‘We are not judges. We are witnesses. Our task is to make mankind
bear witness to these terrible crimes and to unite humanity on the
side of justice in Vietnam.’
With these words, Bertrand Russell opened the second session
of the International War Crimes Tribunal, in November 1967. The
American people were given no opportunity, at that time, to bear
witness to the terrible crimes recorded in the proceedings of the
Tribunal. As Russell writes in the introduction to the first edition,
‘... it is in the nature of imperialism that citizens of the imperial
power are always among the last to know - or care - about
circumstances in the colonies’. The evidence brought before the
Tribunal was suppressed by the self-censorship of the mass media, and
its proceedings, when they appeared in print, were barely reviewed.
Russell wrote that ‘it is in the United States that this book can
have its most profound effect’. He expressed his faith in the
essential decency of the American people, his faith that the ordinary
man is not a gangster by nature, and will react in a civilized way
when he is given the facts. We have yet to show that this faith is
justified. Russell hoped to ‘arouse consciousness in order to create
mass resistance ... in the smug streets of Europe and the complacent
cities of North America’. By now, there are few who can honestly claim
to be unaware of the character of the American war in Vietnam. There
are few, for example, who can now claim ignorance of the ‘new Oradours
and Lidices’ described, in testimony to the Tribunal, by a West German
physician who spent six years in Vietnam (see p.306). But
consciousness has yet to create mass resistance. The streets of Europe
and the cities of North America remain smug and complacent - with the
{9} significant and honourable exception of the student youth. The
record of the Tribunal stands as an eloquent and dramatic appeal to
renounce the crime of silence. The crime was compounded by the silence
that greeted its detailed documentation and careful studies. However,
although no honest effort was made to deal with the factual record
made public in the proceedings of the Tribunal, its work did receive
some oblique response. The Pentagon was forced to admit that it was,
indeed, using anti-personnel weapons in its attack against North
Vietnam (though it could not resist the final lie that the targets
were radar stations and anti-aircraft batteries). The hypocritical
claim that the American bombing policy was one of magnificent
restraint, that its targets were ‘steel and concrete’, was finally
exploded beyond repair. A State Department functionary who had become
an object of general contempt for his unending deceit regarding
Vietnam demeaned himself still further by informing journalists that
he had no intention of ‘playing games with a 94-year-old Briton’,
referring to one of the truly great men of the twentieth century.
Those who were prepared to go beyond the mass media for information
could learn something about the work of the Tribunal from such
journals as Liberation, as could readers of the foreign press,
in particular, Le Monde. The Tribunal Proceedings, along with
the documentary study, In the Name of America, which appeared
in the same year, and the honest and courageous work of many fine war
correspondents, helped to crumble the defences erected by the
government, with the partial collusion of the media, to keep the
reality of the war from popular consciousness.
Though not reported honestly, the Tribunal was sharply
criticized. Many of the criticisms are answered, effectively I
believe, in Part 1 of this book. There are two criticisms that retain
a certain validity, however. The participants, the ‘jurors’ and the
witnesses, were undoubtedly biased. They made no attempt, in fact, to
conceal this bias, this profound hatred of murder and wanton
destruction carried out by a brutal foreign invader with unmatched
technological resources.
A second and less frivolous criticism that might be
raised is that the indictment is, in a sense, superfluous and
redundant. This is a matter that deserves more serious attention.
The Pentagon will gladly supply, on request, such information
{10} as the quantity of ordnance expended in Indochina. From 1965
through 1969 this amounts to about four and a half million tons by
aerial bombardment. This is nine times the tonnage of bombing in the
entire Pacific theatre in the Second World War, including Hiroshima
and Nagasaki - ‘over 70 tons of bombs for every square mile of
Vietnam, North and South ... about 500 pounds of bombs for every man,
woman and child in Vietnam’.1 The total of
‘ordnance expended’ is more than doubled when ground and naval attack
are taken into account. With no further information than this, a
person who has not lost his senses must realize that the war is an
overwhelming atrocity.
A few weeks before the Tribunal began its second session,
forty-nine volunteers of International Voluntary Services wrote a
letter to President Johnson describing the war as ‘an overwhelming
atrocity’. Four of the staff leaders resigned. These volunteers had
worked for many years in Vietnam. They were among the few Americans
who had some human contact with the people of Vietnam. Their
activities, and even the letter of protest, indicate their belief -
surprisingly uncritical - in the legitimacy of the American effort in
Vietnam.2 In this letter they refer to ‘the free
strike zones, the refugees, the spraying of herbicide on crops, the
napalm . .. the deserted villages, the sterile valleys, the forests
with the huge swaths cut out, and the long-abandoned rice checks’.
