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Southeast Asia
From bombers to Big Macs: Vietnam a lesson in reconciliation
2019-02-23
HANOI, Vietnam (AP) ‐ The Vietnamese capital once trembled as waves of American bombers unleashed their payloads, but when Kim Jong Un arrives here for his summit with President Donald Trump he won’t find rancor toward a former enemy. Instead the North Korean leader will get a glimpse at the potential rewards of reconciliation.

By the time the Vietnam War ended in 1975, tens of thousands of tons of explosives had been dropped on Hanoi and nearly two decades of fighting had killed 3 million Vietnamese and more than 58,000 Americans. Vietnam, though victorious, lay devastated by American firepower, with cities in ruins and fields and forests soaked in toxic herbicides and littered with unexploded ordnance.

Despite the conflict’s savagery, what followed was a remarkable rapprochement between wartime foes and it took merely 20 years to restore full relations.

Now some hope Vietnam will offer Kim a road map for his own detente with the United States and that the formerly besieged capital city will be the site of a dramatic resolution to one of the last remaining Cold War conflicts.
Posted by:Besoeker

#2  IIRC, a US officer going to Vietnam post-war was treated to the following anecdote by his NVA counterpart: "We knew you would leave in ten years or so. It took us a thousand years to drive out the Chinese!"
Posted by: magpie   2019-02-23 17:27  

#1  The Vietnamese are not BFFs with the Chicoms. I see deeper meanings in the Trump — Kim summit venue. Maybe.
Posted by: Alaska Paul   2019-02-23 13:35  

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