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Why many people in Vietnam now have a positive view of Americans 50 years after the war
Why many people in Vietnam now have a positive view of Americans 50 years after the war

Sky News

time30-04-2025

  • Politics
  • Sky News

Why many people in Vietnam now have a positive view of Americans 50 years after the war

On the streets of Ho Chi Minh City, it's a sea of red. The streets are filled with national flags and thousands of troops and civilians smiling widely in patriotic dress. Some people have camped out overnight to make sure they get the early morning display of military might-fighter jets and helicopters decorating the skies above. 50 years after the unification of Vietnam, this is a celebration of national pride, revolutionary heroism and victory against the odds. At the statue of former North Vietnam president Ho Chi Minh, we meet Nguyen Ngoc Xuan Mai. She's beaming. "We have so much joy," she tells me. "We celebrate it together. I feel so grateful because [of] what my ancestors did in the past. So that we can have today." The legacy of the Vietnam war - a bloody battle between communist North and US-backed South Vietnam - is a complex one. Around three million Vietnamese lost their lives and about 58,000 Americans. It exposed the limits of American military power and in the US there was huge backlash. The psychological scars on both sides were profound and it altered the political landscape. The impact of Agent Orange, a notorious chemical defoliant used by US forces over Vietnam to destroy jungles is still being deeply felt. It was a hugely toxic defoliant and from the 1960s onwards, doctors saw a sharp rise in birth defects and cancers. Decades later, those victims are still suffering and now they have the added worry of a possible cut in US funding to help with their medical needs. And yet, on the streets of the city that was renamed from Saigon after the US departed, it is not an anti-American feeling you sense. Far from it in fact. Despite their history, many Vietnamese have a positive view of Americans - they see them as forward-looking. Part of that is the cultural exchange and economic benefits they have felt from normalised relationships and the high number of products Vietnam exports to America. A defining and iconic image of the Vietnam War was taken by Pulitzer Prize winning photographer Nick Ut. It shows a nine-year-old girl running naked on a road after being severely burned in a napalm attack by the South Vietnamese Air Force. Mr Ut has returned to Ho Chi Minh City. He tells me he stills speaks to that girl, now a woman, every week. She's called Kim and she lives in Toronto. "I feel like I took that picture yesterday," he tells me. "I always think about that day in the village and the victim, the little girl. She's like a daughter to me." In his first term, Donald Trump invited Mr Ut to the White House. He tells me the president held up a framed copy of the photograph to a packed room and said: "This man's image stopped the war." It certainly became a powerful symbol of the war, influencing global public opinion and anti-war movements. Now in his second term, Mr Trump is threatening Vietnam with 46% tariffs - which would be ruinous to the Vietnamese economy. But Mr Ut says he's hopeful the relationship will endure. He believes the US remains a "good friend".

Subject of iconic photo from Vietnam War will speak at veteran dinner in Ashland.
Subject of iconic photo from Vietnam War will speak at veteran dinner in Ashland.

Yahoo

time17-02-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Subject of iconic photo from Vietnam War will speak at veteran dinner in Ashland.

Kim Phuc Phan Thi, known as 'The Napalm Girl' in the famous 1972 Associated Press Vietnam photograph, will be the featured speaker March 29 at the Ashland Area Vietnam Era Veterans Recognition Dinner. Kim was 9 years old when her photo was taken by Associated Press photographer Nick Ut. She had just been hit with napalm mistakenly dropped by a South Vietnamese Air Force pilot as she was fleeing from her Communist-occupied village. Kim's clothes were incinerated by the napalm and she was photographed running naked and screaming in pain from her burned body. The photograph was circulated around the world and earned a Pulitzer Prize. Ut heroically left his Associated Press journalism assignment and rushed Kim to a hospital, where she was not expected to live. She lay in a morgue for three days before she received life-saving treatment. Kim suffered severe, deep, disfiguring burns and as a young girl she felt no one could ever love her again. She was ashamed to have been photographed naked. For many years she hated the photograph. She also resented the Communist government in Vietnam parading her around the international press circuit as a propaganda tool against the Vietnam War. The photograph is now recognized as one of the most iconic depictions of the Vietnam War and perhaps the 20th century. Since then, Kim has escaped to freedom and has been granted asylum in Canada where she lives with her husband and two children. For years Kim struggled from the trauma she endured but now has healed both physically and emotionally. She credits her Christian faith for her recovery. In an effort to turn her trauma into something positive for others, she has founded The Kim Foundation International, which supports efforts for children suffering from the effects of war around the world. She has also written a book about her life, "Fire Road," and travels the world telling her story in the hope it brings peace to others suffering trauma. She often says, 'I am no longer a victim of war. I am now a survivor of war.' The event will be held 5-9 p.m. Saturday, March 29, at the Ashland Eagles, 400 Eastlake Drive. Tickets, priced at $15, are available at DeSanto Kellogg Law Office, 432 Center St., Ashland. Seating is limited. Call 419-289-1454 for more information. This article originally appeared on Ashland Times Gazette: Napalm Girl from Vietnam Era photograph speaking at veterans dinner

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