They speak of the refugees ‘forcibly resettled, landless, in isolated
desolate places which are turned into colonies of mendicants’; of ‘the
Saigon slums, secure but ridden with disease and the compulsion
towards crime’; of ‘refugees generated not by Viet Cong
terrorism, but by a policy, an American policy’ - a process described
by cynical American scholars as ‘urbanization’ or ‘modernization’.
So effective is urbanization in Vietnam that Saigon is now
estimated to have a population density more than twice that of {11}
Tokyo. Experts in pacification (‘peace researchers’, to use the
preferred term) assure us that ‘the only sense in which [we have
demolished the society of Vietnam] is the sense in which every
modernizing country abandons reactionary traditionalism’.3
The methods of ‘urbanization’ are described, for example, by Orville
and Jonathan Schell:
We both spent several weeks in Quang Ngai some six months before
the [Song My] incident. We flew daily with the FACS (Forward Air
Control). What we saw was a province utterly destroyed. In August
1967, during Operation Benton, the ‘pacification’ camps became so
full that Army units were ordered not to ‘generate’ any more
refugees. The Army complied. But search-and-destroy operations
continued.
Only now peasants were not warned before an airstrike was
called in on their villages because there was no room for them in
the swamped pacification camps. The usual warning by helicopter
loudspeaker or air-dropped leaflets were stopped. Every civilian on
the ground was assumed to be enemy by the pilots by nature of living
in Quang Ngai, which was largely a free-fire zone.
Pilots, servicemen not unlike Calley and Mitchell, continued to
carry out their orders. Village after village was destroyed from the
air as a matter of de facto policy. Airstrikes on civilians
became a matter of routine. It was under these circumstances of
official acquiescence to the destruction of the countryside and its
people that the massacre of Song My occurred.
Such atrocities were and are the logical consequences of a war
directed against an enemy indistinguishable from the people.4
Elsewhere, Orville Schell quotes a Newsweek
correspondent returning from Quang Ngai: ‘Having had experience in
Europe during World War II, he said what he had seen was “much worse
than what the Nazis had done to Europe”.’ Schell adds: ‘Had he written
about it in these terms? No.’5 Vietnamese-speaking
field workers of the American Friends Service Committee describe more
recent stages of modernization, as seen from the ground: {12}
In one such removal, during Operation Bold Mariner in January
1969, 12,000 peasants from the Batangan Peninsula were taken to a
waterless camp near Quang Ngai over whose guarded gate floated a
banner saying, ‘We thank you for liberating us from communist
terror.’ These people had been given an hour to get out before the
USS New Jersey began to shell their homes. After eight weeks
of imprisonment they were ferried back to what was left of their
villages, given a few sheets of corrugated metal and told to fend
for themselves. When asked what they would live on until new crops
could be raised, the Vietnamese camp commander said, ‘Maybe they can
fish.’6
Reports by Western observers are limited to areas more or less
under American control. The most intensive attacks are therefore
unreported in the West. We do, however, have Vietnamese reports, which
will, perhaps, be given somewhat greater credence than heretofore now
that the incident at Song My, which they described with accuracy at
the time, has finally been made public. To select one such report
virtually at random:
In Trang Bang on the evening of October 24 [1969], three flights
of B52s made three sorties, killing 47 people, wounding many others
(mostly children, and old folks), completely levelling 450 houses
and devastating 650 hectares of fields. On the night of October 25,
B52s flew nine attacks in Quang Tri and Quang Nam provinces, dumping
more than 1,000 tons of bombs, killing 300 people, wounding 236
others, setting afire 564 houses and damaging hundreds of hectares
of fields and orchards. In Pleiku, a fertile region, many flights of
B52s came in on the morning of October 17 and released 700 tons of
bombs which wrought havoc in hundreds of hectares of
fields and orchards ...
In the area of Nui Ba and the villages of Ninh Thanh, Hiep Ninh
Thanh, Hiep Ninh of the Tay Ninh Cao Dai persuasion, the US puppets
resorted to toxic chemicals to destroy the crops and kill civilians.
American hovercraft dumped tens of thousands of CS cans while
helicopters dropped hundreds of thousands of toxic bombs on the
villages. Moreover, enemy guns and mortars fired more than 5,000 gas
shells affecting over 1,000 people, with 13 children under 13 killed
(Ninh Thanh and Hiep Ninh villages) and more than 100 hectares of
crops completely destroyed.7
{13} And on and on, without end.
