Indochina War & Anti-Colonial Struggle

Indochina war (Vietnam, Cambodia, Korea, Laos), anti-colonial struggle, national liberation and US Aggression in the region.

Intercontinental Press – July 28, 1975
By Peter Green (John Percy)

Three months after the victorious liberation forces marched into Pnompenh, Cambodia remains cut off from the rest of the world. No foreign journalists were allowed to stay in the country. The only sources of news are the broadcasts of the official government radio station or the reports of refugees who have made their way across the border into Thailand or Vietnam.

Apparently even Peking is cut off. The only reports on Cambodia appearing in the Chinese news agency bulletin, Hsinhua, have been based on Cambodian radio broadcasts.

Intercontinental Press – July 7, 1975
By Peter Green (John Percy)

What is happening in Saigon? Two months after the liberation from imperialist domination, confusion still exists over the intentions of the new regime. Will there be rapid reunification with the North, or will the South retain an independent existence for an indefinite period? Who is actually running things in the newly liberated areas? Will the new regime move to introduce a planned economy in the South?

Intercontinental Press – June 9, 1975
By Peter Green (John Percy)

Washington’s last “humanitarian” mission in Vietnam began with a great fanfare. Both sides of Congress joined hands in granting Ford $405 million to provide a safe haven in the United States for the estimated 150,000 “loyal” Vietnamese who fled their country with the final defeat of American imperialism and its puppet regime.

But more than a month after their evacuation, most of the refugees are still crammed in makeshift tent cities or hastily patched army barracks at camps scattered from Florida to Guam.

Intercontinental Press – June 2, 1975
By Peter Green (John Percy)

For years the warmongers in the Pentagon advanced the myth of a “Communist bloodbath” that would follow the liberation of Vietnam. The aim was to justify their own bloody aggression. Now, with that myth exposed as just one more of the many lies spun by imperialism, they have dummied up.

Not so the Western correspondents in Saigon, however. Many of them have filed glowing reports of the new regime and the liberation forces.

Intercontinental Press – May 26, 1975
By Peter Green (John Percy)

The real story of the Mayagüez incident is beginning to emerge. Although all the details are still not known, contradictions and cover-ups in the official account are coming to light. The May 18 New York Times had to concede that there was some evidence “the Administration was either confused in reporting what went on, less than candid, or both.”

The truth is that the Mayagüez incident was a cold-blooded provocation.

Intercontinental Press – May 19, 1975
By Peter Green (John Percy)

“Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to breathe free....”

These words are part of the inscription on the base of the Statue of Liberty in New York harbor. Ford referred to the “philosophy symbolized” in that statue in appealing May 1 for more money to cover the cost of bringing in refugees from Vietnam.

Ford’s view of the “poor” and of “huddled masses” hardly corresponded with the reality.

Intercontinental Press – May 12, 1975
By Peter Green (John Percy)

Three and a half hours after the last American marines were lifted from the roof of the U.S. embassy in Saigon by helicopter April 30, the liberation forces marched into the city in triumph.

Intercontinental Press – May 5, 1975
By Peter Green (John Percy)

The curtain came down on American imperialism’s thirty-year intervention in Vietnam April 29. The last American officials and military advisers were being plucked out of Saigon by a fleet of helicopters as angry Saigon troops threatened to swamp their final exit.

Intercontinental Press – April 28, 1975
By Peter Green (John Percy)

The population of Pnompenh gave a tumultuous welcome to the victorious Khmer Rouge troops when they entered the Cambodian capital on April 17.

“Three hours after the surrender,” said an April 18 Associated Press dispatch, “thousands of students paraded along the main boulevards, waving banners to greet the Communist forces.”

Intercontinental Press – April 21, 1975
By Peter Green (John Percy)

President Ford’s April 10 speech was designed to impress the world with the threat of resumption of full-scale American military intervention in the civil war in Vietnam.

Since the rout of Thieu’s army, the Pentagon has indicated in various ways that it is pressing to send in B-52s and U.S. troops. The excuse, of course, is “to protect American lives.” To show that it means business, the Pentagon has deployed naval forces off the coast of Vietnam. By April 10, 4,000 troops were standing by.