APPENDIX 1 – A brief combined account of Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos, Indonesia and the Philippines.

1823  –  Philippines – The “Spanish American War”.  Thousands  of Filipinos die.

1901  – Philippines, Luzon – In one province, 3/4 of  population, 300,000  people  killed  by army  of  General  James  Bell,  and the famine and disease induced by that war.

1903/4  – Philippines, Samar – murderous lout Colonel LWT  Waller slaughters every Filipino over age 10. Subsequently acquitted  in court  martial,  Waller  then moved to  Haiti.   Roosevelt  calls Filipinos  “Chinese  half-breeds”,  “Malay  Bandits”,   “Savages, barbarians,  a  wild and ignorant people”.  Later  awarded  Nobel Peace Prize.

Post  WW2  planning – The Third World defined as “to  fulfil  its major  function as a source of raw materials and a market to  the western industrial societies”

1948  – Vietnam – Ho Chi Minh and the Viet Minh are recognised by the U.S. as  the major  local nationalist interest. People governing in their  own interests  and failing to recognise U.S. entitlement to  Indochinese  resources cannot be tolerated. U.S. must control  the area  for themselves and to give concessions and a sphere of influence  to Japan  to  prevent  them being sucked into a  deal  with  Chinese communism.

1949  –  France has a total of 20,000 nationals fighting  in  the whole of Indochina. The original Viet Cong are not communists but simply the anti-French resistance. The French are  defeated by 1954.

July 1949 – Military historian warns that “the widening political consciousness  and the rise of militant nationalism  amongst  the subject people could not be crushed by force and that  Vietnamese nationalism cannot be reversed”.

1950 – American Army planners estimate 80% of Vietnamese  support Ho Chi Minh and of those, 80% are not communists.

1950s – Diem’s dictatorship and GVN Party, supported by US, lack  popular support. Regime resorts  to  large  scale terror,  eliciting resistance that it could not control from  the  National  Liberation Front who won the battle in the rural  areas by the end of 1965.

1954  – Geneva Conference – this Convention defined use of force as  unacceptable except  in the face of armed attack. U.S. stated in contravention  to this throughout 1950s policy documents that military force  would be  used in the case of local communist subversion  or  rebellion not  constituting armed attack. This was stated in National Security Council  (NSC) memorandum 5429/2, which was subsequently falsified by Pentagon  historians and removed from history.

1954 – U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff conclude “No amount of external pressure and assistance can long delay complete communist victory in South Vietnam without a strong base of popular support.

1954-65  – U.S. intervention aiding the French to re-conquer  its former  colony. 10,000 killed by 1957. 75,000 dead by 1959. North Vietnam  intervene  at this stage. 1/2 million dead by 1965.

1956  –  Height of Kennedy’s anti-communist hysteria  –  “Vietnam represents  the  cornerstone  of the free  world  in  South  East Asia…  red  tide of communism” etc. All this while  the  U.S.’s dictator  Diem enjoyed “inspiring political liberty” courtesy  of the U.S., by slaughtering the locals in a typical Latin American- style terror state.

1958 – Cambodia – Election – Despite massive U.S. efforts to subvert,  9 Pathet Lao (NLHS) victories including Prince  Souphanouvong,  4  “left”, 5 “right”, 3 non-party delegates.  U.S.  didn’t like  result, ultra-right installed in power pending  next  election,  so  crudely rigged that even pro-U.S. observers  were  appalled.

1958  – Indonesia – U.S. attempt to overthrow  President  Sukarno using CIA-trained dissidents and mercenaries in the Philippines.

Early  1960s – Cambodia – U.S. and Kissinger unleash the  equivalent of 5 Hiroshimas.

1961  –  66,000 killed in last 4 years.  Kennedy  escalates  war effort  –  3  helicopter companies, troop  carrier  squadron  (32 planes),  combat aircraft, reconnaissance unit, 6 C-123  aircraft equipped for defoliation.