The facts are, of course, familiar in a general way to the
highest authorities in the United States. The Under Secretary of the
Air Force, Townsend Hoopes, wrote a memorandum in March
1968 in which he pointed out that:
...ARVN and US forces in the towns and cities are now responding
to mortar fire from nearby villages by the liberal use of artillery
and air strikes. This response is causing widespread destruction and
heavy civilian casualties - among people who were considered only a
few weeks ago to be secure elements of the GVN constituency. ... The
present mode and tempo of operations in SVN is already destroying
cities, villages and crops, and is creating civilian
casualties at an increasing rate.8
He describes the savage American reaction to the conquest of
many cities by the NLF in the Tet offensive in January 1968 - for
example, in Saigon, where in an effort to dislodge the 1,000 soldiers
who had taken the city, ‘artillery and air strikes were repeatedly
used against densely populated areas of the city, causing heavy
civilian casualties’; or in Hue, where the American reoccupation left
‘a devastated and prostrate city’. ‘Eighty per cent of the buildings
had been reduced to rubble, and in the smashed ruins lay 2,000 dead
civilians.9 ... Three quarters of the city’s {14}
people were rendered homeless and looting was widespread, members of
the ARVN being the worst offenders’. Elsewhere, the story was much the
same:
Everywhere, the US-ARVN forces mounted counterattacks of great
severity. In the delta region below Saigon, half of the city of
Mytho, with a population of 70,000, was destroyed by artillery and
air strikes in an effort to eject a strong VC force. In Ben Tre on 7
February, at least 1,000 civilians were killed and 1,500 wounded in
an effort to dislodge 2,500 VC.
According to Hoopes, the combat photographer David Douglas
Duncan, whose war experience covers the Second World War, Korea,
Algeria and the French war in Vietnam, ‘was appalled by the US-ARVN
method of freeing Hue’. He quotes him as saying:
The Americans pounded the Citadel and surrounding city almost to
dust with air strikes, napalm runs, artillery and naval gunfire, and
the direct cannon fire from tanks and recoilless rifles a total
effort to root out and kill every enemy soldier. The mind reels at
the carnage, cost, and ruthlessness of it all.
Hoopes also reports that a ‘sizable part’ of the PAVN force of
1,000 escaped. Compare the figures on casualties, cited above.
These events occurred too late to be considered by the Tribunal.
I need not elaborate on what has been revealed since. Some indications
are given in my book, After Pinkville. For far more, see the
book by Edward Herman, cited in footnote 1 on p. 11.
I have mentioned all of this in connexion with the question,
raised earlier, as to whether it is necessary, today, to publicize the
detailed reports of the Tribunal. Is it not true that by now the
monstrous character of the war has penetrated the American
consciousness so fully that further documentation is superfluous?
Unfortunately, the answer must be negative. To see why, consider again
the case of Townsend Hoopes, who is now a leading ‘dove’. {15}
A reviewer of his book in the New York Times describes it
as the most persuasive presentation of the case for American
withdrawal from Vietnam. It is instructive to compare his position
with that of the ‘hawks’ on the one hand, and that of the Tribunal, on
the other. Such a comparison shows how narrow is the gap between the
‘hawks’ and the ‘doves’, and how far removed the dove-hawk position
still remains from the consciousness that Russell hoped would be
aroused by the factual record and historical and legal argument of the
Tribunal. I want to stress that Hoopes’s is one of the most humane and
enlightened voices to be heard within the mainstream of American
opinion today, surely among those who have had any significant role in
the formation and implementation of policy. For this reason, his views
are important and deserve careful consideration.
America’s early strategy, as Hoopes describes it, was to kill as
many VC as possible with artillery and air strikes:
As late as the fall of 1966... a certain aura of optimism
surrounded this strategy. Some were ready to believe that, in its
unprecedented mobility and massive firepower, American forces had
discovered the military answer to endless Asian manpower and
Oriental indifference to death. For a few weeks there hung in the
expectant Washington air the exhilarating possibility that the most
modern, mobile, professional American field force in the nation’s
history was going to lay to rest the time-honoured superstition, the
gnawing unease of military planners, that a major land war against
Asian hordes is by definition a disastrous plunge into quicksand for
any Western army.
But this glorious hope was dashed. The endless manpower of
Vietnam, the Asian hordes with their Oriental indifference to death,
confounded our strategy. And our bombing of North Vietnam also availed
us little, given the nature of the enemy. As Hoopes explains, quoting
a senior US Army officer: ‘Caucasians cannot really imagine what ant
labour can do.’ In short, our strategy was rational, but it
presupposed civilized Western values:
We believe the enemy can be forced to be ‘reasonable’, i.e. to
compromise or even capitulate, because we assume he wants to avoid
pain, death, and material destruction. We assume that
if these are inflicted on him with increasing severity, then at some
point in the process he will want to stop the suffering. Ours is a
plausible strategy - for those who are rich, who love life and fear
pain. But happiness, wealth, and {16} power are expectations that
constitute a dimension far beyond the experience, and probably
beyond the emotional comprehension, of the Asian poor.
