Republished on VDARE.COM on March 28, 2003
A Bright Shining Lie: John Paul Vann and America in
Vietnam.
(book review)
By Peter Brimelow
National Review, March 10,
1989 v41 n4 p46(4)
OSCAR WILDE in a famous phrase
described fox-hunting as the unspeakable in full
pursuit of the uneatable. Something similar might be
said about the spectacle of the media establishment in
full cry on behalf of former New York Timesman
Neil Sheehan's ponderous account of John Paul Vann, a
key U.S. official in Vietnam who was killed in a
helicopter accident days after masterminding the
crushing defeat of Hanoi's 1972 Easter Offensive in the
Central Highlands. Excerpted in The New Yorker,
winner of the National Book Award, a best-seller for 15
weeks already at this writing,
A Bright Shining Lie has attracted an
extraordinary pack of articles yelping about what
Sheehan has called his "16-year odyssey" in writing the
book, and whimpering discreetly of the severe emotional
cost to his martyred self and his family.
As of early 1989, a search of the
major media revealed not one single negative review.
True, several reviewers showed telltale signs of having
read attentively little further than the book's dramatic
opening scene—Vann's funeral at Arlington National
Cemetery, attended both by Nixon Cabinet officers and by
antiwar pooh-bahs like Daniel Ellsberg and Edward
Kennedy. Sheehan, who likes a portentous cliché, has
described this scene as the burial of "the whole era of
confidence that Henry Luce has so boastfully called 'the
American century.'"
The reviews also showed a distinct
tendency to discuss not the book, but Vann's character.
("Finally consumed by his own illusions"-Laurence
Zuckerman, Time magazine; "in the grip of a
compulsion"-Ronald Steel, New York Times Book Review;
"degeneration . . . into a stubborn liar and
bloody-minded war lover"-Jeff Danziger, the Christian
Science Monitor.) Vann, it appears, was guilty of
serious deviationism: he did not follow the journalists
he had cultivated so assiduously during the early 1960s
when he was a military advisor to the South Vietnamese
army—most importantly David Halberstam and Sheehan
himself—into their subsequent open opposition to the
war. In a close race, the Christian Science Monitor's
Danziger has probably won the Thundering Inanity Prize:
men like Vann, he sermonizes, "thought there were
problems that could be solved by killing." General Giap,
needless to say, thought problems could be solved by
giving birth.
So much for the unspeakable. What
of the uneatable? The truth can be simply stated.
Sheehan's book is technically, intellectually, and
morally incompetent. Its uncritical reception is a
devastating condemnation of the American intelligentsia.
In itself, it goes far toward explaining why the cause
of freedom was defeated in Vietnam.
To begin with the least important:
at 861 pages, A Bright Shining Lie suffers from
gross, appalling elephantiasis. By comparison, Lytton
Strachey was able to
dispose of General Gordon, in many ways a Victorian
version of John Paul Vann, in less than an eighth of the
space.
A crude political motive can be
detected behind certain of Sheehan's shenanigans. He
devotes six pages to the drama of whether Vann's
peacenik son will decide to disrupt his father's funeral
by pressing his torn draft card upon President Richard
Nixon (answer: no); a mere thirty pages to the entire
course of the war from the Tet Offensive in 1968 to the
Easter Offensive in 1972; and nothing-repeat, nothing-to
the three years between Vann's death and Hanoi's final
onslaught in 1975. Thus, "one of the few brilliant
histories of the American entanglement in Vietnam"
(David Shipler, New York Times) shabbily
contrives to evade the historical reality that Saigon
ultimately fell, not because its troops ceased to
fight—they fought to the end, without benefit of
American media coverage—but because the United States
reneged on its commitment to supply the modern means
to fight.
In the end, however, it emerges
that there is simply no point at all to much of
Sheehan's narrative. The 1963 "battle" of Ap Bac,
involving only 350 Vietcong, receives more attention
than any other engagement of the war, apparently for
little better reason than that Sheehan was there (he did
no reporting in Vietnam after being transferred to
Washington in mid 1966). The harrowing experiences in
captivity of one of Vann's aides are recounted in detail
for a while but then trail off without resolution; it
seems that they are included only because Sheehan
obtained a copy of the man's unpublished account of his
ordeal. Even before reading press stories about the
ninety thousand words Sheehan had to cut from his
manuscript at the last moment and his desperate scramble
(after 16 years!) to complete and fax the New Yorker
excerpt as the magazine was going to press, the truth is
painfully clear: Sheehan just plain lost control of his
material.
