30th Anniversary of US - Viet Nam Relations

 

                                                (Tentative translation)

People to People Meeting

Celebrating 30 years of Viet Nam - US Normalization of Relations

Ha Noi, from 8:00am - 10:00am, on 28th October 2025 (Ha Noi Time Zone)

Monday, October 27, 9 – 11 p.m. ET

(It is held as both a meeting and a webinar)

 

08:00: Opening Remarks and Introduction of Delegates - Mr. Nguyễn Năng Khiếu, Secretary -General of the Vietnam - US Society

08:05: Opening remarks & Overview of Vietnam - US Relations and People-to-People Ties 30 Years after Normalization – Mr. Phan Anh Son, President of the Viet Nam – USA Society

08:15: Briefing – Moderated by Ambassador Pham Quang Vinh,  President of the Vietnam - US Society.

08:20: “Establishing Vietnam  - US Diplomatic Relations in July 1995: A Historic Milestone” - Representative of Vietnam Association of Historical Sciences

08:25: “Support from American Working - Class People for the Vietnamese People: From History to Future” - Mr. Amiad Horowitz, Communist Party USA

08:30: “The Role of Culture Exchange in Reconciliation and the Normalization Process” - Writer Nguyễn Quang Thiều, President of the Vietnam Writers Association

08:35: “The Participation of the Fund for Reconciliation and Development (FRD) in the Normalization Process” - Mr. John McAuliff, Executive Director of the Fund for Reconciliation and Development (online)

08:40: “The Role of Vietnam - US Educational and Cultural Cooperation in Bilateral Relations” - Representative of the University of Social Sciences and Humanities

08:45: “Vietnam - US Friendship Exchange: Connecting Young Generations for a Peaceful and Prosperous Future” - Mr. Frank Joyce, Member of the U.S. National Council of Elders (online)

08:50: “Vietnam - US Cooperation in Addressing War Legacy Issues” - Representative of the Vietnam Association for Victims of Agent Orange (VAVA)

08:55: “The Role of American Veterans’ Organizations in Reconciliation, War Legacy Resolution, and Promoting Vietnam - S Relations” - Mr. Chuck Searcy, President of VFP160

09:00: "Vietnam - US Exchange of People-to-People: Historical Lessons” - Ho Chi Minh City Vietnam - US Friendship Association (online)

09:05-9:45: “Vietnam - US People-to-People Exchange in the Context of the Comprehensive Strategic Partnership” - Ambassador Phạm Quang Vinh, President of the Vietnam - US Society

09:45: Opening Discussion

09:45: Closing Remarks - Ambassador Phạm Quang Vinh, President of the Vietnam - US Society

10:00: Program is over & Group Photo.


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A limited number of virtual seats is available.  If you would like to attend, send us a note by no later than October 11th to jmcauliff@ffrd.org  .  Please include a short description of your involvement in the antiwar movement and/or post-war normalization.

80th Anniversary of Independence

 Under Construction.  Please check back periodically


 US Ambassador Knapper's Facebook post for the 80th anniversary featuring the OSS work with Ho Chi Minh   https://www.facebook.com/reel/2259625791152346


Congratulatory Statement by Secretary of State Marco Rubio


Photos from dinner celebrating 80th anniversary

https://www.facebook.com/photo/?fbid=10238416096998778&set=pcb.10238416102718921


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President meets with friends and American people who love Vietnam

President Luong Cuong met with friends and peace-loving American people in New York, affirming that Vietnam always appreciates their affection and help.

President Luong Cuong on September 22 met with representatives of thousands of American friends who love Vietnam, on the occasion of attending activities of the 80th United Nations General Assembly High-Level Week in New York and working in the US, according to VNA .

These are people who have supported, assisted, and been with Vietnam in the struggle for national independence, national reunification, resolving the consequences of war, promoting Vietnam-US relations, and contributing to the current process of national construction and development.

President Luong Cuong and delegates. Photo: VNA

President Luong Cuong and delegates. Photo: VNA

One of them was Ani Toncheva, a member of the Communist Party USA, who was dedicated to internationalism and anti-militarism and actively participated in struggles for labor and housing rights in New York City.

The meeting was also attended by Mr. John McAuliff, Director of the Reconciliation and Development Foundation, who actively campaigned for support for Vietnam during the 1973 Paris Agreement negotiations, and Mr. Todd Magee, Executive Director of Operation Smile, an organization that has made many contributions to promoting the normalization of Vietnam-US relations.