 June 1962 – U.S. military personnel in Vietnam increased from 841 to 5576.

July 23, 1962 – U.S. Military Conference, Honolulu asserted  that U.S.-trained  Vietnamese  forces should be able to  overcome  the Viet Cong by 1965.

Summer  1962 – Migration of 125-300,000 tribesmen migrating  from “Open  Areas”  where no bombing restrictions are in place.  The Viet Cong find  it  increasingly  easy  to recruit members. U.S. bombing  attempted  to herd  people into strategic hamlets away from the Viet  Cong,  to execute Viet Cong supporters and  to persuade the rest to support the  U.S. while under armed guard, having been driven from  their homes by Napalm bombing. Unsurprisingly, unsuccessful – too  much indiscriminate  bombing  to win anyone over. By the  end  of  the  year, 2048 air attack sorties had been flown.

1962 – Pentagon budget is now $52.1 billion, up from $45.3 billion in 1961.

January 1963 – Kennedy – State of the Union address – “the  spear point of aggression has been blunted in South Vietnam.”

1963  – U.S. covert actions escalate in Cuba, Laos,  Vietnam  and Africa.

April 12, 1963 – Nhu (Diem’s brother) tells Washington Post – South Vietnam  would like  to see half of the 13,000 U.S. troops here leave the  country.

mid 1963 – U.S. Client Regime in the South (Diem and his  brother Nhu)  making peaceful overtures with the North. Backed by  France who  told the Americans from the beginning that they could  never win a war in Vietnam.

November 1, 1963 – U.S. ambassador Lodge assists in coup to overthrow Diem-Nhu regime. Both brothers murdered.

November  6/10th, 1963 – New York Times – “U.S. should  undertake International  negotiations  for the settlement  of  the  Vietnam problem”. Editor informed on the 13th that “it would be folly” to do  so and that the Newspaper should counter further  efforts  to “peddle” this sort of stuff through the Media.  US deplore diplomacy throughout due to the total lack of local political support for them. Both Kennedy and Johnson administrations knew that “the Generals are all we have got”. Military strength and world  media  manipulation combined can overcome (temporarily) the blatant fact that  no-one  in Vietnam wanted the Americans to sort  out  their affairs for them.

November 1963 – U.S.A – Kennedy assassinated. Lyndon Johnson  assumes presidency.

January, 1964 – Discovery that falsely optimistic information fed to U.S. military by the Vietnamese undermines hopes for quick war victory.  U.S.  Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS) recommend  action  on Laos and support of the Government in aerial bombing of  critical targets  in North Vietnam and mining the sea approaches  to  that country. Also commit greater troop numbers in action in the South and the North.

1964  –  French  foreign minister Couve de  Murville.  The  South Vietnamese are out of the game – all that exists is a professional army supported by the Americans.

August 2, 1964 – Tonkin Gulf – U.S. Destroyer “Maddox”  attacked. CIA Director McCone informs NSC “the North Vietnamese are  reacting  defensively to our attacks on their offshore  islands”.  But the attack was advertised as “unprovoked” allowing  later use for it as justification for escalation.

Early 1965 – The U.S. ground invasion of South Vietnam, intervening to prevent political settlement between South and North.  The US  break the following international laws – UN  Charter,  Geneva Accords  1954,  the  Nuremburg Code, the  Hague  Convention,  the Geneva Protocol 1955, the Paris Agreements 1973.

February  19,  1965 – Laos – first raid  against  the  population centre. 

March  1965 – U.S. take up the war directly and expand  to  full-scale attack. Bombing in the South vastly intensifies. Bombing of the  North  starts and begins to spread  around  Indochina.  U.S. combat  forces  start to arrive. Enclave  strategy  –  restricted domain  with upper limit of 100,000 troops – rejected.  “To  make progress  in this country it is necessary to level  everything… to reduce the inhabitants to zero, to eliminate their traditional  culture, for it blocks everything” (American diplomat to Le Monde newspaper). Other witnesses make it clear that “Americans are not interested  in hunting communists, they’re interested in  hunting Asians”.  Or “they’re not fighting freedom, they’re fighting  the birth rate”.

