The Commercial Appeal

Navy’s visit to Vietnam is a show of peace, cooperatio­n

- History Lessons Guest columnist

“The fruits of decades of effort … to build bilateral trust” is how U.S. Ambassador to Vietnam Dan Kritenbrin­k describes the dramatic visit of our aircraft carrier the USS Carl Vinson to that country. The magnificen­t U.S. Navy vessel is on a mission of peace, serving as a symbol of steadily expanding cooperatio­n between two nations once at war.

The Vietnam War was for the U.S. the most divisive since the Civil War. Intense controvers­y led in American domestic life to physical violence as well as emotional and political turbulence during the chaotic 1960’s.

The destructio­n visited on the Vietnamese, Cambodian and Laotian people was vast. Costs of the war resonate in human terms in both Southeast Asia and the United States.

Contempora­ry human experience can mitigate past tragedy. U.S. Navy Commander Hien Trinh is part of the crew of the Carl Vinson. His family fled Vietnam in a tiny fishing vessel after the fall of Saigon in 1975. A U.S. Navy ship rescued the family, which inspired CDR Trinh to join our military. He manages the dental facility on the ship.

Current improvemen­t in relations with Vietnam reflect concern about assertiven­ess of China, including military expansion. Beijing and Hanoi have serious disagreeme­nts about maritime juThere risdiction­s.

Both Presidents Bush contribute­d to cooperatio­n with Vietnam. President George H.W. Bush and Secretary of State James Baker deserve great credit for supporting APEC (Asia Pacific Economic Cooperatio­n).

Australia Prime Minister Bob Hawke conceived the organizati­on and hosted the first summit in 1989.

The formation of APEC complement­ed and reinforced other strategic achievemen­ts of this Bush administra­tion. Bush, Baker and associates skillfully maneuvered through the collapse of the Soviet Union and end of the Cold War.

The administra­tion of President George W. Bush supported the 2006 APEC summit held in Hanoi, the capital of Vietnam. That gathering provided a useful opportunit­y to highlight that nation’s economic growth and the wider commitment to multilater­alism. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld was warmly welcomed to Vietnam, with a special parade in his honor, which included playing the U.S. national anthem.

For years after Hanoi’s 1975 military victory, the newly unified nation was frustrated by inability to turn military and political revolution into economic developmen­t. Vietnam did not join the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations until 1995, nearly three decades after the creation of the regional developmen­t organizati­on.

The 2006 summit was a remarkable substantiv­e and symbolic success. was strong commitment to multilater­alism and the vital importance of working with allies and through establishe­d regional and global institutio­ns.

The summiteers not only restated support of long-term efforts toward freer trade, they also addressed military security, calling on North Korea to abandon nuclear weapons developmen­t and return to six-party talks. Representa­tives of generally Capitalist economies, meeting in a principal city of one of the few remaining Communist political systems, collective­ly called on the secluded leaders of another Communist state to cease this very threatenin­g military activity.

The Pacific region generally lacks the establishe­d network of economic and military organizati­ons that help define Atlantic region relationsh­ips. For this reason, the annual APEC summits are especially significan­t.

Partners in this Asia organizati­on have proven willing to expand their reach to include cooperatio­n with explicitly military dimensions. This complement­s U.S. treaties with Australia, Japan and South Korea.

For decades, the Cold War defined relationsh­ips among nations. Today, economic realities undermine ideology. Celebrate the peaceful U.S. visit to Vietnam.

Arthur I. Cyr is Clausen Distinguis­hed Professor at Carthage College in Wisconsin and author of “After the Cold War.” Contact acyr@carthage.ed.

 ?? EPA-EFE ?? A sailor of the USS Carl Vinson, center, learns to make incense during a visit to a center for Agent Orange victims in Da Nang, Vietnam, this month.
EPA-EFE A sailor of the USS Carl Vinson, center, learns to make incense during a visit to a center for Agent Orange victims in Da Nang, Vietnam, this month.
 ?? Arthur Cyr ??
Arthur Cyr

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