They expressed their admiration for Vietnam's efforts to overcome difficult times to develop strongly, especially during a period when the world had many unpredictable changes, and shared about its contributions to the process of healing the wounds and consequences of war for the Vietnamese people.

These are efforts to help Agent Orange victims have a better life, bring the people of the two countries closer together, contribute to helping Vietnam and the US move towards normalizing relations, as well as projects to help disadvantaged children.

The President affirmed that Vietnam always remembers and appreciates the close affection, valuable help and support that the friends and peace-loving people of the United States have given to the Vietnamese people.

The President recalled the image of peace-loving American citizens in the movement supporting Vietnam's just struggle, promoting an end to the war and the restoration of peace, or American veterans organizations that overcame past guilt and returned to Vietnam to heal the wounds of war.

President Luong Cuong shakes hands with friends, long-time partners, and progressive people of the US on September 22. Photo: VNA

President Luong Cuong shakes hands with friends, long-time partners, and progressive people of the US on September 22. Photo: VNA

He emphasized that people-to-people diplomacy is an important field of Vietnam-US relations, playing the role of a solid social foundation, being both a catalyst and contributing to building and strengthening trust, connecting hearts to hearts, connecting and promoting relations between the two countries.

The President hopes that American friends and partners will promote their role as bridges, connecting businesses and localities of both sides, promoting cooperation in core and breakthrough areas of economics, trade, investment, especially in science, technology, and innovation.

The President also asked American friends and partners to continue supporting and contributing to the work of overcoming the consequences of war, assisting victims of toxic chemicals, dioxin and bombs, and assisting in collecting information to help speed up the process of searching for and collecting the remains of missing Vietnamese soldiers.

He affirmed that Vietnam is committed to making the greatest efforts in searching for and repatriating the remains of American soldiers from the war in Vietnam, and hopes that friends and partners will continue to contribute to the development of relations between the two countries.

Ngoc Anh




Remarks by John McAuliff at VUS/VUFO Friendship Meeting in New York with President Luong Cuong   9/22/25

Mr. President, it is an honor to be with you and your colleagues from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the Viet Nam – USA Society, and the Viet Nam Union of Friendship Organizations.  Our group of twelve includes people who were active in the antiwar movement:   Carolyn Eisenberg, Steven Goldsmith, Susan Gregory, Rick Hind, Terry Provance, Joel Schwartz, and myself.  Some continued on in the campaign for normalization, reconciliation and responsibility for the legacies of war, most notably land mines, UXO and Agent Orange, and were joined by:  Susan Hammond, Mary McDonnell, Matt Meyer, Rebecca Waugh, and Andrew Wells-Dang

They worked with the American Friends Service Committee, the Bach Mai Hospital Relief Fund, Brooklyn for Peace, Catholic Relief Services, Chicago Seven Conspiracy Trial, Clergy and Laity Concerned, the Coalition to Stop Funding the War, the Committee of Returned Volunteers, the Fellowship of Reconciliation, the Indochina Peace Campaign, the March on the Pentagon, May Day, Medical Aid for Indochina, the Moratorium, the National Council of Churches, the National Mobilization Committee, the Pentagon Papers Peace Project, the Peoples Peace Treaty, the Shoe Shine Boys Project, the Social Science Research Council, the Support Committee for Dan and Phil Berrigan, the US Institute of Peace, the Vietnam Peace Commemoration Committee, the War Legacies Project, the War Resisters League, the Women’s March on Congress to Cut Off War Funds and in national movements for draft resistance and to support antiwar GIs.

We meet during the 30th anniversary year of the overdue end of the US embargo and establishment of normal diplomatic relations, the 50th anniversary of the end or the war and of national reunification (which most of us joined in Ho Chi Minh City, attending the fine dinner you hosted), and the 80th anniversary of Viet Nam’s Declaration of Independence. 

Ho Chi Minh’s words incorporated language from the US Declaration of Independence, symbolic of his warm collaboration in Tan Trao with the Deer Team of the Office of Strategic Services, the OSS.  One of my organization’s highlights was the reunion we arranged in 1995 with the support of the Ford Foundation between surviving veterans of the OSS and Viet Minh, including a touching meeting with General Vo Nguyen Giap.  Let me present to you a transcript of three days of discussions in Southampton, Long Island, not far from here, between the two groups of veterans.  It culminated with a program at the Asia Society that moved Deputy Foreign Minister Le Mai to an eloquent commentary.  Tragically it took decades of horrific war, at least three million deaths, and economic and environmental devastation before we returned to the spirit of 1945 two years ago with our comprehensive strategic partnership.

