objectives, then and now, have led a range of military experts, historians and politicians to consider the parallels between Vietnam and Iraq to warn of potential pitfalls ahead. Nearly two years after the American invasion of Iraq, such comparisons are no longer dismissed in mainstream political discourse as facile and flawed, but are instead bubbling to the top.

“We thought in those early days in Vietnam that we were winning,” Senator Edward M. Kennedy of Massachusetts, one of this war’s most vocal opponents, warned in a speech here on Thursday. “We thought the skill and courage of our troops was enough. We thought that victory on the battlefield would lead to victory in war and peace and democracy for the people of Vietnam. In the name of a misguided cause, we continued in a war too long. We failed to comprehend the events around us. We did not understand that our very presence was creating new enemies and defeating the very goals we set out to achieve.”
Full Article: nytimes.com

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