Hoopes does not tell us how he knows that the Asian poor do
not love life or fear pain, or that happiness is probably beyond their
emotional comprehension.10 But he does go on to
explain how ‘ideologues in Asia’ make use of these characteristics of
the Asian hordes. Their strategy is to convert ‘Asia’s capacity for
endurance in suffering into an instrument for exploiting a basic
vulnerability of the Christian West’. They do this by inviting the
West ‘to carry its strategic logic to the final conclusion, which is
genocide’. The Asians thus ‘defy us by a readiness to struggle,
suffer, and die on a scale that seems to us beyond the bounds of
humanity.... At that point we hesitate, for, remembering Hitler and
Hiroshima and Nagasaki, we realize anew that genocide is a terrible
burden to bear.’
Thus by their willingness to die, the Asian hordes, who do not
love life, who fear no pain and cannot conceive of happiness, exploit
our basic weakness, our Christian values which make us reluctant to
bear the burden of genocide, the final conclusion of our strategic
logic. Is it really possible that one can read these passages without
being stunned by the crudity and callousness?
Let us continue. Seeing that our strategy, though plausible, has
failed, the Air Force Staff worked out several alternative strategies,
which they presented to the new Secretary of Defense, Clark Clifford,
in March 1968. The Air Staff preferred the following:
an intensified bombing campaign in the North, including
attacks on the dock area of Haiphong, on railroad
equipment within the Chinese Buffer Zone, and on the dike system
that controlled irrigation for NVN agriculture.
But Hoopes and Air Force Secretary Harold Brown demurred. Why?
They felt ‘there was little assurance such a campaign could either
force NVN to the conference table, or even significantly reduce its
war effort’; furthermore, ‘it was a course embodying {17} excessive
risks of confrontation with Russia’. If they had any other objections
to intensified bombing of the dike system of NVN, Hoopes does not
inform us of them.11 Hoopes himself preferred,
rather, the following tactics:
a campaign designed to substitute tactical airpower for a large
portion of the search-and-destroy operations currently conducted by
ground forces, thus permitting the ground troops to concentrate on a
perimeter defence of the heavily populated areas ... the analysis
seemed to show that tactical air-power could provide a potent ‘left
jab’ to keep the enemy in the South off balance while the US-ARVN
ground forces adopted a modified enclaves strategy, featuring enough
aggressive reconnaissance to identify and break up developing
attacks, but designed primarily to protect the people of Vietnam
and, by population control measures, to force exposure of the VC
political cadres.12
In a letter of 12 February 1968 to Clark Clifford, Hoopes
explains his preferences in similar terms. We should, he urges, stop
the militarily insignificant bombing of North Vietnam and undertake a
less ambitious ground strategy in the South, trying merely to control
(the technical term is ‘protect’) the populated areas. This policy:
would give us a better chance to develop a definable geographical
{18} area of South Vietnamese political and economic stability; and
by reducing the intensity of the war tempo, it could materially
improve the prospect of our staying the course for an added number
of grinding years without rending our own society... [my italics].
Compare these recommendations with the tactics now being
followed by the Nixon administration. Secretary of the Army Resor,
testifying before the House Appropriations Committee,13
refused to predict how long the war would last, but he sees time as
‘running on our side’:
Therefore, if we can just buy some time in the US by these
periodic progressive withdrawals and the American people can just
shore up their patience and determination, I think we can bring this
to a successful conclusion.
To this remark General Westmoreland added: ‘I have never made
the prediction that this would be other than a long war.’
Thus the present Secretary of the Army agrees with the Hoopes
letter of February 1968, that we may be able to stay the course for
‘an added number of grinding years’ if the American people will
consent, if this policy will not rend our own society. And with this
judgement, finally, Mr Hoopes disagrees:
Vietnam is not of course the only source of division in America
today, but it is the most pervasive issue of our discord, the
catalytic agent that stimulates and magnifies all other divisive
issues. In particular, there can be no real truce between the
generations - no end to the bitterness and alienation of even the
large majority of our youth that is neither revolutionary nor
irresponsible - until Vietnam is terminated.
This is the primary reason why, he urges, we must withdraw
from Vietnam.
So the hawks and the doves divide: can the American people stay
the course until victory, or will the polarization and discord in
American society make this effort inadvisable, not in our national
interest?
I do not want to suggest that the spectrum from Hoopes to Resor
exhausts the contemporary debate over Vietnam, but there is little
doubt that it represents the range of views and {19} assumptions
expressed within the mainstream of ‘responsible’ American opinion.
