Showing posts with label General Vang Pao. Show all posts
Showing posts with label General Vang Pao. Show all posts

Saturday, January 08, 2011

Former Hmong General Vang Pao passed away in the US


File photos of former Hmong general Vang Pao, who once commanded a CIA-backed "secret army" of Hmong guerrillas during the Vietnam war. He died in California aged 81, a hospital spokeswoman said.

Vietnam War 'secret army' chief dies in US hospital

7/01/2011
AFP
"...his leadership rested on the force of his own personality, which was energetic, volatile, direct and fearless"
Former Laotian general Vang Pao, who once commanded a CIA-backed "secret army" of Hmong guerrillas during the Vietnam War, died in a Californian hospital. He was 81.

"He died today... the family was there," said a spokeswoman for the Clovis Community Medical Center, some 200 miles (322 kilometers) southeast of San Francisco, adding that he had been at the facility since December 26.

A general in the Royal Lao army and member of the Hmong ethnic minority, Vang Pao ran an irregular army in the 1960s and 70s, commanding thousands of fighters in the US-funded covert war against Vietnamese and Lao communist forces.

He fled to the United States in 1975 after communists ousted Laos' royal rulers, and was credited with helping negotiate the resettlement in America of tens of thousands of fellow Hmong.

Wednesday, January 06, 2010

Abandoning the Hmong Again?

General Vang Pao

January 5, 2010
Paul Hillmer
The Huffington Post (USA)


On Tuesday, December 22, at an event celebrating his 80th birthday, Hmong leader and former general Vang Pao announced he was returning to Laos. Claiming support from high-ranking officials in Thailand and Laos, he insisted, "We have to make a change right now . . . We should put something on the table and sit down in peace." Vang's stunning proclamation made little sense. He was tried in absentia and sentenced to death in Laos, and his efforts to sustain an insurgency movement and create a provisional Lao government within Thailand cost him politically there. Then there were the recently-dismissed federal charges accusing him of a plot to overthrow the Lao government. After an official announcement that Laos had no intention of meeting with him unless he first served his death sentence, Vang Pao "postponed" his trip because the Lao government was "not ready." (How's that for understatement?) An American veteran of the "Secret War" now living in Thailand worried less about Vang Pao's peculiar claims and more about their potential to accelerate the long-threatened forcible repatriation back to Laos of thousands of Hmong.

At 6:40 pm on Monday, December 28, that same American expat watched as eleven large, caged vans packed with Hmong made their way across the Friendship Bridge to Laos. Twenty minutes later three more vans and four buses carried more unwilling passengers. Not only were about 4,000 expelled from Huai Nam Khao camp in Phetchabun province, but also 158 from Nong Khai who were already screened and guaranteed resettlement by the United Nations' High Commissioner for Refugees. At least 500 from Huai Nam Khao, said the expat, had also been "screened in" (classified as people deserving resettlement to a third country) by the Thai military. Who knows how many more would have been deemed worthy of resettlement by a neutral agency?

To be sure, there is no evidence that Vang Pao's quixotic plan actually triggered this tragedy. And yes, at least a few in Huai Nam Khao were, as the Thai called them, "economic migrants." Some were Thai Hmong trying to "blend in;" others left their homes and possessions in Laos, persuaded by human traffickers that this was their ticket to a Western country.

But there were plenty who had every reason to fear for their safety if forced back to Laos. Many had been living in the Buddhist temple of Tham Krabok, given refuge by its powerful abbot, Phra Chamroon Parnchand. After his death in 1999, the Thai military surrounded the settlement with razor wire. Most, both before and after arriving at Tham Krabok, had several opportunities to resettle to third countries, but were so often told "this is the last time" they would be allowed to apply that they were shocked to learn that registrations in 2003 were indeed their final chance. For years most had been encouraged by Vang Pao's, Pa Kao Her's, or other Hmong resistance groups to stay in Thailand and wait for an opportunity to return to Laos and take it back by force.

Still others from Huai Nam Khao had been living in the forests of Laos for many years. Some continued to fight, but most were simply eking out a living in hiding, too afraid of the retribution they were sure the Lao would mete out if they surrendered.