I will end my remarks with an appeal to Viet Nam to take leadership in the world commensurate with the phenomenal success of its post-war recovery and its international prestige.   Can Viet Nam, the US and ASEAN mobilize international opinion to reverse the territorial aggression of China in the East Sea?  Can Viet Nam work with the other UN vote abstention countries to creatively mitigate, if not end, the aggression of Russia against Ukraine?  Can Viet Nam use its strong friendship with both the US and Cuba to help achieve comparable mutual respect, the end of the embargo and doi moi economic reforms with a Caribbean accent?

As Americans we also need to find out and overcome why the US embassy limited its participation in 50th anniversary celebrations in Ho Chi Minh City to the Consular level and at the 80th anniversary march in Ha Noi to the military attaché, although our ambassador was otherwise very involved.    They show the job of reconciliation is not done.  With the support of both governments and the engagement of our peoples, by 2035 VUS should expand sister city partnerships for every province of Viet Nam with every state in the US.

Charlie Clements on Cambodia

 

The US Role in the Coup Against Sihanouk

   By Charlie Clements

In Jan of 1970 I was a co-pilot/pilot in a C-130 cargo plane flying out of Saigon. The mission we were assigned early one morning in January required the entire crew of five to have TOP SECRET security clearances. That was quite unusual as the C-130 is known as a lumbering four-engine turbo- prop specifically designed for take-off and landing on short unprepared runways. Except for moving nuclear weapons, which might be threatened by a typhoon, which is the reason our crew had TS clearances, I had never heard of any classified mission for a C-130 in the war, where I had been flying there for eight months.

Early that morning, we picked up eight civilians in Saigon and flew them to a rendezvous point in Cambodia, where we were met by two aging MiG-17 fighters of Korean War vintage. Cambodia was a so-called neutral country at the time and the U.S. did not have diplomatic relations. The MiGs escorted us to the runway at Phnom Penh.

The eight men, who we assumed were diplomats, were picked up in a black car, not a limousine. We waited on the tarmac eight hours, occasionally cranking up our Auxiliary Power Unit to cool off the aircraft in the blistering heat. When the passengers returned, we took them back to Saigon. They never introduced themselves, said hello or goodbye, or ‘thank you for a nice flight.’ If you have ever ridden in the back of a C-130, you might understand why. It is extremely noisy, the seats are canvas webbing hung from the walls, there is a relief tube for male passengers, but no accommodation for female passengers. There is no air conditioning and no way for anyone in the cockpit to communicate with passengers. It is also very challenging for passengers to even communicate with each other.

Two days later in a bar in Saigon as young men will do I boasted that I had recently participated in a diplomatic mission to a nearby country. A man introduced as “Ski”, one of three with whom I was drinking, appeared to be in his forties, immediately guffawed and said, “You’re pretty damned naive, Clements, if you believe that diplomatic crap. I had a team on your aircraft, which was arranging the overthrow of Prince Sihanouk. When he goes to Paris for his annual medical consultation in 60 days, a palace coup will leave a General named Lon Nol in power. Sixty days after that we will be invited to invade Cambodia.” I was led to believe he was with the CIA and just assumed his comments were the typical one-upsmanship, common in war zones.

Almost 120 days later as I was shuttling plane loads of combat ready American soldiers to a protrusion of Vietnam into Cambodia called the Parrot’s Beak, sometimes described as the ‘end of the Ho Chi Minh Trail’, it was clear the invasion predicted in that Saigon Bar in January was imminent.  Flying over Cambodia to Phnom Penh I had noted large parts of Cambodia looked like the moon and there was only one weapons system that did that - B-52s. I had also heard rumors that B-52 pilots were occasionally required to alter their flight logs after particularly sensitive missions - I had no idea what those were, but began to imagine there were missions over Cambodia.

