Christian G. Appy is the author of the new book American Reckoning: The Vietnam War and Our National Identity. His other books include Patriots: The Vietnam War Remembered from All Sides. He is a professor of history at the University of Massachusetts Amherst.
Q: You write that
"the Vietnam War shattered the central tenet of American national
identity"--the idea of "American exceptionalism." What were
the main reasons you believe this happened, and is this reversible?
A: The idea that the
United States is a superior and invincible force for good in the world, always
on the side of democracy and freedom, has deep roots in our history and had its
broadest appeal, I believe, in the 1940s and ‘50s.
In the 1960s, with
the escalation of warfare in Vietnam, a majority of Americans gradually came to
the conclusion that the war had been initiated under false pretexts, was fought
to prop up an unpopular authoritarian South Vietnamese regime, and was waged
with a kind of ruthlessness that could no longer sustain any illusion that we
were “saving” or “defending” the people of South Vietnam.
In 1969, when the
public finally learned about the My Lai massacre (the close-range murder of
some 500 unarmed and unresisting South Vietnamese civilians by a company of
U.S. infantrymen), that seemed to confirm for many that the U.S. was waging an
aggressive and unjust war.
Others continued to
defend the war, of course, but many pro-war Americans responded to My Lai by
saying that all sides commit atrocities in war. But to say that is itself an
admission that America is not exceptional, that it does not put a “higher
price” on life. And when the war was ultimately lost, the idea of
“invincibility” went out the window as well.
I don’t think we will
ever recover the faith in American exceptionalism we had before Vietnam. Nor should we. The historical record does not
justify it and we’d be better off, I believe, to dispense with a dangerous myth
that makes us too willing to acquiesce to the misuse of power by the tiny elite
that makes foreign policy in our name.
The faith is deeply
damaged, but still with us. After Vietnam, it was cobbled back together again,
but in a more beleaguered and defensive form. It is also more bombastic.
American exceptionalism is now such an endangered faith that those who uphold
it most fervently often berate anyone who challenges it.
Q: How did
you research this book, and what surprised you most in the course
of your research?
A: My research was
wide-ranging and included everything from movies, songs, and memoirs to
presidential speeches, government documents, and contemporary journalism. I
wanted to recover a sense of how Vietnam came into American consciousness in
the 1950s and how our perceptions of the war changed over time.
With that in mind I
explored a lot of primary sources. I also relied heavily an extraordinary body
of secondary sources produced by historians and other writers.
One major goal of the
research was to put the war in a larger cultural and political context than most
books on the subject. I tried not only to illuminate the history of the Vietnam
War but to show how we have wrestled with the myths and realities of our global
war from the earliest days of the Cold War to the present.
I understood when I
started that the war in Vietnam had a profound impact on our national identity
but I was surprised by the depth and breadth of those legacies and how even our
efforts to forget the war, or to repackage it into something more palatable, showed
the intensity of its persistent impact. If the war had been less significant we
would not have tried so hard to find ways to “get over it.”
Q: What impact do you
think the Vietnam War has had on U.S. policymakers' decisions about
whether to send troops to war in subsequent conflicts?
A: The most important
lesson we might have learned from the Vietnam War is to dismantle the imperial
presidency and to make foreign policy far more transparent, democratic, and
accountable to an informed public. In the 1970s Congress made some efforts to
curb the war-making power of the executive (e.g. the War Powers Act) and to
open up public debate about foreign policy.
However, those
efforts were incomplete and easily overwhelmed by a foreign policy
establishment (including the military-industrial complex) that sought ever more
power and ever greater secrecy.
As a result, there
was never any fundamental rethinking of America’s role in the world and no
internal challenge to the persistent effort to maintain and enhance global
military superiority.
In fact, when the Cold
War ended and another round of major reform and military down-sizing might have
occurred, instead we doubled-down on the goal of full spectrum military
dominance and extended our colossal network of foreign military bases.
However, I can
identify one positive impact Vietnam had on policymakers. From the end of the
Vietnam War in 1975 until 9/11, policymakers understood that the public would
not tolerate long, massive, indecisive wars with high American casualties,
especially when there was no clear threat to national security.
Although the U.S.
intervened directly and indirectly in dozens of places, during the quarter
century after Vietnam only about 800 Americans died in combat. In that sense, the
memory of Vietnam served as a modest brake on military adventurism.
After 9/11, however,
all the brakes came off and once again we waged open-ended and seemingly
endless wars to support unpopular regimes in countries where American troops
are widely regarded as unwelcome foreign occupiers.
And, as in Vietnam,
we have fought long after the majority of Americans opposed their continuation.
And, once again, our leaders have failed to achieve their stated objectives.
Q: How did you decide
on the book's title, and what kind of
reckoning has America had as far as the Vietnam War is
concerned?
reckoning has America had as far as the Vietnam War is
concerned?
A: I’m full of ideas
for titles of other people’s books, but find the process agonizing with my own.
I usually don’t settle on one until they are almost finished.
However, when “American
Reckoning” finally popped into my head it felt instantly right. I wanted the
title to evoke a serious struggle over politics, conscience, and morality.
Reckoning has a
number of possible meanings, but when linked to the Vietnam War I think it
strongly suggests the ongoing process by which we have evaluated and judged
that war and how that soul-searching reshaped the way we think about ourselves
as a nation and a people.
The book argues that
the war did indeed produce a serious reckoning but it remains incomplete. In
the decades after the Vietnam War our public culture has not fully grappled
with the war’s hardest questions and realities.
Instead of focusing
on the damage we did in and to Vietnam, we have generally focused on our own
war-related wounds, real and imagined.
While dissenting
memories survived, the dominant voices in our culture have been quite
successful in refocusing attention on the war as an American tragedy.
For several
generations our children have been taught to honor the American veterans of
Vietnam, but they have not been encouraged to explore deeply the history of the
war itself and why it was so destructive and controversial.
Q: What are you
working on now?
A: I haven’t settled
on a new project but I’m thinking of writing about World War II and American
memory, another enormous topic. There is still a great deal about that war we
have forgotten, or badly distorted, or never knew.
Part of the mystery
of the subject is personal. My father was a Marine Corps dive bomber in the
Pacific in 1944. He died in 1990 having told us very little of his experience.
We have only his aviator’s log book and a few stories.
Q: Anything else we
should know?
A: There’s a lot more
we all should know, me as much as anyone, but I remain hopeful that studying
the past can help us in the present. I wouldn’t do this work otherwise.
And while recent
years have been very depressing by many measures, one thing history does
suggest is that fundamental change can sometimes happen at unpredictable times
and in unexpected ways.
Lately I’ve been
thinking more and more about what kind of world my two-year old granddaughter
will inherit and hoping we won’t leave behind more of a mess than any
generation could reasonably be expected to fix.
--Interview with Deborah Kalb. This Q&A also appears on www.hauntinglegacy.com.
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