logo
50 years on, Vietnam War's ecocide still not healed

50 years on, Vietnam War's ecocide still not healed

Asia Times30-04-2025

When the Vietnam War finally ended on April 30, 1975, it left behind a landscape scarred with environmental damage. Vast stretches of coastal mangroves, once housing rich stocks of fish and birds, lay in ruins. Forests that had boasted hundreds of species were reduced to dried-out fragments, overgrown with invasive grasses.
The term 'ecocide' had been coined in the late 1960s to describe the US military's use of herbicides like Agent Orange and incendiary weapons like napalm to battle guerrilla forces that used jungles and marshes for cover.
Fifty years later, Vietnam's degraded ecosystems and dioxin-contaminated soils and waters still reflect the long-term ecological consequences of the war. Efforts to restore these damaged landscapes and even to assess the long-term harm have been limited.
As an environmental scientist and anthropologist who has worked in Vietnam since the 1990s, I find the neglect and slow recovery efforts deeply troubling. Although the war spurred new international treaties aimed at protecting the environment during wartime, these efforts failed to compel post-war restoration for Vietnam.
Current conflicts in Ukraine and the Middle East show these laws and treaties still aren't effective.
The US first sent ground troops to Vietnam in March 1965 to support South Vietnam against revolutionary forces and North Vietnamese troops, but the war had been going on for years before then. To fight an elusive enemy operating clandestinely at night and from hideouts deep in swamps and jungles, the U.S. military turned to environmental modification technologies.
The most well-known of these was Operation Ranch Hand, which sprayed at least 19 million gallons (75 million liters) of herbicides over approximately 6.4 million acres (2.6 million hectares), of South Vietnam.
The chemicals fell on forests, and also on rivers, rice paddies and villages, exposing civilians and troops. More than half of that spraying involved the dioxin-contaminated defoliant Agent Orange. A U.S. Air Force C-123 flies low along a South Vietnamese highway spraying defoliants on dense jungle growth beside the road to eliminate ambush sites during the Vietnam War. Photo: AP via The Conversation / Department of Defense
Herbicides were used to strip the leaf cover from forests, increase visibility along transportation routes and destroy crops suspected of supplying guerrilla forces.
As news of the damage from these tactics made it back to the US, scientists raised concerns about the campaign's environmental impacts to President Lyndon Johnson, calling for a review of whether the US was intentionally using chemical weapons. American military leaders' position was that herbicides did not constitute chemical weapons under the Geneva Protocol, which the US had yet to ratify.
Scientific organizations also initiated studies within Vietnam during the war, finding widespread destruction of mangroves, economic losses of rubber and timber plantations, and harm to lakes and waterways. A photo at the War Remnants Museum in Ho Chi Minh City, historically known as Saigon, shows the damage at Cần Giờ mangrove forest. The mangrove forest was destroyed by herbicides, bombs and plows. Photo: Gary Todd / Flickr via The Conversation
In 1969, evidence linked a chemical in Agent Orange, 2,4,5-T, to birth defects and stillbirths in mice because it contained TCDD, a particularly harmful dioxin. That led to a ban on domestic use and suspension of Agent Orange use by the military in April 1970, with the last mission flown in early 1971.
Incendiary weapons and the clearing of forests also ravaged rich ecosystems in Vietnam.
The US Forest Service tested large-scale incineration of jungles by igniting barrels of fuel oil dropped from planes. Particularly feared by civilians was the use of napalm bombs, with more than 400,000 tons of the thickened petroleum used during the war. After these infernos, invasive grasses often took over in hardened, infertile soils. Fires from napalm and other incendiary weapons cleared stretches of forest, in some cases scorching the soil so badly that nothing would regrow. Photo: AP via The Conversation
'Rome Plows,' massive bulldozers with an armor-fortified cutting blade, could clear 1,000 acres a day. Enormous concussive bombs, known as 'daisy cutters', flattened forests and set off shock waves killing everything within a 3,000-foot (900-meter) radius, down to earthworms in the soil.
The US also engaged in weather modification through Project Popeye, a secret program from 1967 to 1972 that seeded clouds with silver iodide to prolong the monsoon season in an attempt to cut the flow of fighters and supplies coming down the Ho Chi Minh Trail from North Vietnam.
Congress eventually passed a bipartisan resolution in 1973 urging an international treaty to prohibit the use of weather modification as a weapon of war. That treaty came into effect in 1978.
The US military contended that all these tactics were operationally successful as a trade of trees for American lives.
Despite Congress's concerns, there was little scrutiny of the environmental impacts of US military operations and technologies. Research sites were hard to access, and there was no regular environmental monitoring.