With this observation, we can return to the Tribunal. Its assumptions,
of course, fall entirely outside of this spectrum. It is unfortunate,
but undeniable, that the central issue in the American debate over
Vietnam, in respectable circles, has been the question: can we win at
an acceptable cost? The doves and the hawks disagree. Hawks become
doves as their assessment of the probabilities and costs shifts, and
if the American conquest were to prove successful, they would, no
doubt, resume their former militancy. The Tribunal is concerned with
very different questions. It does not ask whether the US can
win at an acceptable cost, but rather whether it should win,
whether it should be involved at all in the internal affairs of the
Vietnamese, whether it has any right to try to settle or even
influence these internal matters by force. Until this becomes the
unique and overriding issue, within the United States, the debate over
Vietnam will not even have begun.
Inevitably, despite disclaimers, the Russell Tribunal will evoke
memories of Nuremberg and Tokyo. With the revelation of the Song My
atrocities, the issues raised in the War Crimes trials have become,
at last, a matter of public concern. We can hardly
suppress the memory of our initiative at Nuremberg and Tokyo, or the
explicit insistence of the US prosecutor, Robert Jackson, that the
principles of Nuremberg are to be regarded as universal in their
applicability. After the trials, he wrote:
If certain acts and violations of treaties are crimes, they are
crimes whether the United States does them or whether Germany does
them. We are not prepared to lay down a rule of criminal conduct
against others which we would not be willing to have invoked against
us.14
It might be argued that the verdict of Nuremberg
and Tokyo was merely the judgement of victors, who sought vengeance
and retribution rather than justice. I think there is merit in this
accusation, but - right or wrong - it does not affect the broader
question of the legitimacy of the principles that were recognized in
the Charter of the War Crimes Tribunals. Legal niceties aside, the
citizen is justified in taking these principles as his guide. {20}
A classic liberal doctrine holds that:
‘Generally speaking, it is the drawn sword of the nation which checks
the physical power of its rulers.’15 It is the
fundamental duty of the citizen to resist and to restrain the violence
of the state. Those who choose to disregard this responsibility can
justly be accused of complicity in war crimes, which is itself
designated as ‘a crime under international law’ in the principles of
the Charter of Nuremberg. This is, in essence, the challenge posed to
us by the Russell Tribunal.
Richard A. Falk has written about this matter in an important
recent article.16 He points out that ‘Song My stands
out as a landmark atrocity in the history of warfare, and its
occurrence is a moral challenge to the entire American society’.
Nevertheless, it would ‘be misleading to isolate the awful happenings
at Song My from the overall conduct of the war’. Among the war
policies that might, he argues, be found illegal, are these: ‘(1) the
Phoenix Programme; (2) aerial and naval bombardment of undefended
villages; (3) destruction of crops and forests; (4)
“search-and-destroy” missions; (5) “harassment and interdiction” fire;
(6) forcible removal of civilian population; (7) reliance on a variety
of weapons prohibited by treaty.’ That these policies have been
followed, on a massive scale, is not in question. Falk argues that:
‘if found to be “illegal”, such policies should be discontinued
forthwith and those responsible for the policy and its execution
should be prosecuted as war criminals by appropriate tribunals’. He
also notes how broad was the conception of criminal responsibility
developed, under American initiative, in the War Crimes Trials. In
Falk’s paraphrase, the majority judgement of the Tokyo Tribunal held
as follows:
A leader must take affirmative acts to prevent war crimes or
dissociate himself from the government. If he fails to do one or the
other, then by the very act of remaining in a government or a state
guilty of war crimes, he becomes a war criminal.
And Falk emphasizes the obligation of resistance for the
citizen, if {21} the evidence is strong that the state is engaged in
criminal acts.
It is correct, but irrelevant, to stress the vast differences in
the political processes of America and the fascist states. It is
correct, but hardly relevant, to point out that the United States has
stopped short of carrying ‘its strategic logic to the final
conclusion, which is genocide’ (Hoopes). Thus one cannot compare
American policy to that of Nazi Germany, as of 1942. It would be more
difficult to argue that American policy is not comparable to that of
fascist Japan, or of Germany prior to the ‘final solution’. There may
be those who are prepared to tolerate any policy less ghastly than
crematoria and death camps and to reserve their horror for the
particular forms of criminal insanity perfected by the Nazi
technicians. Others will not lightly disregard comparisons which,
though harsh, may well be accurate.
Nazi Germany was sui generis, of that there
is no doubt. But we should have the courage and honesty to face the
question whether the principles applied to Nazi Germany and fascist
Japan do not, as well, apply to the American war in Vietnam. Recall
the objectives of ‘denazification’, as formulated by those who were
responsible for this policy. General Lucius D. Clay, in 1950,
described the primary objective as follows: ‘to safeguard the new
German democracy from Nazi influence and to make it possible for
anti-Nazi, non-Nazi and outspoken democratic individuals to enter
public life and replace the Nazi elements which had dominated all life
in Germany from 1933 to 1945’.17 He reports
that:
This was, perhaps, the most extensive legal procedure the world
had ever witnessed. In the US Zone alone more than 13
million persons had been involved, of whom over three and two-thirds
million were found chargeable, and of these some 800,000 persons
were made subject to penalty for their party affiliations or
actions. All this was, of course, apart from the punishment of war
criminals many of whom were high-ranking Nazis.