This technical failing leads into
Sheehan's crucial intellectual failing. In a peculiar
parody of General William Westmoreland, the U.S.
commander in Vietnam, Sheehan substitutes immense
diffuse force for specific incisiveness. The difference
is that Westmoreland's method of blind attrition was at
least intended to produce an American victory.
It is possible to make a case that
U.S. interests did not require intervention in Vietnam.
But quite apart from such geopolitical questions, the
war posed practical military problems that Sheehan
nowhere clearly explains. The peculiar geography of
South Vietnam meant that Saigon had not only to defend a
frontier eighty miles long but had to do so on exterior
lines, an almost impossibly difficult task. The obvious
solution was either to invade North Vietnam or at the
very least to occupy Cambodia and Laos to the Mekong
River, establishing the short, defensible frontier along
a DMZ extended due west. But Washington refused to
contemplate these options. Throughout the war, the North
Vietnamese were able to import materiel from the
Communist bloc through Haiphong Harbor, transship it
down the Ho Chi Minh Trail parallel to the South
Vietnamese border, and maintain sanctuaries in Cambodia
within fifty miles of their enemy's capital. The United
States and its allies were fighting with one arm tied
behind their back—a posture they were able to maintain
only because the United States' arm was so
extraordinarily powerful.
How did this incredible situation
come about? In 861 pages, Sheehan makes only a few vague
allusions to the problem, usually in the context of
Washington's alleged fear of direct Chinese or Soviet
intervention.
Sheehan is almost equally
impenetrable on the professional disputes between Vann
and the American high command. This is particularly
unfortunate because it means he never has to confront
directly a curious paradox. In the early states of the
war, Vann apparently wanted the Americans to take over
the direction of the South Vietnamese army in detail, to
function like a classic colonial power. But Sheehan
maintains dogmatically that it was precisely the taint
of "collaborating," with French colonialism—his use of
the World War II term is no accident; another favorite
word is "quisling"—that made an alliance with Saigon
unacceptable to pure-hearted Vietnamese patriots. Either
Sheehan-and Vann's other journalistic allies-never
thought through the implications of Vann's prescription,
or they just chose to ignore it while using his critical
diagnosis of American policy for their own antiwar
purposes.
Similarly, in the later stages of
the war, as the attack increasingly became a
conventional invasion by North Vietnamese troops, Vann
opposed Westmoreland's search-and-destroy operations in
the deserted interior mountains and proposed that U.S.
forces instead concentrate on controlling and
"pacifying" the populated areas, mostly on the coastal
plain. A close reading of Sheehan's text suggests that
Vann might have regarded Westmoreland's determination to
accept battle in whatever prepared position the North
Vietnamese chose to offer it as an uneconomical use of
force, but it's hard to tell. And presumably
Westmoreland could have objected that Vann's approach
would leave the North Vietnamese units intact, able to
attack the South Vietnamese in the populated areas and
force them either to retreat or to make last-ditch
defensive stands. This was exactly what happened in 1972
(win) and 1975 (loss). Sheehan's 861 pages of
"brilliant" history offer no clue to any of this.
One reason for Sheehan's vagueness
becomes apparent in his treatment of the air war.
Accepting as usual the antiwar polemics of the time, he
asserts baldly that bombing 'Cannot paralyze a country
at war. He does not, of course, inquire why Washington,
having decided to substitute attrition for strategy,
nevertheless refrained from the systematic razing of
populated areas, as in World War II, let alone from
bombing the Red River dikes and washing North Vietnam
into the sea. But even more significant is the question,
raised most recently in Colonel Jack Broughton's
remarkable
Going Downtown: The War against Hanoi and Washington
(Crown/Orion), of political over-restriction of the
air war. Civilians in a weekly White House lunch ten
thousand miles away decided not only targets but
detailed tactics. Pilots were not even allowed to attack
SAM sites unless their planes were fired on first.
Sheehan does not reject this
argument: he shows absolutely no awareness of it, nor of
any of the sources cited by Broughton, such as the 1967
Stennis Committee report and British diplomat John
Colvin's testimony that Hanoi was on the verge of
collapse in that year until rescued by another round of
Washington's pointless bombing pauses, and this suggests
that Sheehan's loss of control of his material includes
a grave failure to keep up with the field, especially
when new work was disturbing to his simple antiwar
faith. Although his bibliography cites with a straight
face works on European politics by Barbara Tuchman, its
selection of books on Vietnam published during the past
ten years is suspiciously scrappy, notable omissions
including Guenter Lewy's America in Vietnam and
Colonel Gerald Turley's The Easter Offensive.
