I have had two brushes with Vietnam during my life: one was serving in the Army artillery in Vietnam during the war, the second was overseeing databases of Vietnamese who wanted to go to the United States after the war.
When I was in Vietnam from 1969 to 1970, I had very little
interaction with the Vietnamese. I was in a heavy artillery battery that
supported American Army soldiers on the ground.
Most of the time we were stationed at firebases in the middle of
nowhere, with no Vietnamese around. A
few times we had Vietnamese units on the same firebase, but we did not interact. They supported Vietnamese units and we
supported American units. We were in
northern South Vietnam, which the Army called I Corps. Occasionally I would ride into town with
supply trucks; so, I occasionally saw Hue and Quang Tri. At Firebase Barbara, on
a lonely mountaintop not too far south of Khe Sanh on the Laotian border, all
of our resupply was done by helicopter. When
Saigon fell, I had no personal connection to any South Vietnamese left
behind.
At the American Embassy in Bangkok, Thailand, from 1984 to 1986,
I was in charge of the embassy’s computers.
I was primarily responsible for the computers in the embassy, which
mainly handled administrative tasks like maintaining personnel and financial
records. However, as the senior computer
person in the embassy, I had oversight responsibility for several other
computer operations. One of them handled
data for the Orderly Departure Program for Vietnamese still in Vietnam who wanted
to leave the country. The Orderly Departure
Program had been established to try to stop the dangerous exodus of Vietnamese “boat
people.” Another handled data for Vietnamese refugees who had already escaped across
Laos or Cambodia to Thai refugee camps and who wanted to go to the United
States. This was about ten years after
the fall of Saigon, but I don’t know how many of these people had worked for
the US during the war.
According to Wikipedia, from 1980 to 1997, 623,509 Vietnamese
were resettled abroad under the Orderly Departure Program, of whom 458,367 went
to the United States. As I recall, a
friend at the embassy in Bangkok who worked in the Orderly Departure Program
went to Vietnam about once a week to process a planeload of Vietnamese going to
the US. Outside of the Orderly Departure
Program, the number of “boat people” leaving Vietnam and arriving safely in
another country totaled almost 800,000 between 1975 and 1995. The UN High Commissioner for Refugees estimated
that between 200,000 and 400,000 boat people died at sea without reaching their
destination. About 40,000 Vietnamese refugees
were held in Thai border refugee camps until they could be resettled.
If Vietnam is an example, there will continue to be many
refugees fleeing Afghanistan for years to come.
No comments:
Post a Comment