Field-Marshal Sir Bernard Montgomery saw the objective of the
allied forces in Germany as ‘to change the heart, and the way of life,
of the German people’. Denazification involved a cultural and
ideological change, to proceed side-by-side with economic
reconstruction.18 {22} We can certainly ask
whether three and two-thirds million Germans in the US Zone were more
guilty of complicity in war crimes than any Americans. And we can ask
whether a cultural and ideological change in the United States, at the
very least, is not imperative if many others, who fear neither pain
nor death, are not to be spared the fate of Vietnam.
Some of these questions arise in a revealing exchange between
Townsend Hoopes and two young journalists who published an interview
with him in the Village Voice (see note 14 above). Hoopes
insisted that:
War crimes tribunals would be the worst thing that could
happen in this country. That would amount to
McCarthyism. You’re proposing a system of legal guilt for top
elected officials. The traditional way to deal with these top
officials is to throw the rascals out.
In an article in which he comments on ‘the curious piece of
reporting’ of Coburn and Cowan, Hoopes explains further that ‘a
democratic and an entirely elective form of retribution’ has already
been visited upon Lyndon Johnson, and that his ‘closest collaborators’
may also be excluded from high office.19 Hoopes
does not say whether this form of ‘retribution’ would also have been
more appropriate in the case of the Japanese and German war criminals
should the West, then, merely have guaranteed a democratic election in
which they might have been deprived of office? He does, however,
reject the suggestion that civilian officials be held accountable for
such incidents as the Song My massacre, or for the bombing of North
Vietnam, or for such policies as those enumerated by Falk, cited
above. In fact, Coburn and Cowan report that ‘in the friendliest
possible terms, he accused our “generation” of wanting to impose a
totalitarian system of morality’ which would lead to ‘universal
anarchy’. Coburn and Cowan, in turn, ask:
If Tojo can be sentenced to be executed by an American war crimes
tribunal for leading Japan into a ‘war of aggression’, should the
only punishment for an American President be that he is voted out of
office while his Secretary of Defense serves a secure term as
President of the World Bank?
{23} This seems a not unreasonable question, certainly not
unreasonable for those who take seriously the statement of Justice
Jackson, quoted earlier. Nor do Coburn and Cowan appear unreasonable
when they add that: ‘The “anarchists” who frighten us most are those
who wield the big bombs, control the courts, and assume for themselves
the power to declare all their enemies outlaws.’
Hoopes strongly disagrees. It is these strange conclusions that
make the Coburn-Cowan article such ‘a curious piece of reporting’. To
him it is ‘crystal clear ... that such views could not conceivably be
held or expressed by anyone who was a young man during the Second
World War or who was engaged in the mortal struggles of its aftermath
- in Greece, in Germany, in Berlin, in Korea’. Only ‘sensitive, clever
children’ could be moved to such harsh judgements, ‘unshaped by
historical perspective and untempered by any first-hand experience
with the unruly forces at work in this near-cyclonic century’. Those
who designed our Vietnam policy were ‘struggling in good conscience to
uphold the Constitution and to serve the broad national interest
according to their lights’; they were, ‘almost uniformly, those
considered when they took office to be among the ablest, the best, the
most humane and liberal men that could be found for public trust’, and
‘no one doubted their honest, high-minded pursuit of the best
interests of their country, and indeed of the whole non-Communist
world, as they perceived these interests’. To be sure, they were
deluded by the ‘tensions of the Cold War years’. The tragedy of
Vietnam, as he sees it, is that these good men were unable to perceive
that the triumph of the national revolution in Vietnam would be
‘neither a triumph for Moscow and Peking nor a disaster for the United
States’. Furthermore, their policies received wide public support.
‘Set against these facts, the easy designation of individuals as
deliberate or imputed “war criminals” is shockingly glib, even if one
allows for the inexperience of the young.’ Similarly, it would be
‘absurd’ even to ask whether a war crimes tribunal, even
in principle, should try Nixon and Kissinger as ‘war criminals’ (even
though they continue to ‘buy some time in the US’ so that the war can
be brought ‘to a successful conclusion’, in the words of the present
Secretary of the Army).