April 1965 – 89,000 killed in last four years.

1965  –  U.S.A – Black sections call for the fight for  a  better life at home for ALL Americans rather than fighting a war out  in South  East  Asia. Frustration turned to violence,  the  National Guard  called  in to assist Police. In Watts, a district of Los Angeles, 36 people  die  in riots.

October  1965  –  Indonesia – A CIA  coup  murders  anti-American Generals and is blamed on the communists. There is a flaw in the accusation – it appeared that the pro-American Generals  including Suharto were the ones to survive this coup. A second coup (to overthrow  the communists) places Suharto at the head of  a  new, anti-communist Government who slaughter several hundred  thousand peasants and secure Indonesia’s riches for foreign  corporations. Events  described by the New York Times as “a gleam of  light  in South  East  Asia” with “spectacular  investment  opportunities”. Acknowledged  retrospectively  that  with  the  U.S.  controlling Indonesia and the Philippines that the continuation of the war in Vietnam was unnecessary. 10 years on from Kennedy’s pronouncement, apparently Vietnam is no longer worthy of the status of the “cornerstone of the free world”.

1965 –  the Space budget is now $5 billion up from $400m in 1962. By  the end of Kennedy over 78% of all Research and Development in the US is now funded by the  federal government out of taxes.

May  1966  – Marine Commandant and ex-Kennedy  favourite  General Shoup  “I believe that if we had and would keep our dirty  bloody dollar-crooked  fingers out of the business of these  nations  so full of depressed, exploited people they would arrive at a  solution of their own. That they design and want. That they fight and work  for  (not one) crammed down their  throats  by  Americans”.

Another 60,000 dead in the last year.  

1966 – U.S. Government study of Viet Cong defectors and prisoners showed few of them considered themselves to be communists or could  give a definition of communism.

Are we arriving at this point at a new definition of Communist? A person who doesn’t believe in the intrusion of foreign Governments in to their lives. An anti-Imperialist need not be a Communist – they just want foreign troops and interests to stop stealing from them.

Summer  1967  –  Detroit, Newark and dozens of  others cities in the  U.S.A  – further riots, deaths and Urban War Zones. By this stage 500,000 Americans  were fighting in Vietnam. 10,000 Americans and 50,000 Vietnamese were dead. War costs standing at around $3 billion/month.

January  1968  – The Tet offensive is launched by the Viet Cong. US statements that 200,000 more US troops will be required leads to a dramatic decline in support for the war. Propaganda  reconstruction  starts  – U.S.A drop “No withdrawal  without  victory” line and start backtracking and rewriting history.

March  17th and 19th, 1968 – Laos – Phosphorus  bombing.  65  villages destroyed in the last 3 years. Heaviest bombing in history (until Cambodia  a  few  years later). “The most  appalling  episode  of lawless cruelty in American history.”

1969  – Troop numbers – 50,000 Korean mercenaries, 20,000  others and 500,000 U.S. troops.

1969  –  Withdrawal of some U.S. troops  co-ordinated  with  most devastating and ferocious campaign of mass murder yet  undertaken by  the expeditionary U.S. Force. Also escalation of war  against civilians  in  Laos and Cambodia. 12,000 air raids per  month  on Laos.

1969-75  – Cambodia – U.S. bombing started 1970 reached  peak  in 1973,  ended in 1975. Directed against inner Cambodia. It  killed about 600,000 people over that 5 year period and estimated that 1 million  would  die  subsequently of hunger and  disease  in  the wreckage. World’s press silent. Bombings thought to have built up peasant support for the Khmer Rouge. But grants from World Health Organisation  help  Cambodia to beat  Malaria  and  Tuberculosis, until…

1971  –  By the end of this year, 3.9 million tons of  bombs  had been  dropped  on  South Vietnam from the  air  alone,  excluding ground ordnance. This is double the amount used by the US in  all theatres since World War 2.

