| To the Editors:
In the space of three brief paragraphs in your January 1 issue,
Noam Chomsky manages to mutilate the truth in a variety of ways with
respect to my views and activities on Vietnam.
Mr. Chomsky writes as follows:
Writing in Foreign Affairs, he [Huntington] explains that
the Viet Cong is "a powerful force which cannot be dislodged from
its constituency so long as the constituency continues to exist."
The conclusion is obvious, and he does not shrink from it. We can
ensure that the constituency ceases to exist by "direct application
of mechanical and conventional power...on such a massive scale as to
produce a massive migration from countryside to city...."
It would be difficult to conceive of a more blatantly dishonest
instance of picking words out of context so as to give them a meaning
directly opposite to that which the author stated. For the benefit of
your readers, here is the "obvious conclusion" which I drew from my
statement about the Viet Cong:
...the Viet Cong will remain a powerful force which cannot be
dislodged from its constituency so long as the constituency
continues to exist. Peace in the immediate future must hence be
based on accommodation.
By omitting my next sentence -- "Peace in the immediate future must
hence be based on accommodation" -- and linking my statement about the
Viet Cong to two other phrases which appear earlier in the article,
Mr. Chomsky completely reversed my argument. (Incidentally, the phrase
"direct application of mechanical and conventional power" is not mine,
but one which I quote from Sir Robert Thompson. Mr. Chomsky, however,
does not see fit to recognize these distinctions of authorship.)
Mr. Chomsky's further effort to say that I favor demolishing
Vietnamese society and "eliminating the people" in order "to crush the
people's war" is totally false and misleading. My article described
the urbanization produced by the escalation of the war between 1965
and 1968 and the extent to which this "American-sponsored urban
revolution" undercut the "Maoist-inspired rural revolution." It
concluded from this fact that peace would require compromise and
accommodation on both sides. To eliminate Viet Cong control in the
areas where they have been strong, I said, "would be an expensive,
time-consuming and frustrating task." Instead of attempting this, we
should aim at a political reintegration of the country which "clearly
will depend, however, upon the recognition and acceptance of Viet Cong
control of local government in these areas. It is here that
accommodation in the most specific sense of the word is a political
necessity." This is, in a nutshell, the thesis of the article, and it
is well reflected in its title, "The Bases of Accommodation," which
Mr. Chomsky somehow forgot to mention.
Not content with distorting my views directly, Mr. Chomsky goes on
to repeat Daniel Ellsberg's prejudiced and inaccurate description of
them. The phrase "modernizing instruments" which he quotes is Mr.
Ellsberg's phrase, not mine. The repetition of Mr. Ellsberg's
distortions by Mr. Chomsky does not make them any less distorted. Or
does Mr. Chomsky think that truth is produced by reiteration rather
than analysis? If Mr. Chomsky is interested in my views on Vietnam, he
would do well to read more carefully than he has what I have written
on the subject rather than to rely on what critics such as Mr.
Ellsberg assert I have said.
Mr. Chomsky is equally inaccurate and misleading in his description
of the Council on Vietnamese Studies as "in effect the State
Department task force on Vietnam." His use of the definite article
implies that there is only one such task force or that this is a very
special task force. In fact, of course, there have been scores if not
hundreds of State Department task forces, study groups, working groups
dealing with Vietnam. The Council on Vietnamese Studies, however, is
not one of them. The Council is the creation of the Southeast Asia
Development Advisory Group which, in turn, was created by the Asia
Society which, in turn, acted under a contract with the Agency for
International Development which, in turn, is a semi-autonomous agency
of the State Department. The Council is thus a task force of the State
Department to the same degree that Mr. Chomsky is the son of his
great-great-grandfather. The Council has, on occasion, met with AID
officials to discuss matters of common interest, but it has never, to
the best of my knowledge, undertaken any "task" for the State
Department. It was, indeed, almost a year before any Vietnam expert in
the State Department could muster enough interest in the Council to
show up at one of our meetings. The principal task of the Council, as
its name implies, is to raise funds from public and private sources to
support scholarly research on Vietnam, a task at which, I regret to
say, it has been only moderately successful.