I got angrier and angrier that day and by the end of our crew day about 8 p.m., I decided, because I had a cold to declare myself DNIF (Duties Not Including Flying), which pilots could do if they had a cold...and I did. They found another co-pilot for that mission and I flew back to Taiwan with my own crew the next day. When I got there, I asked to see my commander, explained that I was getting angrier and angrier about everything I saw in SE Asia/Vietnam and asked for a change of assignment any place else in the world. I explained that there were several offices within the Pentagon where my skills as an econometrician would be in demand.

Though I was a Distinguished Graduate of the Air Force Academy (number two in my class) and a decorated pilot, on April 30, 1970 I refused to fly further missions in SE Asia.  The Air Force locked me up in a psychiatric ward for eight months and gave me an honorable, but medical discharge (10% psychiatric).

Returning to Phnom Penh, 55-years later John McAuliff arranged a dinner with five survivors of the Khmer Rouge genocide. They were five of only 64 men who survived that a college degree or higher, all had served as government ministers as Cambodia slowly and painfully rebuilt their country. I asked if any of them had known or heard of evidence of CIA involvement in the coup that overthrew Prince Sihanouk. They said no, but to a person they also stated categorically that General Lon Nol did NOT have the wherewithal to have been able to do something like that on his own. Press accounts, some written from Cambodia, indicate widespread suspicion that this was a CIA-engineered coup.  Since Sihanouk in attempting to remain neutral, had not permitted U.S. bombing of the portion of the Ho Chi Minh trail inside Cambodia, the major supply route for the North Vietnamese and Viet Cong armies fighting in South Vietnam, it was strongly in the U.S. interest to install the more U.S. friendly General Lon Nol, then Sihanouk’s Prime Minister.   

Most Americans were led to believe that the B-52 carpet bombings in Cambodia began with the so-called ‘incursion’ (read invasion) in May 1970. However, in 2000 after Bush was elected, but before his inauguration, Bill Clinton traveled to Vietnam. In a gesture to aid in recovery of the remains of both American and Vietnamese MIAs, he released the previously classified IBM database of all the U.S. bombing missions of the war from 1964 to 1973 -  described as the largest database ever created. It revealed many, many bombing missions that the world had no knowledge of, providing proof that the U.S. B-52’s had been carpet bombing Cambodia since 1965.

As Ben Kiernan and Taylor Owen wrote, “The total tonnage of U.S. bombs dropped on Cambodia, at least in the range of 500,000 tons, possibly far more, either equalled or far exceeded the tonnages that the U.S. dropped in the entire Pacific Theater during World War Two (500,000 tons) and in the Korean War (454,000).38 In per capita terms, the bombing of Cambodia exceeded the Allied bombing of Germany and Japan, and the U.S. bombing of North Vietnam (but not that of South Vietnam or possibly, Laos)”

The articles below by Ben Kiernan and Taylor Owen describe in some detail and with maps what the database revealed:

Bombs Over Cambodia: New Light on US Air War (with maps) https://gsp.yale.edu/sites/default/files/walrus_cambodiabombing_oct06.pdf                                                 October 2006

 

Roots of U.S. Troubles in Afghanistan: Civilian Bombing Casualties and the Cambodian Precedent  

June 28, 2010

https://apjjf.org/taylor-owen/3380/article [see note 38 correcting bombing totals in Walrus]

 

Making More Enemies than We Kill? Calculating U.S. Bomb Tonnages Dropped on Laos and Cambodia, and Weighing Their Implications

April 27, 2015

https://apjjf.org/ben-kiernan/4313 

 

While our delegation was in Cambodia, I was very interested to visit the Cambodia Mine Action Center, often referred to by its initials CMAC. I served on the board of Physicians for Human Rights, one of six NGOs that founded the International Campaign to Ban Landmines (ICBL). The campaign was catalyzed by a book written by PHR and Human Rights Watch, which suggested that using extant methods de-mining it would take 10,000 years to clear Cambodia of these heinous weapons. No human language has survived that long. Within eight years we had an international treaty banning that weapon and because it was the first arms control treaty led by civilians rather than by militaries, the Campaign was awarded the 1997 Nobel Peace Prize. I was President of PHR at the time and present with me at both the treaty signing in Ottawa and the Nobel Peace Prize ceremony a week later in Oslo was Tun Channarath, a Cambodian who lost his legs to an anti-personal mine. I was heartened to learn from the Executive Director of CMAC that Tun was still alive and active in their work. CMAC is not only pioneering new methods of mine detection such as mine sniffing rats, but with Japan has developed new technologies such as using drones to map minefields. They train people in demining techniques from all over the world including Ukraine and Sudan.