1972 – Nixon’s Christmas bombing of Hanoi.

1973  – U.S. forced to sign treaty. Washington declares  that  it will  subvert  it  in every crucial respect. And  after  all  the fighting  against  the  North Vietnamese, what’s  so  wrong  with communism?  Rand  corporation foreign affairs  specialist  Konrad Kellen concluded … “The Hanoi regime is perhaps one of the most genuinely popular in the world today. The 20 million North  Vietnamese,  most of whom live in their  agricultural  co-operatives, like  it  there and find the system just and the labour  they  do rewarding.”

1974 – East Timor, Southern Indonesia – Portuguese colonial occupation ends. Attempted  coup  by  Indonesian elements beaten by bloody  civil  war.  3,000 dead. 90% of Indonesian military equipment bought from U.S.

December  7, 1975 – East Timor – U.S. President Gerald  Ford  and Foreign  Secretary Henry Kissinger visit the Indonesian  military junta  in Djakarta for civic reception. Hours later, the  Indonesian invasion of East Timor begins. 200,000 dead by 1979. Senator Daniel  Moynihan blocks UN action on Timor. He says… “The  U.S. Department   of   State  desire  that  the   UN   prove   utterly ineffective  …this  task was given to me.” Ford  and  Kissinger knew that the invasion was imminent. Australia had already  withdrawn its nationals from the territory. Kissinger tells the Press in Djakarta that the US do not recognise East Timor and that “the United States understands Indonesia’s position on the question.”

1975  – Cambodia – Pol Pot comes to power and takes over  atrocities from the U.S.. Immediately condemned as genocidal only a few weeks later by the World’s press. The Khmer Rouge boast that they have killed 2 million people. This is picked up by world  media and supporting photos convince the public of the sheer  barbarity of them – the official enemy. Pol Pot’s destruction of hospitals, murder  of  doctors etc means that twenty years later, 1/4 of  the  population again suffer from malaria and TB, mostly children.

1975  –  Vietnam War ends. 3 million dead in the last  10  years. Another million in Cambodia and Laos. 10 million refugees. If the U.S.  can’t  have the resources, they can stop  the  locals  from having  them and supplying the “threat of a good example” to  the embarrassment   and   exposure   of   the   Western   model    of “Civilisation”.

The U.S.,  after their defeat in Vietnam, impose a trade embargo. Aid  from the World Bank, Europe and Japan is also  blocked.  UNICEF are denied  permission  to hand milk and food aid to  Vietnam.  India is threatened  with  U.S. action for trying to  send  100  buffaloes (used as tractors). Mennonite Group in U.S. threatened for trying to send pencils, and shovels to dig up the unexploded bombs. 

Imposed  starvation  as a result of the  U.S.-orchestrated  world Trade embargo forces the “Boat People” to leave the country. U.S. proclaim this as the barbarian savagery of the Vietnamese leadership. 

The Vietnamese are portrayed  as merciless savages who  have  failed  to apologise for atrocities against the U.S.A. Note that the U.S. also  used the same  ploy  against  Native Americans, trying to  portray  the victim as the blood-thirsty aggressor. But the “Vietnam Syndrome” of  ongoing protest means that civil rule at home is becoming increasingly  difficult. Planners talk of the “Crisis of Democracy”.

1977  – US Congressional Hearings. Chairman Donald  Fraser,  concerning  the Indonesian invasion of East Timor… “To  write  off the  rights  of 600,000 people because we are  friends  with  the country  that  forcibly annexed them does real  violence  to  any  profession of adherence to human rights or principle”.

April  17, 1978 – Cambodia – First day of Year Zero. Khmer  Rouge enter  Phnom Penh and march the entire population into the  countryside, telling them that the city was about to be bombed by the U.S..  Pol Pot and his Paris intellectuals are  anti-peasant  and anti-Vietnamese  –  border war starts  with  Vietnam.  Vietnamese invade  to oust Pol Pot who is threatening Vietnam as  well.  Pol Pot falls. Hun Sen comes to power, installed by the Vietnamese.