The three paragraphs of Mr. Chomsky to which I have referred
constitute less than five percent of his article. I do not know if the
level of veracity which he achieves in them is typical of the entire
piece. If these paragraphs are representative, however, the article as
a whole should contain, by conservative extrapolation, approximately
94 other serious distortions and misstatements of fact.
Samuel P. Huntington
Palo Alto, California
Chomsky's response:
In the issue of January 1, I pointed out that massacre and forced
evacuation of the rural population is the essence of American strategy
in Vietnam, and referred to Samuel Huntington's essay in Foreign
Affairs for a clear explanation of the theory behind this
strategy. There he wrote that: "In an absent-minded way the United
States in Vietnam may well have stumbled upon the answer to 'wars of
national liberation.'" The answer to such wars is "forced-draft
urbanization and modernization which rapidly brings the country in
question out of the phase in which a rural revolutionary movement can
hope to generate sufficient strength to come to power." He presents a
more detailed description of "the answer" we have stumbled upon in a
comment on Sir Robert Thompson's contention that People's
Revolutionary War is immune to "the direct application of mechanical
and conventional power." This Mr. Huntington denies:
In the light of recent events, this statement needs to be
seriously qualified. For if the "direct application of mechanical
and conventional power" takes place on such a massive scale as to
produce a massive migration from countryside to city, the basic
assumptions underlying the Maoist doctrine of revolutionary war no
longer operate. The Maoist-inspired rural revolution is undercut by
the American-sponsored urban revolution.
He also points out that the Viet Cong is "a powerful force which
cannot be dislodged from its constituency so long as the constituency
continues to exist."
These comments are no doubt accurate and, as I wrote, provide a
succinct explanation of American strategy. Since the Viet Cong is a
powerful force which cannot be dislodged from its constituency so long
as the constituency continues to exist, we have resorted to military
force, causing the migration of the rural population to refugee camps
and suburban slums where, it is hoped, the Viet Cong constituency can
be properly controlled.
I also commented that Mr. Huntington "does not shrink from" these
conclusions. This comment could, in fact, have been strengthened. Thus
he says that "forced-draft urbanization and modernization,"
Vietnam-style, may well be "the answer" in general to mass-based
peasant revolutions. In fact, he expresses no qualms, no judgment at
all about such methods (which clearly involve "war crimes" as defined
by Nuremberg Principle VI, for example). His approach follows the
principle stated by two counterinsurgency theorists in Foreign
Affairs, October, 1969: "All the dilemmas [of counterinsurgency] are
practical and as neutral in an ethical sense as the laws of physics."
Thus Huntington uses such terms as "urbanization" to refer to the
process by which we drive the Viet Cong "constituency" into refugee
camps and cities, and he speaks of the "American-sponsored urban
revolution," the "social revolution" that we have brought about in
this way. So successful is "urbanization," he might have added, that
the population density of Saigon is now estimated at more than twice
that of Tokyo. Lucky Vietnamese.
Enough has been written about the conditions of life of the five
million or so beneficiaries of "urbanization" so that further comment
is unnecessary. A useful indication of the nature of the
"American-sponsored urban revolution," as it affects the more
privileged, is given in an observation by Luce and Sommer (Vietnam:
the Unheard Voices):
When students at Saigon's teacher training college were asked to
list 15 occupations in an English examination, almost every student
included launderer, car washer, bar-girl, shoeshine boy, soldier,
interpreter, and journalist. Almost none of the students thought to
write down doctor, engineer, industrial administrator, farm manager,
or even their own chosen profession, teacher. The economy has become
oriented toward services catering to the foreign soldiers.
Huntington himself refers to the "often heart-rending" social costs
of "urbanization" and writes that: "After the war, massive government
programs will be required either to resettle migrants in rural areas
or to rebuild the cities and promote peacetime urban employment." Such
is the social revolution we have brought to Vietnam.
Mr. Huntington further claims that I said he "favors" eliminating
the Viet Cong constituency by bombardment, whereas he only states that
such "forced-draft urbanization" may well be "the answer to 'wars of
national liberation' " that we have stumbled upon in Vietnam. The
distinction is rather fine. One who insists on it must also recognize
that I did not say that he "favored" this answer but only that he
"outlined" it, "explained" it, and "does not shrink from it," all of
which is literally true.
