Monday, January 02, 2017

A visit to China and Viet Nam

My blogger friend Bookworm is enjoying an Asian trip. She planned it so she could have a layover in Beijing, and is now in Viet Nam. While getting a brief tour around Beijing, she wrote,
Our guide quoted Mao a great deal so, while I did not feel that he is revered, he is still a presence. It just goes to show that dictators will be forgiven if they kill only their own people. It’s when they go out and start world wars, only to lose them, that their reputation gets blackened.

She visited the tunnels
outside of Saigon that the Viet Cong built as a headquarters, a trap, and a base for operations. Visitors actually see only a small part of the tunnels themselves, with the rest being above ground recreations.

The tunnels reveal that the Viet Cong were a resilient, ingenious, and very small people. Resilient because they functioned entirely underground despite massive US bombardments; ingenious because they turned the entire region into a death trap for US troops, complete with snipers and hidden holes filled with bamboo spears, metal spikes, poisonous snakes, and scorpions for unlucky soldiers; and very small because I found the small portions of tunnels open to the public hard to walk through and I’m only five feet tall (about 2.5 feet when bent double, as was necessary for me to traverse the tunnels). Oh, and the entire tunnel network was dug out in a region with high temperatures, high humidity, and fun things such as malaria.

That the American troops who fought the Viet Cong didn’t win wasn’t for want of courage or effort though. I was left with a deep respect for those young American men who entered that lush, dangerous jungle in the service of a government that fought a winnable war stupidly — but more on that when I’m not on an iPad and am less tired.
Read more here, and see her photos.

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