The recent cut-off of USAID funding has slowed down, but will not halt CMAC’s efforts at disarming the vast amounts of unexploded munitions that continue to kill and maim decades after the conflict in which they were deployed has ended.

More about my personal decision to refuse to fly further missions in SE Asia and the consequences can also be found in the book I wrote Witness to War, Bantam, 1984.

Charlie Clements

5/31/2025

clementscharlie@gmail.com

 

 

Charlie’s zoom presentation of the Cambodia coup story can be seen at 39:55 in the VPCC 50th anniversary of peace webinar https://youtu.be/-oUamqY6D0Q


Overview of April-May Trip to Indochina, Remarks by John McAuliff

 

Indochina:  Fifty Years On

By John McAuliff

When I first encountered the human and material devastation of post-war Viet Nam, Cambodia and Laos in April-May 1975, I could not imagine the transformation that half a century would bring—including in relationships between our countries.

I just led an extended visit to Indochina by eighteen Americans, most with a history of antiwar activism but without prior direct experience in the region.  Our number did include four recognized scholars as well as a distinguished veteran, the second ranked graduate of his class at the US Air Force Academy, who was confined for ten months after refusing to fly combat support missions when the US invaded Cambodia in 1970.

Like hundreds of thousands of US tourists who visit every year, our group was overwhelmed by widespread economic and social development far beyond the level of the US war years.  Every city we visited contained completed and under construction high rises of residential apartments and of offices of private businesses and government agencies.  Traditional markets are being supplemented or replaced by modern malls based on Japanese and Chinese investment.  Large export processing zones produce name brand goods destined for US consumers.  New bridges have replaced ferries and Ho Chi Minh City, a.k.a. Saigon, has opened its first subway train.

Students flock to the US, especially from Viet Nam, for undergraduate and professional degrees.  Most return home where they are joined by ambitious government-welcomed first generation descendants of refugees.  Grab is the Uber like ap that provides smart phone credit card access not only to taxis but also to motor bikes and three wheeled tuk tuks. 

Shared positive history took our delegation to Tan Trao, 125 miles northwest of Ha Noi, where members of the US Office of Strategic Services lived and trained with Ho Chi Minh and General Giap to fight Japanese forces in 1945.  It is a well attended public memorial.  A current shared threat took us to the East Sea Museum in Da Nang where Viet Nam’s decades long conflict with China over maritime claims blend with US concern to maintain freedom of navigation and the territorial rights of all countries bordering the South China Sea.

Meetings with the public University of Hue and the private Dong A University in Da Nang and the Diplomatic Academy in Ha Noi, as well as personally arranged meetings with academic colleagues, illustrated how much potential still exists for research collaboration.

One of Viet Nam’s most popular attractions for American and other foreigners and countless local students and older visitors  is the War Remnants Museum in Ho Chi Minh City.    Our delegation went beyond that venue to grapple with the pain still felt at My Lai, the tiger cage prisons at Con Dao Island, mine and UXO clearance in Quang Tri, and birth defects created by Agent Orange in Da Nang. 

Our visits to Cambodia and Laos were shorter with fewer participants but equally meaningful.  The magnificence of Angkor Wat gives way to the still raw pain of the torture center at Tuol Sleng, the execution ground of Chung Ek and the work of the Documentation Center sponsored by the Queen Mother to account for every person’s experience under the Khmer Rouge.  The decades long challenge of clearing land mines in Cambodia and UXO (unexploded ordnance) in Laos echo war legacies in Viet Nam, including Agent Orange, that exact human cost far after combat ended.

US acceptance of responsibility for the legacies of its wars in Indochina has been slow and insufficient but had been growing.  Already obligated US funding for remediation and clearance programs appears to be undergoing slow if murky fulfillment.  However the future is less certain because of the DOGE afflicted destruction of USAID and the US Institute of Peace.

Our delegation played a locally well reported role in Viet Nam’s celebration on the 50th anniversary of the end of the war.  Their formulation is different than ours, and reflects what the conflict was about from their perspective, “The Liberation of the South and the Reunification of the Country”.  Our difference of motivation is acknowledged, but there is broad recognition that opposition to the war in the US saved countless lives in Viet Nam and in Laos.  Cambodia is a more complicated equation due to the indigenous killing fields of the Khmer Rouge after US withdrawal. 

