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Misleading Parallels: Nicaragua and Vietnam
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11773 |
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Section : |
EDITORIAL
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| Issue
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4 / 1987 |
4,262 Words |
| Author
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Morton A. Kaplan Editor and Publisher |
Parallels are being drawn by many in Washington between Nicaragua and Vietnam to argue for a "hands-off" policy with respect to Nicaragua. Among the incorrect parallels are the arguments that as in Vietnam our involvement will necessarily escalate in the absence of congressional curbs, that the domino effect has been proven wrong, and that we can come to terms with Nicaragua as we did with China. Although the Vietnam case will be reconsidered from a number of vantages in this issue of THE WORLD & I in the Currents in Modern Thought section, in this editorial I will argue that these proposed parallels are incorrect and suggest other parallels that are more relevant. I shall indicate briefly at the conclusion why the policy of ending support for the Contras is inconsistent with an attempt to find a satisfactory accommodation with the Soviet Union.
Although Santayana said that those who cannot learn from history are doomed to repeat it, the more usual case in international relations is that of learning the wrong lesson from history. For instance, administration officials and congressional leaders, many of whom did not believe that China would intervene in Korea, constrained policy on Vietnam in the belief that otherwise the Chinese would intervene.
In fact good analysis would have avoided both mistakes. An Egyptian friend who had asked me to oversee the Yemeni delegation to the United Nations told me during the debate over crossing the 38th parallel in 1950 that American intelligence had been shown to the Egyptians that proved the Chinese would not intervene. Yet the information from Indian Ambassador Panikkar about Foreign Minister Chou En-lai's firm assertions, the movement of Chinese armies toward the Korean border, and the
... (1995 of 26103 Characters)
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