Sun.Star Cebu

VIETNAM WAR LINGERS

US envoy visits Hanoi for defense diplomacy; pursues missing servicemen search

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It’s been over for 40-plus years, the war that Americans simply call Vietnam but the Vietnamese refer to as their Resistance War Against America.

Yet it lingers in so many ways, as was apparent this week when Defense Secretary Jim Mattis dropped in for a couple of days of defense diplomacy with a former enemy. Although he never served in Vietnam and had not previously visited the country, Mattis has said he learned from a lot of Marines who did.

In his meeting with Vietnamese government leaders, Mattis’ focus was on a peaceful future. Not the bloody past.

Still, the legacy of the conflict that divided America and ultimately unified Vietnam confronted Mattis almost immediatel­y after his arrival on Wednesday as he visited a US office that oversees the search for remains of American servicemen still missing from the war.

More than 1,200 Americans are unaccounte­d for in Vietnam and 350 more are missing in Laos, Cambodia and China, according to the Pentagon’s POW-MIA Accounting Agency. That accounting effort, decades in the making and dependent on cooperatio­n from Hanoi, is likely to continue for decades.

Later, while talking to his Vietnamese counterpar­t, Mattis was presented with photo identifica­tion cards of two US servicemen from the war. Details weren’t made public.

More than 58,000 US service members were killed in the war, including more than 1,200 in Cambodia and Laos.

Estimates of the number of Vietnamese killed vary widely, from about 2 million to nearly twice that. /

 ??  ?? WAR LEGACY. A 1970 photograph showing US soldiers descending from a helicopter after a sweep east of the Cambodian town of PreyVeng during the Vietnam War.
WAR LEGACY. A 1970 photograph showing US soldiers descending from a helicopter after a sweep east of the Cambodian town of PreyVeng during the Vietnam War.

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