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http://www.guardian.co.uk/Iraq/Story/0,2763,930158,00.html

Hearts, minds and bodybags

Iraq can't be a Vietnam, pundits insist. Those who were there know better

James Fox
Saturday April 5, 2003
The Guardian

In Vietnam in 1972 there was a hearts and minds programme called chieu
hoi to entice the population in the south to rally to the government. The
late Gavin Young of the Observer quipped: "I think the Americans have
bitten off more than they can chieu hoi ." Is this the case with Iraq if,
whatever happens in Baghdad, liberation turns to occupation and
resistance?

To lose the hearts and minds, which the Americans have surely done so far
in Iraq, would surely be to lose the war, whatever the strategic results.
But don't whisper "Vietnam", and certainly "quagmire", the word with
which the Iraqis daily taunt the Americans. To do so in print has invited
the reflex denial that the topography - desert versus jungle - is different
and not good for guerrilla war; that Vietnam took 10 years to lose and
we've been here two weeks. One historian wrote last week that the Iraqis
were not "politicised as the Vietnamese were by the Vietcong", a startling
observation given the evidence of recent days. Nationalism, patriotism and
fatwas from the Arab world are surely enough. Iraqi strategists, according
to one Arab editor, study Vietnam constantly. And they talk of it too. Not
only will 100 Bin Ladens be unleashed by this struggle, they say, but "100
Vietnams". "Let our cities be our swamps and our buildings our jungles,"
Tariq Aziz told the Institute of Strategic Studies before war began.
Yesterday Iraq's information minister, Mohammed Saeed al-Sahaf, talked of
turning Iraq into "another Indochina". Has Baghdad become a mini Ho Chi
Minh trail of hidden tunnels and arsenals?

George C Scott, as General Patton in the eponymous film, hisses: "Rommel,
you sonofabitch, I read your book". The key book for the Iraqis was
written by General Vo Nguyen Giap, the brilliant architect of the war
against the French and the Americans. It was published in English in 1961,
under the title People's War, People's Army, long before the US war in
Vietnam hotted up. Though full of partyspeak, it shows how easy it is to
hold up and demoralise a hugely superior army that has a long supply
convoy. Giap exploited what he called "the contradictions of the
aggressive colonial war". The invaders have to fan out and operate far from
their bases. When they deploy, said Giap, "their broken-up units become
easy prey". First harass the enemy, "rotting" away his rear and reserves,
forcing him to deploy troops to defend bases and perimeters.

"Is the enemy strong?" wrote Giap. "One avoids him. Is he weak? One
attacks him." There will never be enough troops to hold down the
scattered guerrilla forces. General William Westmoreland, commander of
US forces in Vietnam, estimated that he would have needed 2 million
troops to "pacify" the country. At the peak of the war he had half that
number. You can apply the principle to Baghdad or the country beyond -
the topography matters less than the principle. Commanders talk of their
puzzlement at Republican Guard units "melting away" after the onslaught of
last week. Are they preparing a trap?

It was astonishing to read of the surprise on the part of the military at the
Iraqis' methods. The commander of the Desert Rats said that their "terror
tactics" were "outside the rules of war", although anyone who has
attended a war knows there aren't any rules. Hue was the last pitched
battle fought by the Americans during the 1968 Tet offensive. In that
battle, 5,000 Vietcong infiltrators climbed out of their civilian clothes in
the city to reveal their North Vietnamese uniforms. General Westmoreland
complained that Tet "was characterised by treachery and deceitfulness" -
the same outrageous methods Bush speaks about today.

The Americans were surprised and outraged by the Vietnamese tactics
right to the end, consistently underestimating the North Vietnamese
army's strength and determination. I remember the shock in 1972 when the
North Vietnamese launched a fierce barrage far from its bases with deeply
dug-in 130mm guns south of the demilitarised zone. Giap had stockpiled
massive underground arsenals.

The Iraq campaign has swiftly changed from a "hearts and minds" operation
of liberation to one of winning the war. The Anglo-American forces have
not won the cooperation of the local population that is so vital for
military-political control. From the Iraqi point of view, since you can't win,
the only real weapon is the demoralisation of the enemy, keeping the war
going as long as possible and uniting the population against them. Mark
Franchetti reported vividly last weekend on frightened marines shooting up
any taxi that moved, describing the fresh-faced soldiers he had met a few
days ealier turning into scared, demoralised killers - echoes again of the
Vietnam era.

Giap wanted to wage a protracted guerrilla war of attrition and mount a
parallel political offensive aimed at the US democratic system, which would
not bear for ever a long, inconclusive war. The Iraqis are doing the same.
What took years to build up in the US during the Vietnam war - scepticism
and finally widespread opposition - could happen in just weeks with the
help of 24-hour television. Now the actual speed and success of the war
will come down to whether the Americans are prepared to kill civilians
more or less indiscriminately, as Saddam does and Giap did before him. If it
is a question of televised bodybags versus civilians, the civilians will have to
go.

Finally, there is the Giap maxim: "War without politics is like a a tree
without a root." At the moment, the coalition politics stink. It is impossible
for Rumsfeld, and perhaps also Tony Blair, to understand how insulting it is
to be told what "liberation" is by a superpower you have reason to
distrust. The doctrine forgets how instructed Iraqis are with a deep sense
of their history, as were the Vietnamese and as are the Palestinians, now
coming to fight in Iraq because they fear they may be next.

I remember, too, in Vietnam in 1972 the anger among the South
Vietnamese - even when facing defeat - at being denied a hand in their
own destiny. The sentiment was eloquently put by one Iraqi in Basra last
week: "Even if I do not support Saddam, I do not want the invasion. They
want to change the system but this is not the way. This way there will be
only death, the death of children and women."

Maybe the Iraqis who simply want to defend their country out of
patriotism should be taken at their word; that Baghdad is indeed the first
quagmire they advertise. It can't be besieged because that would lose any
final support for the coalition cause. In house-to-house fighting it will take,
according to one military expert, a battalion to clear one office block; the
battle could last many weeks or even months. If air strikes are used, it will
kill many civilians and wreck any last hope of cooperation.

"What if they get to Baghdad and nobody's home?" asks Dan Plesch, senior
researcher at the Royal United Services Institute, "if they've all melted
away to the towns set in the marshes of the Tigris?" With or without
Saddam, the guerrilla war then extends to the country beyond and then
perhaps to the whole Arab world, whose united desire at the moment,
according to Egypt's leading newspaper, is to see the "invincible" US
defeated, in whatever cause.

· James Fox reported from Vietnam for the Sunday Times in the early
1970s. He is the author of White Mischief and The Langhorne Sisters

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the authority of teachers, elders or wise men.  Believe only after
careful observation and analysis, when you find that it agrees with
reason and is conducive to the good and benefit of one and all.
Then accept it and live up to it." The Buddha on Belief,
from the Kalama Sutra

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