President John F. Kennedy’s administration had decided to increase America’s commitment to help South Vietnam fight off communist insurgents from the Liberation Army of South Vietnam, often referred to by the Americans as the Viet Cong, and Halberstam would be there to write about what happened. While in South Vietnam he also encountered one of his heroes—veteran journalist Richard Tregaskis, whose work from the frontlines of World War II Halberstam knew well.
Tregaskis and Halberstam also supported the Kennedy administration’s commitment to resisting communism in Vietnam and shepherding its government toward democracy. Halberstam feared that “if the Vietnamese, who are perhaps the toughest people in Southeast Asia, fell to the Communists, the pressure on the other shaky new nations would be intolerable.” He believed that just as America’s commitment to South Korea in the early 1950s had discouraged “overt Communist border crossings ever since, an anti-Communist victory in Vietnam would serve to discourage so-called wars of liberation” in other countries in the region.
Tregaskis must have heard the rosy scenarios outlined by the top officials in Vietnam, and Halberstam wanted him to talk to lower-ranking U.S. officers he trusted and knew would offer the visiting writer an accurate assessment of the war’s lack of progress and problems with the American-backed government of President Ngo Dinh Diem. Halberstam decided to take the forty-five-year-old Tregaskis on a daylong excursion to review how the war was going in My Tho, located south of Saigon in the critical Mekong Delta. The area had been the site of a sharp engagement between the ARVN and VC at a small hamlet known as Ap Bac on January 2, 1963. The guerrilla forces stood their ground against ARVN soldiers ferried into the battlefield via U.S. helicopters, as well as troops attacking from M-113 armored personnel carriers.
In Halberstam’s estimation his day with Tregaskis had gone well, as the veteran reporter had been well informed about the severe challenges ahead, especially the ARVN’s inadequacies in the field. But Tregaskis did not react to this information as Halberstam had expected.
Years later, Halberstam recounted that the older reporter had turned and said to him: “If I were doing what you are doing, I’d be ashamed of myself.” Halberstam likened Tregaskis’s comment to being slapped in the face, especially because he had a “reverence toward World War II people and Korean War people,” noting his father had been a medic in World War I and a combat surgeon in World War II.
As for Tregaskis, he made no mention of such an incident in his Vietnam book, nor did he directly disparage the young reporter’s work anywhere in the volume. But in a review of Halberstam’s 1965 book The Making of a Quagmire for the Chicago Tribune, Tregaskis quoted Nolting’s description of the Times reporter: “He’s always looking for the hole in the doughnut,” which Tregaskis viewed as apt, considering Halberstam’s “fundamental attitude in covering the Viet Nam war: that something must be wrong rather than right with it.”
As Halberstam pointed out, however, the senior U.S. officials in South Vietnam, who had been urging reporters to “get on the team,” had lost their credibility with him and other journalists through their own mendacity. They continually lied to a group of tough, talented young reporters “whose friends are being killed, who have seen guys their own age killed, who are risking their lives themselves. Go and lie to them and then try to court-martial their sources. That will draw lines in the sand.”
Halberstam, who shared the Pulitzer Prize for international reporting in 1964 with the AP’s Browne, pointed out that since mid-1962 some American military officers had turned to the handful of reporters in Saigon, using them as a conduit to air their complaints and skepticism to the public and government officials in Washington, DC. “The journalists kept showing up in the countryside,” Halberstam recalled, “and it was only a matter of time before they saw how hollow the entire operation was, how many lies were being told, and how fraudulent the war was.” Eventually he added, a “version of the war and the [Diem] regime, far more pessimistic, began to surface in the American press.”
President Kennedy’s aides remembered a time when the president, reading Halberstam’s stories from Vietnam in the Times, exploded with frustration: “Why can I get this stuff from Halberstam when I can’t get it from my own people?” Tregaskis maintained that top diplomats in Vietnam complained to him that the president gave “more attention to Halberstam’s dispatches than to the reports of all his own people there.”
The uncharitable view Tregaskis held of Halberstam, and the other young reporters based in Vietnam who questioned the official, optimistic view of events from top administration officials there, seemed to be prompted by his experiences in combat during World War II; his unflinching belief to the end of his life in the need for the United States to respond forcefully to communist aggression, especially in Vietnam; and his continued admiration for the skill and bravery of U.S. troops in the field.
No comments:
Post a Comment