In Ho Chi Minh City we joined the President’s anniversary eve dinner for the international diplomatic and business community.  After the parade, we held a private meeting with a leader of the governing party.  (His remarks can be read here https://vnpeacecomm.blogspot.com/2025/05/fatherland-front-meeting-in-ho-chi-minh.html.) Along with representatives of resident US veterans and business communities, I also spoke at an earlier commemorative program hosted by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Ha Noi.  

The whole delegation was invited to the seated gathering of thousands opposite the VIP speaker and viewing stand for the celebratory anniversary parade in the center of Ho Chi Minh City. The general public watched in crowds surrounding the subsequent line of march, on giant TV screens erected around the city or at home.   Enthusiasm for the multiday celebration appeared broad and genuine. Participating units were reported here:  https://vietnamnews.vn/politics-laws/1716843/grand-military-parade-procession-takes-place-in-hcm-city-to-celebrate-50th-anniversary-of-national-reunification.html   Based on memory of previous 5 year anniversary marches, the military presence was larger, but not exclusive.  For the first time Cambodian, Lao and Chinese contingents participated. 

There are reports that Viet Nam also invited the US to participate for the first time, a remarkable symbol of reconciliation and a careful balance to Chinese inclusion.  However that was killed by the White House blocking any US official participation, until the last minute at the Consular level—much to the detriment of the US.  The same policy seems to have led to cancellation of our delegation’s meeting with the US Ambassador and the substituted Deputy Chief of Mission. 

My personal conclusion fifty years later is that Viet Nam is well on the way to its goal of being a middle income developed country.  It will play an increasingly strong leadership role in South East Asia and internationally.  The difficult process of reunifying the country culturally, politically and militarily after four decades of war with France, the US, Cambodia and China (and distrust of their allies within the country) are over.  As after the US Revolution and Civil War, there are still some rough edges of treatment of the losing side.   Viet Nam’s version of democracy is not the same as our, nor is that pursued by its neighbors.  The country has new leaders and is in the midst of deep reform of local, regional and national governance.  Time will tell whether that makes the system more responsive to popular will or more efficient bureaucratically.

Having traveled to the region at least thirty times over the last half century, I was not surprised by what I saw or heard although the amount of Vietnamese engagement in the 50 year anniversary was notable.  I was impacted more by learning of a link between the history of Viet Nam and Cambodia.  Hearing Charlie Clements’ account of 1970 was not only moving as a reminder of the price paid for conscientious resistance by an active duty Air Force officer, but also confirmed direct and unique US responsibility for the tragedy that befell Cambodia. 

As a C130 pilot with unusual security clearance, Charlie transported an intelligence team to Phnom Penh that apparently lay the groundwork for the overthrow of President Norodom Sihanouk.  Charlie’s chance encounter with a key CIA operative in Saigon a few days later predicted the coup by Lon Nol and his invitation of US military intervention including B52 raids way in excess of the Secret Bombing.*  Without a US inspired coup and military engagement, there would have been no viable Khmer Rouge, take over of power, depopulation of cities, mass torture and executions, cross border attacks on Viet Nam and a third Indochina War that included China’s destructive invasion in support of Pol Pot.

As an American, I am more immediately concerned by current threats to our governance and foreign policy.  If implemented, the irrational and unfounded tariff policies of the Trump Administration will do great damage to the economic well being of the people of Viet Nam, Cambodia and to a lesser extent Laos.  His tariffs have nothing to do with reciprocity.    Viet Nam and Cambodia are being grievously punished for an imbalance of trade that came about because the US encouraged them to be an alternative supply stream to China.

US non-participation in 50th anniversary events was juvenile and may reflect revisionist right wing perspectives on the war by this Administration.  It was contrary to US interests and hopefully will be corrected by the time of the 30th anniversary of normalization of relations in July.

5/16/25


*  Charlie's personal account can be read here   https://vnpeacecomm.blogspot.com/2025/05/charlie-clements-on-cambodia.html

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Webinar by delegation participants (5/15/25):   

https://youtu.be/-oUamqY6D0Q

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Remarks by John McAuliff on behalf of the VPCC Delegation 
at the Fatherland Front meeting April 30, 2025

The anniversary we celebrate has special meaning for Americans and Vietnamese.  Our initial relationship could not have been more positive in 1945 as the US Office of Strategic Services provided military support to Viet Minh forces in Tan Trao led by Ho Chi Minh and Võ Nguyên Giáp.