One should, I believe, agree with Townsend Hoopes that ‘what the
country needs is not retribution, but therapy in the form of {24}
deeper understanding of our problems and of each other’. No one, to my
knowledge, has urged that those responsible for the massacre of the
people of Vietnam, their forced evacuation from their homes,20
and the destruction of their country, be jailed or executed, or even
that ‘denazification’ procedures of the sort instituted against
thirteen million Germans in the US Zone be applied to the American
population. Let us, by all means, try rather to achieve a deeper
understanding of our problems. Among these problems is the fact that
one of the most liberal and enlightened commentators on contemporary
affairs can assure us that Asian hordes care nothing of death, fear no
pain and cannot conceive of happiness, while as for us - it is our
Christian values that impel us to stop short of a final solution.
Among our problems is the fact that the same spokesman can summon up
the kind of ‘historical perspective’ that sees our intervention in
Greece, in the 1940s, as a ‘mortal struggle’ (against whom?); or the
fact that those who were, quite possibly, the most humane and liberal
men that could be found for public trust could set out to annihilate
the Vietnamese in the belief (whether honest or feigned - it hardly
matters) that they were combating a communist monolith that included
‘Moscow and Peking’ (in 1965!). One of our problems is the doctrine
developed by Mr Hoopes, in accordance with which - to take his words
literally - no policy carried out by the best American leaders with
wide public support could be criminal, could in principle demand any
response other than ‘to throw the rascals out’.
In fact, is it not a trifle naive (or even ‘glib’) of Mr Hoopes
to suggest that we throw the rascals out? Did we vote
the rascals in? Richard Barnet, in a recent study, writes:
Most of the men who have set the framework of America’s
national-security policy, as I found when I studied the background
of the top 400 decision-makers, have come from executive suites and
law offices {25} within shouting distance of one another in fifteen
city blocks in New York, Washington, Detroit, Chicago, and Boston.
It is not surprising that they emerge from homogeneous backgrounds
and virtually identical careers with a standard way of looking at
the world. They may argue with one another about means but not about
ends.21
No one who considers carefully the role of the executive in
civil-military decisions in the post-war world, or the role of the
private economic empires in determining national policy (either in
their own protected domain, or within the parliamentary system
itself), or the kinds of choices presented by the two competing
candidate-producing organizations can so easily speak of ‘throwing the
rascals out’. It would require social revolution, leading to a
redistribution of power throughout the industrial as well as the
political system, for a significant change to take place in the top
decision-making positions in American society. For this reason alone,
one must fully accept the judgement that ‘what the country needs is
not retribution, but therapy in the form of deeper understanding of
our problems’ - and appropriate action to remedy these problems,
which, given our enormous power, are problems of life and death for a
good part of the world.
These problems should be on the agenda for any thinking person.
More immediate, however, is the problem of bringing about a withdrawal
of American force from Vietnam. There is no indication that any such
policy is envisioned, at present. Rather, it is clear that the US
government is hoping to stay the course until victory is achieved,
adjusting tactics, where necessary, to buy some time at home. For this
reason, the Proceedings of the Tribunal is a document of first
importance; the spirit and convictions that underlie it must, as
Russell hoped, become a part of the consciousness of all Americans.
Richard Falk concludes the article I quoted earlier, writing:
Given the perils and horrors of the contemporary world, it is
time that individuals everywhere called their government to account
for indulging or ignoring the daily evidences of barbarism... the
obsolete pretensions of sovereign prerogative and military necessity
had better be challenged soon if life on earth is to survive.