My only additional comment involved a quotation from Ellsberg, who
speaks of the "people who have been driven to Saigon by what
Huntington regards as our 'modernizing instruments' in Vietnam, bombs
and artillery." Huntington claims that this is prejudiced and a
distortion. Unfortunately, it is an accurate statement. The
"forced-draft urbanization and modernization" that he believes may be
the answer to peasant revolution was, as he makes clear, effected
primarily by American military force. Bombs and artillery produced
"the depopulation of the countryside," the migration to the cities,
where "the Maoist-inspired rural revolution is undercut by the
American-sponsored urban revolution."
So far as my comments go, then, they are accurate. But Mr.
Huntington objects that they do not go far enough, and cites two
reasons. First, I did not state that the phrase "direct application of
mechanical and conventional power" was borrowed from Thompson. That is
correct (though irrelevant -- see the full statement, just quoted);
however, it was clearly indicated that the quotation was abbreviated,
and note 4 refers to a fuller discussion where I explicitly gave the
source of the wording. His second and more serious claim is that I
misrepresented his position by not discussing his specific tactical
proposals. It is true that I did not discuss these proposals,
restricting my comments to his assessment of Viet Cong strength and
his general ideas about how to defeat peasant revolution. Let us turn,
then, to his immediate suggestions for Vietnam.
After describing how we may have stumbled upon the answer to
peasant revolutions, Huntington adds this paragraph:
Time in South Viet Nam is increasingly on the side of the
Government. But in the short run, with half the population still in
the countryside, the Viet Cong will remain a powerful force which
cannot be dislodged from its constituency so long as the
constituency continues to exist. Peace in the immediate future must
hence be based on accommodation.
Obviously, if the Viet Cong constituency will continue to exist in
the short run, it follows that in the immediate future, if there is to
be peace, it must be based on accommodation (or American withdrawal,
which is rejected as "misplaced moralism"). This is not a policy
proposal, but rather, indubitably, an immediate consequence of the
assumption that the Viet Cong will remain a powerful force. Why this
assumption? Huntington explains:
To eliminate Viet Cong control in these areas would be an
expensive, time-consuming and frustrating task. It would require a
much larger and more intense military and pacification effort than
is currently contemplated by Saigon and Washington.
Since "the answer to 'wars of national liberation'" will, in this
instance, require an effort that is expensive, time-consuming, and
frustrating, and since Saigon and Washington cannot or will not take
the necessary steps, evidently another approach must be sought.
Therefore Huntington proposes that the Viet Cong accept an arrangement
rather like that of the Hoa Hao (who, he asserts, went through the
typical evolution: development of social and political consciousness,
confrontation with the Central Government, defeat by the Central
Government, withdrawal from the national political scene,
accommodation). Given the present "rates of urbanization and of
modernization," his prognosis is that the Viet Cong "could now
degenerate into the protest of a declining rural minority increasingly
dependent upon outside support" (though at one time, prior to
"urbanization and modernization," the Viet Cong "had the potential for
developing into a truly comprehensive revolutionary force with an
appeal to both rural and urban groups").
Suppose, however, that the NLF refuses to be satisfied with the
generous offer of some degree of local control within the framework of
national power set by the US military and the Saigon authorities it
has installed. Suppose that the NLF is unwilling to accept an
"accommodation" under which it is likely to degenerate into a
declining rural minority. Then, Mr. Huntington explains, we can make
clear that "this confrontation cannot succeed." He does not list the
methods, but they can easily be imagined.
Thus although the general answer to peasant revolution may be
beyond our grasp in the short run, given present political realities,
we may still be able to impose (by force) an "accommodation" that is
likely to lead to the political solution that we have determined to be
appropriate. Nothing could indicate more clearly the persistence of
what can only be described as colonialist assumptions, pragmatically
attuned to the political and economic constraints within which policy
makers are forced to operate.
Finally, Mr. Huntington objects to my description of the Council of
Vietnamese Studies, which he headed, as "in effect the State
Department task force on Vietnam." He states that this group is only
indirectly related to the State Department, that its influence is
negligible, and that its main function is fund-raising for scholarly
research. An assessment of this statement depends on records that are
not available to me. My identification was based only on hearsay, and
I am quite ready to accept the correction. |