1980 – Cambodia – CIA deny Pol Pot carried out any executions  in the last two years, although there were 1/2 million of them.

 1982  – Cambodia – Britain vote for Pol Pot’s defunct  regime  to occupy the Cambodian seat at the UN.

1985  – Cambodia – Vietnam, who invaded to oust the  Khmer  Rouge causing  trouble on the Vietnamese border, ask as only  condition for  withdrawal that the Khmer Rouge be prevented from  returning to  power. Welcomed by several Indo-Chinese Governments  but  rejected by the U.S..

1986 – Cambodia – Pol Pot has received $85 million in the last  6 years.  Arms reach Pol Pot from U.S., German and Swedish  suppliers, passed on by Singapore or made by their own Chartered Industries  under license. These weapons have been captured from  the Khmer  Rouge. U.S. and British SAS in Malaysia  train  guerrillas allied  to Pol Pot. In the UK, Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher agrees that the British will take  on  training alone after U.S. Irangate scandal to avoid further damage to U.S. reputation.

1988 – Cambodia – Oxfam publish “Punishing the Poor: the International  Isolation  of Kampuchea” by Eva Mysliwiec.  Censured  for material on Kampuchea 3 years later by Charity Commission threatening to remove charitable status.

1989 – Cambodia – Vietnamese forces withdraw. Western support for the  Khmer Rouge increases. Alliance between Hun Sen  and  Prince Sihanouk “torpedoed” by the U.S. State Department.

1990  –  Vietnam Syndrome – Retrospective survey on  the  Vietnam war.  71% regarded the war not as a “mistake” but  “fundamentally wrong and immoral”. Compare this figure to 45% among decision makers, including  the clergy). 

1990 – Cambodia – a former member of U.S. special forces  discloses that  he had been ordered to destroy records that showed U.S. munitions in Thailand ending up with the Khmer Rouge. The records implicated the National Security Council.

1990  –  Thailand  reformists offer secret help  and  a  regional conference  excluding the Western Powers to deal with  the  Khmer Rouge.  U.S.  threatens to withdraw Thailand’s  trade  privileges under  the  “Generalised Special Preferences”.  The conference  never took place.

June 25, 1991 – Cambodia – British Government admits that SAS has been secretly training the allies of Pol Pot since 1983.

1991 – Vietnam – U.S. again blocks European and Japanese  efforts to end 16-year economic embargo imposed by U.S..

Khieu Samphan, the public front of Pol Pot, visits Phnom Penh  in secrecy guarded in the UN security compound.

1995 – U.S. President Bill Clinton renews relations with Vietnam. Analysts  have suggested that there is more money to be  made  in investing  in  Vietnam (Oil) than in China and so  the  issue  of missing  American  POWs  that justified the  long  Trade  Embargo slowly  slips  off  the agenda as U.S.  corporations  fear  being beaten to the investment opportunity by Japan and Europe. And Vietnam throughout the 1980s had been receiving $3 billion per year in economic and military aid from Russia.

As with Burma, so with Vietnam. American Presidents have to compete with influence from Russia, China and other upcoming economies including India,  and so have increasingly courted Vietnam as the now unified country sets course to being one of the economic powerhouses of the 21st century.

The Communist Party in Vietnam have softened their approach to the idea that the State must own everything and now allow private capital.

The Vietnamese would be well advised to observe the US’s “Track1” style of encroachment that I have  discussed with reference to Chile and which has been used extensively elsewhere – the encouragement of Vietnam to hold “free and fair” elections… at which point a heavily funded pro-American candidate favourable to the interests of American business will blitz the American-funded Vietnamese airwaves to woo the voters with all kinds of promises and finally return control over Vietnamese resources once more to a Leader that serves the needs of American capital.

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