{26} The Tribunal takes one step - small, perhaps, but
significant. The Tribunal, or another like it, should turn to
Czechoslovakia, to Greece, to a dozen other countries that are
suffering in the grip of the imperialist powers or the local forces
that they support and maintain. Still more important, the work
initiated by the Tribunal should be carried further by groups of
citizens who take upon themselves the duty of discovering and making
public the daily evidences of barbarism, and the still more severe
duty of challenging the powers - state or private - that are
responsible for violence and oppression, looking forward to the day
when an international movement for freedom and social justice will end
their rule. {27}{28}
Back to Start of Table of Contents of Russell War Crimes Tribunal
NOTES
1. Edward S. Herman, ‘Atrocities’
in Vietnam: Myths and Realities (Pilgrim Press, 1970). In a
careful analysis, he estimates South Vietnamese civilian casualties at
over a million dead, over two million wounded, and he notes that two
years ago the total number of refugees ‘generated’ mainly by the
American scorched earth policy was estimated at almost four million by
the Kennedy Committee of the 90th Congress.Back
2. The letter appears as an Appendix in Don Luce
and John Sommer, Vietnam: the Unheard Voices (Cornell
University Press, 1969).Back
3. Ithiel Pool, New York Review of Books, 13
February 1969, letters.Back
4. New York Times, letter, 26 November 1969.
The war in Quang Ngai and Quang Tin provinces is described in
unforgettable detail by Jonathan Schell, The Military Half
(Vintage Books, 1968).Back
5. ‘Pop me some dinks’, New Republic, 3
January 1970.Back
6. Vietnam: 1969, AFSC White Paper, 5 May
1969, 160 N. 15th Street, Philadelphia, Penna. 19102.Back
7. South Viet Nam: The Struggle, publication
of the NLF Information Commission, No.48, 15 November 1969.Back
8. Limits of Intervention (McKay, 1969).Back
9. The NLF claims that 2,000 victims of the
American bombardment were buried in mass graves (see Wilfred Burchett,
Guardian, 6 December 1969). This is consistent with Hoopes’s
account. Hoopes states that, after ten days of fighting, 300 local
officials and prominent citizens were found in a mass grave. This
corresponds roughly with the estimate of Police Chief Doan Cong Lap,
who estimated the total number executed as 200; he also gives the
figure of 3,776 civilian casualties in the battle of Hue (Stewart
Harris, The Times, 27 March 1968). Apart from Harris, I know of
only one journalist who has given a detailed eye-witness report from
Hue at the time, namely Marc Riboud. US authorities were unable to
show him the mass graves reported by the US mission. Riboud reports
4,000 civilians killed during the reconquest of the ‘assassinated
city’ of Hue (Le Monde, 13 April 1968). AFSC staff people in
Hue were unable to confirm the reports of mass graves, though they
reported many civilians shot and killed during the reconquest of the
city (see the report by John Sullivan of AFSC, 9 May 1968). For
attempts to evaluate government propaganda on mass killings in Hue,
see D. Gareth Porter and Len E. Ackland, ‘Vietnam: the bloodbath
argument’, Christian Century, 5 November 1969; Vietnam
International, December 1969 (6 Endsleigh Street, London, W.C.1);
Tran Van Dinh, ‘Fear of a bloodbath’, New Republic, 6 December
1969. The only other accounts I have seen merely convey information
given out by American government sources.Back
10. This is not quite accurate. He does provide a
brief philosophical discussion of Buddhist beliefs, which tend ‘to
create a positive impetus towards honourable death’.Back
11. As Gabriel Kolko notes, in testimony to the
Tribunal, the barbarism of Seyss-Inquart in opening the dikes in
Holland was considered one of the most monstrous crimes of the Second
World War, and was prominent among the charges that led to his death
sentence at Nuremberg. Note also Kolko’s discussion of the bombing of
dikes in the Korean war, and the testimony given regarding American
bombing of dikes in North Vietnam. Eye-witness reports of the bombing
of dikes in the Red River Delta have appeared in the American press.
See Christian Science Monitor, 8 September 1967, quoted in my
American Power and the New Mandarins (Chatto & Windus, 1969),
p.15.Back
12. As we know from other sources, the VC
political cadres thus ‘exposed’ were to be eliminated by ‘Operation
Phoenix’, which, in the year 1968, is claimed to have killed 18,393
persons. See Senator Charles E. Goodell, New Republic, 22 November
1969 (cited in Herman, op. cit.), and also Judith Coburn and Geoffrey
Cowan, ‘Training for terror: a deliberate policy?’, Village Voice, 11
December 1969. On ‘population control measures’, see William
Nighswonger, Rural Pacification in Vietnam (Praeger, 1967). For
earlier precedents during the Japanese occupation of Manchuria, see my
American Power and the New Mandarins, pp. 195-203.Back
13. 8 October 1969, released 2 December. Quoted in
I. F. Stone’s Weekly, 15 December 1969.Back
14. Quoted in an article to which I return in a
moment: Judith Coburn and Geoffrey Cowan, ‘The war criminals hedge
their bets’, Village Voice, 4 December 1969.Back
15. Wilhelm von Humboldt, The Limits of State
Action, 1792 (Cambridge University Press, 1969), J. W. Burrow
(ed.).Back
16. ‘The circle of responsibility’, The Nation,
26 January 1970. Falk is Milbank Professor of International Law and
Practice, Princeton University.Back
17. The Present State of Denazification,
reprinted in Constantine Fitzgibbon, Denazification (Norton,
1969).Back
18. Fitzgibbon, op. cit.Back
19. ‘The Nuremberg Suggestion’, Washington
Monthly, January 1970. Noam Chomsky.Back
20. Coburn and Cowan report the views of
Ambassador Ellsworth Bunker, who says in a statement to Congress on
the refugee situation that the figures may be misleading, since the
war-torn Vietnamese are used to disruption and ‘have been moving
around for centuries’. Since this is true, to a far greater extent, of
the American population, there would presumably be even less reason to
protest, if they were driven from their homes by a foreign invader.Back
21. The Economy of Death (Atheneum, 1969).
See also the detailed analysis by Gabriel Kolko, The Roots of
American Foreign Policy(Beacon Press, 1969), Chapter 1.Back
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