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US Is Finally Cleaning Up Agent Orange In Vietnam

derekmead writes "It only took 40 years. And yes, Washington still disputes Hanoi's claim that up to 4 million Vietnamese suffered contact with the defoliant, which was dumped en masse in a U.S. air campaign to scorch away the dense jungle cover under which guerilla fighters hid. But the AP reports that the U.S. is finally set to start cleaning up the mess. The numbers are staggering: Between 1962 and 1971, the U.S. military sprayed some 20 million gallons of Agent Orange and a galaxy of other herbicides on nearly a quarter of former South Vietnam. The defoliant ate through about 5 millions acres – a tract comparable in size to Massachusetts – of forest. An additional half-million acres of crops were decimated."

8 of 277 comments (clear)

  1. If I was cynical... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I would think that the clean up was a pre-requisite to the large resort chains going in and buying up the beach front...I hear it's beautiful there.

  2. That's nice by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    But what about our fathers who also had this shit sprayed on them and told to fuck off and die of cancer?

  3. Re:Decimated? by artor3 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Congratulations, in your haste to be OUTRAGED, you missed the fact that the GP was just making a (lame) joke about the definition of the word "decimated".

  4. Re:Um... by Bespoke · · Score: 5, Insightful

    My guess would be that Monsanto and Dow now have an Agent Orange clean-up chemical to sell and have been lobbying for this to boost their profits.

  5. Re:What the...? by number11 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Not sure if you're aware, but wars are not contests in being selfless and giving towards your opposite. Generally the point is to win.

    Yup. But the point was, this was an unnecessary war that was mostly being conducted because Lyndon Johnson couldn't figure out a way to withdraw that wouldn't result in people blaming him. And, like most wars, those who suffered were mostly civilians.

    Sometimes I think that no country should be allowed to go to war, if it hasn't has a war on its own soil in the last fifty years. We (the USA, or rather the former Confedracy) last had a war on our soil in 1865 (if you don't count a few skirmishes in WW2), so we can't identify with the horror.

  6. Re:Tough luck by MtHuurne · · Score: 4, Insightful

    They won in the sense that they kept fighting until the US decided to pull out. It's not like they were marching on Washington DC. Your reasoning would only make sense in a symmetric war.

  7. Re:Um... by Immerman · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Hear, hear. Considering that the US's days as the uncontested military superpower are likely numbered (I'd give us a few more decades at most), it seems to me it makes good long-term strategic sense to start cultivating friendships and good will now, when our actions still matter. Especially considering the massive loss of global good will we've suffered in the last decade.

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  8. No, you are not by Taco+Cowboy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Vietnam is opening up to foreign investors, and the United States is increasingly in competition against the Chinese in the influence game in South East Asia

    While the Vietnamese communist government may want to get on the side of the US to counter the red China, most people of Vietnam just do not trust Uncle Sam

    What took place in the village of My Lai and the Gulf of Tonkin incident have burned into the brains of many Vietnamese

    BTW, the clean up of Agent Orange should not only be done in Vietnam, but also in Laos and Cambodia

    Too many deaths, sufferings, and deformations had resulted from the Agent Orange - and Uncle Sam must be man enough to acknowledge what they had done, and to amend the damages that they had caused
     

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