The pressures of emerging cold war politics led the US government to a tragic course of first supporting and then replacing the French colonial role in Indochina.  How many million lives were lost and opportunities for economic development were squandered because of American historical and cultural ignorance and arrogance?

During the next thirty years the people of Viet Nam and the US paid an increasingly horrific and disproportionate cost.

The first stages of US intervention were barely noticed in public opinion and government.  The path accelerated with sabotage of the Geneva Agreement, most notably refusal to implement reunification elections in 1954.  As military advisers and supplies of weapons grew into direct combat, a military draft and growing casualties,  US citizens took notice.  Symbolic vigils by traditional pacifists expanded into teach-ins on university campuses, a draft counseling and resistance movement, increasingly massive peace demonstrations, a nationwide Moratorium, tax resistance, symbolic sabotage of draft boards and large scale civil disobedience. 

Civilian activists were energized by antiwar veterans and gave significant support to opposition within the military.  African Americans not only provided the inspirational model of the civil rights movement but moral leadership uniting domestic and international concerns.

After the Paris Agreement brought release of POWs and the end of US combat and bombing of the north, the antiwar movement diminished in size but focused effectively on pressuring the US Congress to restrict further US intervention and material support for the Saigon government, undermining its morale and military capability.  A powerful motivator for activists was exposure of the brutal tiger cages at Con Dao that we just visited and repression of the Paris mandated role of the Third Force.

When the war ended fifty years ago, a majority of Americans celebrated the end to the bloodshed and favored humanitarian assistance.  Official opinion was more negative.  The rawness of feelings and distrust led to missed opportunities for normal relations on both sides in the late 1970s.  US public opinion soured because of postwar problems in Viet Nam and illusions about China.

However, sympathetic sectors of peace oriented religious organizations and remnants of the secular antiwar movement advocated for normal relations beginning with Viet Nam’s membership in the United Nations.  A rice shipment was provided by the Friendshipment coalition and individual organizations established their own humanitarian programs in collaboration with the Viet Nam Union of Friendship organizations.

Thanks to Foreign Minister Nguyen Co Thach and General John Vessey a crucial diplomatic pathway was opened through officially endorsed private humanitarian assistance.  During the decade before normalization of relations, a growing number of US NGOs, veterans groups, educational exchange institutions and businesses built a network of relations with Vietnamese mass organizations and government ministries.  They also pressured and worked with members the US Congress and several Administrations to end the embargo and establish diplomatic relations.

Many US ambassadors have acknowledged that US government credibility with the Vietnamese people was built on the moral foundation of activists who opposed the war and non-governmental organizations and veterans groups that addressed the humanitarian problems of its legacies, including Agent Orange, land mines and unexploded ordnance.

In the thirty years since normal relations, we have seen the flowering of bilateral trade due to economic reforms created by Doi Moi, dramatically expanded educational exchange and creation of a Comprehensive Strategic Partnership.  Both countries are determined that neighboring waters should be a zone of peace, mutual respect and free transit. 

We had begun to believe that the catalytic role of people to people engagement had been supplanted by deep and enduring national ties.  Then we witnessed the Trump Administration’s butchery of USAID and the US Institute of Peace, including war legacy projects in Viet Nam, a block on US embassy participation in 50th anniversary events and threats of punishing irrational tariffs.   I hope and believe this is a short term aberration.  In any case it has illustrated that the role of friendship and mutual support has not ended.

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Prospects of Viet Nam’s Diplomacy in the Role of Mediation and Reconciliation

Remarks by John McAuliff at a conference organized by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Ha Noi, April 23, 2025  

“50 Years of National Reunification: The Peacebuilding Role of Diplomacy from Past to Present”

Let me thank our hosts of MOFA and DAV for inviting me and giving me a task that seems inherently presumptuous, an American offering ideas about mediation and reconciliation to Vietnam, the country that has taught me everything I know about creative diplomacy for almost fifty years.

It began with Do Xuan Oanh of Hoi Viet My who welcomed a delegation of US peace activists to Ha Noi on April 30, 1975.  We arrived at the same moment that US Ambassador Graham Martin was abandoning Saigon.  It continued with Foreign Minister Nguyen Co Thach who taught me that you could not move a country geographically but you could change its political and thus its strategic environment. 