This sort of vagueness in a
"brilliant history" of such pretensions is appalling,
yet it exactly reflects the vagueness endemic in the
reporting at the time, as anyone who tried to follow the
military situation from a distance will remember.
Vagueness, in fact, was crucial to the antiwar cause. It
was vital to the undermining of domestic morale that
American soldiers appear to be dying, as Sheehan intones
in the rhetoric of the era, "in the rain forest of
nowhere . . . for no visible purpose and with no
conclusion in sight." Similarly, only by keeping
attention firmly diverted from the crucial role of the
cross-border sanctuaries could the antiwar movement get
away with shamelessly describing the Nixon
Administration's belated thrusts at them as a "widening
of the war," as if the war were somehow not already in
these areas-another rhetorical device retained by
Sheehan. The Vietnam experience was not merely a case of
trahison des clercs, the betrayal of a nation's
purpose by its educated classes, but of tantrum des
clercs. The entire American intelligentsia was in a
state of hysteria over the war, shouting slogans to
drown out rational discussion and above all refusing to
open its eyes to reality. As the reaction to A Bright
Shining Lie demonstrates, it still is.
An odd feature of Sheehan's book is
that enough facts have survived his emotional
selectivity and analytical ineptitude to refute his
thesis completely. Thus he admits unhesitatingly that
the Vietcong were always a wholly owned subsidiary of
North Vietnam, contrary to ardent antiwar assertions at
the time. He makes it clear that guerrilla warfare was
not some new military magic, as David Halberstam implied
in his influential 1965 book The Making of a Quagmire,
and that it was quickly replaced by conventional
main-force action; that Westmoreland's approach,
whatever its faults, was indeed wearing down the
Communists even before the 1968 Tet Offensive; that Tet
was a military disaster for them; that after Tet their
grip on the countryside was broken; and that Nixon's
1970 incursion into Cambodia achieved its objective in
disrupting North Vietnam's preparations for another
offensive. He even notes that American bombing, which
Vann originally criticized as too indiscriminate for the
detailed war he wanted to fight, did indeed ultimately
have the effect of driving the population into
government-controlled areas where the Communist
influence could not be sustained.
But Sheehan avoids considering the
implications of these facts with perfunctory excuses.
Tet was a "psychological defeat" for the United States.
"Antiwar protests" soon "forced" Nixon to withdraw from
Cambodia. Quite how victory was turned into a
"psychological defeat" and a domestic fifth column
allowed to frustrate America's objectives even as its
soldiers were dying to secure them is never examined.
It is interesting to speculate why
Sheehan's "odyssey" turned out this way. Partly at fault
is the knowledge and wisdom of this Ulysses. Sheehan has
little historical perspective, so he portrays the
Communist victory in Vietnam as inevitable, although the
examples of Malaya, the Philippines, and South Korea
prove the contrary. His anticolonialism prevents him
from seeing that it was the exception rather than the
rule for European colonial powers to fail to establish
friendly successor regimes, and exacerbates his weakness
for debatable and emotive comparisons, particularly with
the American Revolution (a Vietnamese "collaborating"
with the French was "the equivalent of a Tory"). He
asserts at length that Ho Chi Minh could have been an
"Asian Tito" without ever considering the possibility
that he might have been an Asian Castro. He seems to
feel that the North Vietnamese should have been appeased
just because they were nationalists who were better
soldiers than their neighbors. This theory applied in
World War II would have ranged the U.S. on the side of
the Third Reich.
But beyond this is the fact that
Sheehan is an unreconstructed peacenik and a
blame-America-firster, of an unusually primitive kind.
His account of Vietnam's post-World War II history can
be summarized in Orwellian form: Ho Chi Minh good, U.S.
bad. Nowhere in his vast tome is there any hint that
there is any reason why anyone should not want to be
ruled by Communists. Anti-Communism is invariably
presented as "simplistic" or "Manichean." Sheehan's
response to the Communist mass-murder of some three
thousand people in Hue during the Tet Offensive is
notably cool: "The killings were as stupid as they were
cruel. The massacre gave substance to the fear that a
bloodbath would occur should the Communists ever win the
war . . . "The boat people, naturally, are never
mentioned.
A new political generation has
arisen for whom the Vietnam War is merely a rumor. But
for those of us whose youth it pervaded, A Bright
Shining Lie is a reminder that in some sense the
struggle will never end. We will take it to our
graves--and in the case of Neil Sheehan, if the God of
his forefathers is to be relied upon, beyond it.