The
United States throughout its history has gone to war starting with its war of
independence until most recently, the war in Iraq and Afghanistan. In most of
the wars that it has been involved in, there have been claims that the United
States military has committed atrocities against the civilian populations of
the countries it has invaded. The reports of such atrocities have been reported
during the following instances: the Philippine-American war; the Second World
War; the Korean War; the Vietnam War; in Yugoslavia in 1999; and finally,
during the War on Terror. In this paper, we shall discuss some American
atrocities committed during the Vietnam War with specific emphasis on the
crimes committed against the noncombat civilian population within Vietnam.
Atrocities
such as the killing of noncombat civilians or the torture of prisoners occur in
all wars but that it became a particular issue in the Vietnam War. Violence
against the civilians of Vietnam by the American military was an intentional
act of war and they acted with indifference to the destruction of noncombatants
and to that of their property. Most of the military commanders of the United
States were aware of the laws governing ground warfare that had been established
by various international agreements but atrocities were still committed by some
American soldiers and officers. Throughout the entire war, only two hundred and
seventy eight soldiers and marines were convicted of murder, rape, and other
violent crimes by the military justice system but many more incidents went
unpunished or were not even reported. The policy of heavy bombing by in South
Vietnam with high explosives and napalm by American forces to support ground
operations in and around villages and the widespread use of artillery for the
same purpose generated many accidental civilian casualties.
The
United States military used herbicides and defoliants as part of its herbicidal
warfare in Vietnam, and one of these, known as Agent Orange, was used
extensively from 1961 to 1971 in South Vietnam and in portions of North
Vietnam. At the time the herbicides were being used, there was little
consideration within the American military about the potential long term
effects of the widespread use of Agent Orange towards the Vietnamese
population. It is further unclear exactly where in Vietnam the Agent Orange
herbicides were sprayed and the amount sprayed at each location and this has
ensured that virtually every aspect of the effects of this herbicide in Vietnam
is infused with uncertainty. These herbicides were used on the crops of the
Vietnamese civilians so that the crops could die causing mass starvation. The
American army commanders mistakenly believed that starvation would force the
Vietnamese population to support the American backed South Vietnamese regime
but this turned out to be counterproductive because instead the people lost all
confidence in the southern government and secretly supported the North. Another
major result of the use of these herbicides was the mass starvation that
occurred after their use and a lot of the civilian population, which had
nothing to do with the war, died in the resulting famine.
It
was the fear, anger, and incentive for promotion or commendation for a high
body count (which was a requirement by the military at the time) that led the
American soldiers to an over application of their weaponry which constituted
atrocities against the civilian population. Individual Vietnamese and sometimes
even entire villages could be killed because they were suspected of being the
enemy or in certain incidents; they were simply killed just because they got in
the way. The Vietnam war, with its tactical use of high altitude bombing and
artillery fire, and the search and destroy missions resulted in mass killings. These
weapons were used indiscriminately by the American military and in the process
many civilians were killed accidentally. The number of these accidental
killings may border in the tens of thousands because there were no statistics,
whether private or official, at the time to show their extent. Furthermore,
while platoons were on missions, their leaders rarely restrained them from committing
such acts as would be deemed atrocities in normal human societies. One of the
major and most notable of these incidents, due to the high media attention it
gained, was the My Lai massacre of
1968.
The
My Lai massacre in Vietnam was the
mass murder of between three hundred and five hundred Vietnamese civilians in
the village of Son My by American
soldiers during the Vietnam War. Most of the victims of this massacre were
women, children and the elderly and when investigations were carried out, some of
the bodies were found to have been mutilated and many of the women had been
raped preceding the killings. When news of this massacre first came to light,
the army tried to deflect any concern about it by blaming it on the South
Vietnamese military. This incident prompted global outrage when it became
public and it increase the domestic opposition for the United State’s
involvement in Vietnam. The My Lai massacre
had numerous complex causes which included psychological stress on the
soldiers, poor unit leadership, bad intelligence, and an overall American
strategy that put more emphasis on killing than on protecting the people. The
American strategy of having body counts to show their progress in their
progress in the war was very detrimental to the lives of the Vietnamese
civilians because they could not be differentiated from the North Vietnamese
soldiers who also wore peasant clothing. This led to the American soldiers’
killing of random Vietnamese civilians on suspicion that they were enemy
forces. Some soldiers, bent on having a higher body count in order to establish
their reputations within the military ranks, wantonly killed Vietnamese
civilians in order to raise their counts.
By
its nature, atrocity defies rationality, marking the limits of understanding
and he uses this to explain what happened in Vietnam. The order to kill
anything that moves caused many American soldiers to commit vast and
unthinkable atrocities in Vietnam. American platoons had a tendency of
waylaying civilians, raping the women among them, and at times murdered them in
cold blood. In certain instances, if the American soldiers did not find anybody
to fight in the various villages across the countryside of Vietnam, they would
instead indulge themselves by raping, torturing, and murdering the hundreds of
civilians living within such villages. Most of these cases went unreported
because the people of Vietnam at the time did not have did not have any legal
authority they could turn to for justice because they were in the middle of a
war and furthermore, the government which claimed to represent them (South
Vietnam) had allied itself with a foreign power in order to maintain its
authority. In fact, the South Vietnamese government actively supported the
American involvement in Vietnam despite the fact that atrocities were being
committed against its civilian population.
America
committed genocide in Vietnam and admits that individual atrocities and war
crimes did occur in that country. One would agree with Sevy’s opinion because
of the statistics showing the American military casualties of the war. It is
said that about fifty eight thousand United States soldiers died in the
Vietnamese war and this was despite their having a weapons technology that was
far superior to that of their opponents. Now that it has been determined that
the Americans had superior weapons, we should now the casualties in the
Vietnamese side. If the American lost nearly sixty thousand soldiers despite
their superior weapons, it is only logical to assume that the Vietnamese lost
many times more that number in armed forces and that would be without counting
the civilian casualties of this war. The random killings that were committed by
all the armed forces involved in this conflict may put the number of civilian
casualties in the millions. It is my suggestion that if the Americans had not
involved themselves in the war in the first place, then it would have come to a
swift end much sooner than it did.
The
American atrocities in Vietnam are real and that they happened on a much
grander scale than have been reported. It is up to the United States government
to recognize and acknowledge these atrocities and not only do so, but also apologize
to the people of Vietnam for committing them. If the American government would
do this, then there would definitely be an improvement in the relations between
America and Vietnam which would bring them even closer than they are today.
Furthermore, America would earn global respect for owning up to its failures and
because of this new found respect; America would be able to retain its hegemony
over the world with the good will of all the nations of the world. This would
be to its advantage especially considering that new world powers, such as
China, Russia, and Brazil, are rising to challenge America’s authority as the
only world superpower.