- The Washington Times - Wednesday, April 30, 2025

SEOUL, South KoreaVietnam marked the 50th anniversary of national unification Wednesday with fireworks, a flyover of jets and a parade featuring a portrait of independence leader Ho Chi Minh on a giant lotus leaf through the city named after him.

Thousands lining the parade route waved red flags and sang patriotic songs as they celebrated the capture of South Vietnam’s capital, Saigon, by North Vietnamese forces on April 30, 1975. The outcome was the unified communist state of Vietnam, with its capital in Hanoi. Saigon was renamed Ho Chi Minh City.

One informed visitor was struck by the profusion of flags of the National Liberation Front — the Viet Cong, or southern communist guerrillas — given that Saigon fell to North Vietnamese troops.



“That tells me Hanoi has a message of unity. They are trying to keep the south from feeling left out or restive,” said Don Kirk, an 86-year-old American reporter who covered the war from 1966 to 1973 and was an invited guest of Vietnam’s Press Bureau. “In the south, they don’t feel terribly dominated and they can make money, but they can’t speak out against the regime.”

The victory of the communist North over the democratic South was a profound disaster for 1.2 million refugees who fled Vietnam and for U.S. prestige.

A war America couldn’t win


SEE ALSO: Vietnam 50 years after unification: A complex legacy


U.S. troops had fought Asian communist forces with fair success a decade earlier, and South Korea survived as a state.

GIs fought for South Vietnam from 1965 to 1973. With 58,000 dead, it was America’s bloodiest conflict since World War II.

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Despite building massive bases and deploying colossal firepower, Washington failed to break the will of the North Vietnamese and Viet Cong. Instead, the will on the U.S. homefront cracked as television media beamed the war into living rooms.

Some footage was glamorous: jungle patrols, helicopter assaults and airstrikes scored by rock ’n’ roll.

Still, much imagery was disturbing: flaming villages, children scorched by napalm, South Vietnamese executing prisoners.

“I think U.S. media did contribute to feeling against the war by acting as if we were screwing up all the time and reporting the futility of what we were doing,” Mr. Kirk said by telephone from Vietnam, which he covered for the Chicago Tribune and other outlets. “Big media were basically anti-war: They were interested in showing how stupid we were.”

That factor, combined with Saigon’s corruption, a surprise communist offensive in 1968 and revelations of a massacre in My Lai by U.S. troops, turned many Americans against the war.

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Some portrayed Washington’s stance as imperialist. Protests rocked campuses, and veterans were abused.

“For the first time in history, the Yanks were definitely the bad boys,” said Gastone Breccia, a military historian at the University of Pavia. “They were incapable of conquering a small, defiant people.”

Some point to U.S. leadership failures.

“In Vietnam, if [Army Gen. Dwight D.] Eisenhower had been president, the war would have lasted about a year,” former U.S. House speaker Newt Gingrich said during a recent trip to the region. “He understood winning.”

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Though U.S. forces were largely undefeated, they were outmaneuvered as North Vietnamese troops massed in neighboring Laos and Cambodia.

GIs withdrew in 1973, the year the draft ended.

By 1975, as North Vietnam advanced, Washington had no appetite for intervention. While the U.S. Navy rescued evacuees, Saigon’s forces fought their final battles alone.

Multiple legacies for multiple players

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Since Vietnam, professionalized U.S. forces have prevailed in short conflicts such as Grenada, Panama and the Persian Gulf War, but not in sustained battle zones, including Somalia, Iraq and Afghanistan.

For Vietnam, the end of the fighting did not mean the end of war. In 1978, it invaded Cambodia, ejected the murderous Khmer Rouge and occupied the country until 1989.

In 1979, China, which had aided North Vietnam and supported the Khmer Rouge, invaded Vietnam, sparking a two-month border war. Chinese troops, lacking Vietnamese combat expertise, were bloodied.

China and Vietnam last exchanged fire in 1988 in the South China Sea, where territorial disputes over reefs and shoals still simmer.

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One of Hanoi’s key communist backers ignored a core lesson of Vietnam: that a technologically advanced army may fail against determined peasant adversaries.

“Four-and-a-half years after the liberation, or fall, of Saigon, Moscow’s communists would have acquired their own Vietnam by invading Afghanistan,” Mr. Breccia said.

U.S. military leadership refocused on big war.

“That paid off in Desert Storm,” said retired Special Forces Col. David Maxwell, but in what he called an “ironic legacy,” it forgot Vietnam’s lessons when battling insurgents in Iraq and Afghanistan.

“Most of the military, except Special Forces and the [U.S. Army John F. Kennedy Special Warfare Center and School], purged most of the doctrine in counterinsurgency because the military believed it would never conduct such a war as Vietnam again,” Mr. Maxwell said.

Some combatants, such as Australia, suffered trauma similar to America’s. For South Korea, the U.S. ally that supplied the largest troop contingent in Vietnam, outcomes were nuanced.

Washington’s support for dictatorial Seoul regimes “postponed democracy for decades,” said Korean-American scholar Tae Yang Kwak, whose Harvard doctoral thesis explored the issue.

Still, there were economic upsides.

“Over 300,000 South Korean soldiers fought, and around 100,000 civilian contractors labored in South Vietnam over the course of the war,” leading to an “economic boom” for South Korea “and also for hundreds of thousands of families lifted into the middle class by salary remissions,” Mr. Kwak said.

A resilient people

Hanoi has rebuilt relations with Washington and Beijing. Though communist, Vietnam, like China, has unleashed controlled capitalism across its economy.

Integrated into global supply chains, it benefits from overspill from China’s huge manufacturing sector and investment from countries including South Korea.

Western warships frequently visit Vietnam, and Western arms firms view it as a promising market.

Tourists from around the world visit its attractions, including war sites Hoa Lo Prison, ironically dubbed the “Hanoi Hilton” by U.S. captives, and widened Viet Cong tunnels at Cu Chi, near Ho Chi Minh City.

For Mr. Kirk, who had just visited Cu Chi, Vietnam’s resilience stood out.

“There is no doubt that life’s a heck of a lot better now. It’s amazing how Vietnam has recovered,” he said. “How and why did we spend so much time here, and what could we have done differently to have ended mass suffering on all sides?”

• Andrew Salmon can be reached at asalmon@washingtontimes.com.

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