Tyler Cowen blogs about Nick Turse’s recent book on the US-Vietnam war, Kill Anything That Moves.
I’ve been reading it too over the last couple of weeks during
infrequent breaks, and have found it extraordinary and horrifying. Turse
managed to get access to internal files generated by investigations
into possible crimes committed by US troops in Vietnam, and combines
this with interviews both with US army veterans and Vietnamese people.
The record is partial (it’s clear from Turse’s account that the US
archives have been weeded for embarrassing material and that he’s lucky
to have found what he did) but damning. My Lai was closer to being the
rule than the exception. Casual murder by US troops of women, children
and old people as well as young men, torture, rape and collective
reprisals were endemic, even before one gets into the more impersonal
forms of slaughter.
http://crookedtimber.org/2013/08/16/vietnam-and-historical-forgetting/
http://crookedtimber.org/2013/08/16/vietnam-and-historical-forgetting/
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