After the fall of Saigon to North Vietnamese troops on April 30, 1975, the US imposed a trade and economic embargo on all of Vietnam, leaving the country both war-damaged and cash-strapped.
Vietnamese scientists told me they cobbled together small-scale studies. One found a dramatic drop in bird and mammal diversity in forests. In the A Lưới valley of central Vietnam, 80% of forests subjected to herbicides had not recovered by the early 1980s. Biologists found only 24 bird and five mammal species in those areas, far below normal in unsprayed forests.
Only a handful of ecosystem restoration projects were attempted, hampered by shoestring budgets. The most notable began in 1978, when foresters began hand-replanting mangroves at the mouth of the Saigon River in Cần Giờ forest, an area that had been completely denuded. Mangroves have been replanted in the Cần Giờ Biosphere Reserve near Ho Chi Minh City, but their restoration took decades. Photo: Tho Nau / Flickr, CC BY
In inland areas, widespread tree-planting programs in the late 1980s and 1990s finally took root, but they focused on planting exotic trees like acacia, which did not restore the original diversity of the natural forests.
For years, the US also denied responsibility for Agent Orange cleanup, despite the recognition of dioxin-associated illnesses among US veterans and testing that revealed continuing dioxin exposure among potentially tens of thousands of Vietnamese.
The first remediation agreement between the two countries only occurred in 2006, after persistent advocacy by veterans, scientists and nongovernmental organizations led Congress to appropriate US$3 million for the remediation of the Da Nang airport.
That project, completed in 2018, treated 150,000 cubic meters of dioxin-laden soil at an eventual cost of over $115 million, paid mostly by the US Agency for International Development, or USAID. The cleanup required lakes to be drained and contaminated soil, which had seeped more than 9 feet (3 meters) deeper than expected, to be piled and heated to break down the dioxin molecules. Large amounts of Agent Orange had been stored at the Da Nang airport during the war and contaminated the soil with dioxin. The cleanup project, including heating contaminated soil to high temperatures, was completed in 2018. Photo: Richard Nyberg / USAID via The Conversation
Another major hot spot is the heavily contaminated Biên Hoà airbase, where local residents continue to ingest high levels of dioxin through fish, chicken and ducks.
Agent Orange barrels were stored at the base, which leaked large amounts of the toxin into soil and water, where it continues to accumulate in animal tissue as it moves up the food chain.
Remediation began in 2019; however, further work is at risk with the Trump administration's near elimination of USAID, leaving it unclear if there will be any American experts in Vietnam in charge of administering this complex project.
While Agent Orange's health effects have understandably drawn scrutiny, its long-term ecological consequences have not been well studied.
Current-day scientists have far more options than those 50 years ago, including satellite imagery, which is being used in Ukraine to identify fires, flooding and pollution. However, these tools cannot replace on-the-ground monitoring, which is often restricted or dangerous during wartime.
The legal situation is similarly complex.
In 1977, the Geneva Conventions governing conduct during wartime were revised to prohibit 'widespread, long term, and severe damage to the natural environment.' A 1980 protocol restricted incendiary weapons.
Yet oil fires set by Iraq during the Gulf War in 1991, and recent environmental damage in the Gaza Strip, Ukraine and Syria indicate the limits of relying on treaties when there are no strong mechanisms to ensure compliance. Remediation work to remove dioxin contamination was just getting started at the former Biên Hoà Air Base in Vietnam when USAID's staff was dismantled in 2025. Photo: USAID Vietnam, CC BY-NC / The Conversation
An international campaign currently underway calls for an amendment to the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court to add ecocide as a fifth prosecutable crime alongside genocide, crimes against humanity, war crimes and aggression.
Some countries have adopted their own ecocide laws. Vietnam was the first to legally state in its penal code that 'Ecocide, destroying the natural environment, whether committed in time of peace or war, constitutes a crime against humanity.' Yet the law has resulted in no prosecutions, despite several large pollution cases.
Both Russia and Ukraine also have ecocide laws, but these have not prevented harm or held anyone accountable for damage during the ongoing conflict.
The Vietnam War is a reminder that failure to address ecological consequences, both during war and after, will have long-term effects. What remains in short supply is the political will to ensure that these impacts are neither ignored nor repeated.
Pamela McElwee is professor of human ecology, Rutgers University
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Court allows Trump restrictions on press for now
Court allows Trump restrictions on press for now