It went on with a series of US ambassadors, beginning with Pete Peterson, who recognized that American credibility with the Vietnamese people was built on the moral foundation of activists who opposed the war, non-governmental organizations and veterans groups that addressed the humanitarian problems of its legacies, including Agent Orange, land mines and unexploded ordnance;  not to mention pioneers from US universities and the American business community.

So here is my two cents worth about where Viet Nam might go in the future to build on the hard won potential of its past.

 1)     Utilize Viet Nam’s unique role where it is trusted by both sides of a conflict to offer the good offices of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the Ministry of Defense and other agencies to assist in the development of mutual understanding and confidence building.    That can be combined with adding in the broad range of people to people relationships and experience created by the Viet Nam Union of Friendship Organizations. I leave to your imagination the applicable countries.

 2)    Offer Viet Nam’s example of undertaking risky internal radical self-transformation to solve grave economic and development problems and liberate creative productive energy of the entire population, consistent with socialist values.  At the same time show the benefit of opening the door without discrimination to all sources of investment and trade.   Note that doi moi preceded and may have encouraged the end of the US embargo of Viet Nam by more than seven years.  Countries with which Viet Nam has special emotional and political closeness can be helped to recognize the hard, uneven but necessary steps to achieve fundamental market reforms.

3)    Consistent with Viet Nam’s principle of non-intervention, it needs to grow its international leadership role beyond participation in UN peace keeping missions to lead incremental humanitarian solutions in conflict zones.  For example Viet Nam could bring countries that abstained in the UN vote against Russian aggression in Ukraine to take responsibility under the UN for the security of all nuclear plants, replacing both sides’ combatants. That would eliminate a grave danger to the people of Ukraine, Russia and the rest of Europe.  Viet Nam could also have helped to create a neutral safety zone that allowed the local population to obtain internal refuge closer to home and family.  Trusted by both sides, these special UN peace keepers could have saved civilian lives and been able to assure exclusion from this territory of transit of foreign weapons supplies or use for Ukrainian military emplacements.

You can say this is an attractive fantasy but who could imagine fifty years ago what we see around us today, here and throughout the country, of booming construction, economic growth and public engagement—or have believed that once bitter enemies could be comprehensive strategic partners determined that neighboring waters should be a zone of peace, mutual respect and free transit.

A half a century ago the Vietnamese people with significant popular support throughout the world, including in the US, overcame what was assumed to be not only an undefeated but undefeatable power that had dominated the world since 1945.  Today we see that the disease of imperial assumptions and ambition does not have one home country or ideology.  Multipolarity ironically leads to more than one power doing terrible things.  I challenge Viet Nam to provide the international leadership that guarantees not only its own well-being but advances hope for the survival and prosperity of our brothers and sisters in too many places to mention.

Let me close as someone who was raised as a Catholic but no longer follows that faith to express the feeling of deep loss from the passing of Pope Francis and hope that his Church will choose a worthy successor. 


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Vietnam can be a trusted mediator on global stage, says American peace activist                                                                                                         Voice of Vietnam  Wednesday, 23/04/2025                                                                                                                                                                                          https://english.vov.vn/en/politics/diplomacy/vietnam-can-be-a-trusted-mediator-on-global-stage-says-american-peace-activist-post1194311.vov

American activists say US should take responsibility for role in Cambodia’s tragic history                                                                                                                                                                                            By Som Sotheary / Khmer Times May 8, 2025

https://www.khmertimeskh.com/501680694/american-activists-say-us-should-take-responsibility-for-role-in-cambodias-tragic-history/


Delegation meeting at the Diplomatic Academy

https://dav.edu.vn/hoc-vien-ngoai-giao-tiep-doan-quy-hoa-giai-va-phat-trien-hoa-ky-tang-cuong-hop-tac-vi-hoa-binh-va-phat-trien/

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Ho Chi Minh City Celebrates the Fall of Saigon                                                                                   By Damien Cave, The New York Times

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/04/30/world/asia/saigon-parade-vietnam-war.html?unlocked_article_code=1.G08.OUTr.1_ANDXXYj7UZ&smid=url-share

Out of War’s Shadow:  Vietnam on the Move t                                                                         By Damien Cave and Tung Ngo, The New York Times

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/04/30/world/asia/vietnam-country-progress-growth.html?unlocked_article_code=1.G08.8zZo.B7Y7L4xCBvck&smid=url-share