Wow... maybe those areas were engulfed in violence because of the Vietnam war happening in the first place (rather than the subsequent defeat/withdrawl).
I know from first hand experience that there are STILL to this day remenant factions of CIA trained militia forces fighting in Laos. I had to have an AK-47 equiped guide (or two) with me at all times when i ventured into the hilltribe areas of central Laos last year. And they were all equiped, indoctrinated, and fighting because of the Vietnam war itself - not because the Americans left. And they would NOT have been equiped, trained, or indoctrinated (by either side) had the Vietnam War not happened (or played out in the way it did).
Before your quote come this quote, which i think is a more accurate view (and i am not sure why the author goes off in another direction after stating it):
Quote:
I wrote a book called Sideshow, which was very critical of the way in which the United States had brought war to Cambodia while trying to extricate itself from Vietnam.
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He later says:
Quote:
I still believe the overthrow of Saddam Hussein was the correct thing to do — and it was something only the United States could have done. For all the horrors that extremist Sunnis and Shias are inflicting on each other today, the US rid the world of the Pol Pot of the Middle East. So long as the vile Saddam family regime remained in power there was no hope of progress in the region.
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(1) Saddam was hardly Pol Pot. (2) Sanctions had left Saddam essentially powerless outside his country and would have even more so had the USA been more interested in using their considerable power to better enforce them and (3) Saddam was non-religious (near the very end of his rule he embraced a tentative Muslim stance, but it is widely believed he did so to maintain power in an ever poorer country and not of sincere devotion), non-extremist and (in comparative terms) was one of the most enlightened leaders in the Middle East prior to the Gulf War and had brought in the best educational reforms, business and trade reforms, etc. and (4) was a GOOD friend to the United States and the Republican party.
And concludes with:
(a)
Quote:
The consequences of an American defeat in Iraq would be even worse than in IndoChina.
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Exactly - but it is not the defeat that is the problem, it was the thoughtless and hurried ENTRY to the theater of war that was the problem.
(b)
Quote:
As the al-Qaeda leader in Iraq, Musab al-Zarqawi, said before he was killed by a US air strike: “The shedding of Muslim blood is allowed in order to disrupt the greater evil of disrupting jihad.”
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He seems to forget, almost laughably, that Al Qaida was NEVER welcome in Iraq when Saddam was in power, extremist Muslim views were NEVER welcome under Saddam, and that the wider 'war on terror' came to Iraq only AFTER America invaded.
Pretty poor and inconsistant viewpoints on the authors part.
Claeren.