RTHK

time2 days ago

  • RTHK

Court allows Trump restrictions on press for now

Court allows Trump restrictions on press for now AP journalists have been barred from the Oval Office for months over the agency's refusal to call the Gulf of Mexico the "Gulf of America" . Photo: Reuters President Donald Trump can bar The Associated Press from some White House media events for now, a federal appeals court ruled Friday, pausing a lower court order to give access to the US news agency's journalists. AP journalists and photographers have been barred from the Oval Office and from traveling on Air Force One since mid-February because of the news agency's decision to continue referring to the "Gulf of Mexico" -- and not the "Gulf of America" as decreed by Trump. In April, district court judge Trevor McFadden deemed that move a violation of the First Amendment to the US Constitution, which guarantees freedom of speech and of the press. But on Friday, a panel of judges with the Washington-based federal appeals court ruled that, pending appeal, the government could go ahead and bar AP from "restricted presidential spaces," which it said did not fall under First Amendment protections. The AP, a 180-year-old news organisation, has so far refused to backtrack on its decision to continue referring to the "Gulf of Mexico." In its style guide, it highlights that the Gulf of Mexico has "carried that name for more than 400 years" and the agency "will refer to it by its original name while acknowledging the new name Trump has chosen." Since Trump returned to the presidency in January, his administration has sought to radically restructure the way the White House is covered, notably by favouring conservative podcasters and influencers. Two weeks after barring the AP, the White House stripped journalists of the nearly century-old power to decide which of the profession's own number will be members of a pool of reporters and photographers covering presidential events. (AFP)

Ex-district councillor's candle shop inspected by Hong Kong customs officers on eve of Tiananmen anniversary
Ex-district councillor's candle shop inspected by Hong Kong customs officers on eve of Tiananmen anniversary

HKFP

time5 days ago

  • HKFP

Ex-district councillor's candle shop inspected by Hong Kong customs officers on eve of Tiananmen anniversary

Hong Kong customs officers inspected ex-district councillor Katrina Chan's incense shop for hours on the eve of the Tiananmen crackdown anniversary, accusing her of failing to comply with product safety regulations. Two plainclothes officers, who later introduced themselves as Customs and Excise Department (C&ED) personnel, visited Chan's shop, Heung Together, in Dragon Centre in Sham Shui Po with three other customs officers on Tuesday evening. The plainclothes officers bought products from the shop twice within the span of 20 minutes on Tuesday evening. They told her she was suspected of violating the Consumer Goods Safety Regulation because she had failed to include bilingual safety labels on products. Inspections of the products lasted more than four hours, from 7.30pm to around 11.40pm, after the mall had already closed. The officers photographed and seized some of the products Chan was selling but did not arrest her. Candles for $6.4 Chan, who served as Tsuen Wan district councillor from 2019 to 2021, sold soy wax candles for '$6.4' on Tuesday, one day before June 4, the anniversary of the 1989 Tiananmen crackdown. A customs officer at the scene said that Tuesday's operation was part of a routine inspection. When asked if the team had inspected other shops at Dragon Centre on the same day, he said he could not reveal operational details. At least five other plainclothes officers, who a customs officer said were not part of the department's team, stood in the vicinity of the shop, regularly rotating positions. Just before midnight, two of the officers identified themselves as police officers to Chan, saying they were at the scene to observe the customs officers and that they did not know the other unidentified men in plainclothes. Throughout the inspections, Chan said the presence of the unidentified men left her feeling uneasy. When reporters on the scene began recording the exchange between Chan and the two police officers, the officers asked them to stop, saying it was a 'private conversation.' HKFP has reached out to the C&ED and the police force for comment. Chan said last month that she was being 'silenced' after being ousted from her job and a theatre production she was part of. In May last year, she and five others were arrested under the city's homegrown security law, also known as Article 23. Their arrests were linked to a Facebook page called 'Chow Hang-tung Club,' named after the activist who was the vice chairperson of the Hong Kong Alliance in Support of Patriotic Democratic Movements of China. The Alliance once organised the city's annual Tiananmen vigils until Hong Kong police banned the Tiananmen vigil gathering at Victoria Park for the first time in 2020, citing Covid-19 restrictions. The ban was imposed again in 2021, nearly a year after a national security law imposed by Beijing came into effect. The Tiananmen crackdown occurred on June 4, 1989, ending months of student-led demonstrations in China. It is estimated that hundreds, perhaps thousands, died when the People's Liberation Army cracked down on protesters in Beijing.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store