Finding the parallels
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Paul Clinton
Not knowing the enemy was part of what made the Vietnam War so
difficult to fight for Pete Sandro.
Whether a rice farmer was friend or foe was never clear because there
were pockets of Vietnamese in what used to be South Vietnam who wanted a
unified Communist country.
That made Sandro often wonder if the Vietnamese woman passing him on a
bicycle was thinking about tossing a grenade in his jeep.
“That was the problem,” Sandro said, as Veterans Day approached. “You
didn’t know who was who.”
Sandro and Bill Mimiaga, Newport-Mesa residents and first cousins who
both served in the Marine Corps during the war, said they see some
similarities with what’s occurring now in Afghanistan.
In that country, many of the tribal warlords are easily swayed from
one side to another, depending on who is willing to give them the best
deal.
The country should prepare to dig in its heels for what could be a
prolonged guerrilla war, both men said.
Both wars have unfamiliar, unforgiving terrain -- be it rice paddies
and jungle or rocky wasteland and mountain caves. But the political
landscape of the two conflicts, they said, couldn’t be more different.
“We should have more support at home,” said Mimiaga, a Costa Mesa
resident. “In general, we’re not trying to prop up a puppet government.
That was working against us” in Vietnam.
The United States’ disastrous decision to back a repressive South
Vietnamese government led by Ngo Dinh Diem doesn’t compare, Mimiaga said,
with President Bush’s call to root out terrorists hiding under the
shelter of another oppressive regime -- the Taliban.
The North Vietnam-supported Viet Minh were “nationalists trying to
unite their country,” Mimiaga said. “Their cause was different from the
Taliban.
Mimiaga, 55, and other outspoken Newport-Mesa veterans have been
participating in rallies and other events to raise support for troops
already in Afghanistan.
On Nov. 3, Mimiaga and other veterans wearing their full-dress
uniforms gathered outside a bookstore at Newport Boulevard and 19th
Street to raise the flag, sing “God, Bless America” and wave to passing
motorists.
In contrast to an American public unwilling to honor Vietnam veterans
for fighting an unpopular war, a lot of the motorists waved back.
Sandro, who lives in Newport Beach, remembers his return to the
country in September of 1968 after serving a 13-month tour of duty.
“You just came here and didn’t say much because people didn’t want to
hear what you wanted to say,” Sandro said.
On his tour in Vietnam, Sandro found himself in Phu Bai, Hue and other
areas near the Demilitarized Zone.
During the Tet Offensive, when North Vietnamese troops laid siege to a
Marine base at Khe Sahn in December 1967, the 24-year-old Sandro was
stuck in a hellish place.
“It was a frightening place,” Sandro said. “There were a lot of rocket
attacks.”
Sandro now teaches eighth grade at Doig Intermediate School in Garden
Grove. Many of his students are Vietnamese, a younger generation that
doesn’t know the horrors of war.
As far as public support for U.S. troops in Afghanistan, the more
ready comparison has been World War II. The campaign to unseat Adolph
Hitler was seen as a moral act, Mimiaga said, much like tracking down
Osama Bin Laden and bringing him to justice as the suspected architect of
the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center and the
Pentagon.
“This, to me, is a moral war,” Mimiaga said. “We have a world
responsibility to punish criminals who take innocent lives.”
Mimiaga has a unique perspective on the Vietnam War. He served two
tours of duty -- one from mid-1965 to mid-1966, the other during 1970 and
1971.
As an 18-year-old, Mimiaga enlisted because he “always wanted to be a
Marine.”
It wasn’t long before he found himself stationed in exotic places with
nondescript names -- Hill 55, Hill 69 and Happy Valley.
“It was a beautiful country,” Mimiaga said about his first impression.
“We were the first units there. . . . It was a rude awakening.”
His return to Vietnam, four years after his first tour ended, wasn’t
by choice. He was still a professional soldier.
During that tour, with the U.S. military losing the war,
self-preservation was the name of the game for Mimiaga and other troops.
“Everything was fragmented,” Mimiaga said. “It was topsy-turvy. You
started getting that short-timer’s attitude. You didn’t want to be a
casualty.”
Mimiaga teaches special education in Long Beach. He also heads the
Orange County chapter of the Vietnam Veterans of America. Veterans Day,
for him, is about honoring the sacrifices of all soldiers from all wars.
Even the unpopular ones such as Vietnam.
“When we came out, we weren’t heroes,” Mimiaga said. “We didn’t get a
slap on the back. But we did our duty.”
-- Paul Clinton covers the environment and John Wayne Airport. He may
be reached at (949) 764-4330 or by e-mail ato7
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