The Phnom Penh Post

Back in the Delta, Kerry meets former Viet Cong foe

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VIET Cong veteranVo Ban Tam remembers the first time he crossed paths with John Kerry on the banks on the Bay Hap river, a day that ended in bloodshed.

Almost a half-century later, the now 70-year-old Mekong Delta shrimp farmer locked eyes with the US secretary of state on Saturday and they warmly grasped hands in mutual respect.

Kerry returned to the Vietnam waterway at the end of a visit to the communist nation, less than a week before he was to leave office, searching for the spot where he won a Silver Star for bravery as a young US Navy lieutenant.

On February 28, 1969, as the skipper of Swift Boat PCF-94, Kerry was patrolling when Vo Ban Tam’s unit launched an ambush.

The plan, the Vietnamese guerilla told his former adversary on Saturday, was to use rifle and grenade fire to lure the heavily-armed American craft into range of a shoulder-held rocket launcher.

This tactic had paid off for the Viet Cong in the past, but on this day Kerry made a dramatic decision, deliberate­ly beaching his boat then storming ashore to pursue the operator.

Grabbing an M-16 rifle the then 26-year-old chased down the guerrilla and shot him dead, saving his crew from a counteratt­ack.

Vo Ban Tam remembered the dead man, 24-year-old Ba Thanh, as a respected member of the Viet Cong’s main force in Ca Mau province, trained to use the prized launcher.

“He was a good soldier,” he recalled, speaking through an interprete­r on the banks of same river, shortly after Kerry revisited the scene of the ambush for the first time.

Kerr y had never before learned the name of the man he shot. During his unsuccessf­ul 2004 White House campaign, opponents tarnished his war record by claiming he killed a teenager.

But US officials preparing for Kerry’s visit tracked down Vo Ban Tam and his account confirmed Kerry’s memory that his slain adversary was an adult.

Vo Ban Tam admitted that thanks to Kerry’s action the Viet Cong had not been victorious that day. But he recalled proudly how his comrades often had the upper hand.

“We were guerrillas, we were never there where you were shooting,” he boasted, telling Kerry they could hear his boat coming that day a kilometre off.

“Well, I’m glad we’re both alive,” Kerry said.

To die for a mistake?

Kerry returned from Vietnam later in 1969. Despite holding Silver and Bronze stars for valour and three Purple Hearts for being wounded in action, he became a prominent anti-war activist.

The tall, young, erudite Yale graduate stood out among veterans and his devastatin­g testimony before a Senate committee in 1971 sealed his celebrity.

He forecast thatWashin­gton’s searchand-destroy missions and brutal pacificati­on measures would fail to overcome theVietnam­ese determinat­ion to resist foreign occupation.

On behalf of his own American comrades in arms, he famously demanded: “How can you ask a man to be the last man to die for a mistake?”

 ?? ALEX BRANDON/AFP ?? US Secretary of State John Kerry (left) shakes hands with Vo Ban Tam, 70, who was a member of the former Viet Cong and who took part in the attack on Kerry’s boat on February 28, 1969, while on a tour of the region, in the Mekong River Delta, on...
ALEX BRANDON/AFP US Secretary of State John Kerry (left) shakes hands with Vo Ban Tam, 70, who was a member of the former Viet Cong and who took part in the attack on Kerry’s boat on February 28, 1969, while on a tour of the region, in the Mekong River Delta, on...

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