When I visited Huai Nam Khao in November 2007, the Thai colonel in charge brought me three men to interview. All said they had come from Laos and feared being handed back to Lao authorities. The Thai colonel kept haranguing them. "Things are different now. Why don't you go back?" The youngest of the three finally retorted, "If you are going to send me back to Laos, just kill me now." At the time I wondered about the sincerity of his statement. But less than a month later I was back home, going through pictures taken in 2003 of Hmong people still hiding in Laos. There, in one of those images, were two of the men I met at Huai Nam Khao.

The relationship between the Thai government and the Hmong in Laos goes back to 1961, when a CIA officer named Bill Lair, living in Thailand for the previous ten years, had developed a Thai commando team called the Police Aerial Reinforcement Unit, or PARU. It was the PARU who were sent into Laos to train Hmong anti-communist guerrillas under the command of then-lieutenant colonel Vang Pao. Between 1970 and 1974, as many as 20,000 Thai troops were sent to Laos to fight against communist forces. Even after the war's official conclusion, members of the Thai military helped support Hmong insurgents fighting in Laos. Thailand certainly suffered a tremendous influx of refugees from Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia, and Burma in the post-Vietnam period, contending with hundreds of thousands of people staying in the country for an indeterminate length of time. It also received massive aid from several countries and from the United Nations to take care of them and to secure its own borders.

But times have changed, political winds have shifted, and now almost 50 years later, the Thai and American governments who saw the Hmong as crucial to their plans have both abandoned them. The Thai now suffer strained relations with Burma and Cambodia, and cannot jeopardize their ties to Laos -- or their share of Lao hydroelectric power and the contracts to build and finance the dams that produce it. The United States did nothing to curb Vang Pao's fund-raising practices and insurgency activities, and in fact, during the Reagan and Bush, Sr. years, may have played a role in encouraging the latter. While engaging in negotiations and rapprochement with Vietnam, it has done little to improve its relations with Laos or defend the interests of the Hmong and other former allies still living there. Its diplomatic efforts to prevent the recent repatriations were feeble at best.

The Hmong governor who got me into Huai Nam Khao said it was easy to distinguish the true refugees from the "economic migrants." But no one in Thailand seemed interested in trying, or allowing the UNHCR or anyone else to. Thai General Worapong Sanganetra's shameless lie that all Hmong left Huai Nam Khao voluntarily only further erodes what little credibility his country may have retained.

The only hope for a tolerable resolution to this tragedy is that the Lao PDR will allow immediate and ongoing access by the UNHCR, other humanitarian agencies, and the US and other embassies, to all Hmong forced back into their country, as well as any remaining Hmong still hiding in the jungles. But Laos has already said it is "too soon" for UN inspectors. Word is already reaching humanitarian advocates that former resistance leaders have been imprisoned and tortured. Unless Laos invites observers in to confirm or refute these claims, most Hmong will believe they are true, and that the US and Thailand have once again abandoned their former allies, with devastating results.

Monday, April 07, 2008

Neutrality and Justice

Chhun Yasith (L) and General Vang Pao (R)

April 7, 2008
New York Sun Editorial

'Contrary to the government's assertion, it is by no means self-evident that a person engaged in extra-territorial or resistance activities — even militant activities — is necessarily a threat to the security of the United States. One country's terrorist can often be another country's freedom-fighter."

* * *

It happens that those words were written by one of our wisest federal Judges, John Noonan, who rides the 9th United States appellate circuit. He was deciding, in 2004, an immigration case involving a Sikh militant. We thought of the judge's point as we were ruminating on two current criminal prosecutions on the Coast that are being levied by the Justice Department against individuals who are hardly neutral — they are on our side in a twilight struggle against remnant communist regimes in Indochina.

One, whose opening arguments last week were covered by our Josh Gerstein, involves the trial of a Cambodian American Yasith Chhun, an accountant who was indicted in May 2005 under the Neutrality Act for alleged acts against the government of Cambodia. The charges also included conspiring to kill in a foreign country, to destroy property overseas, and to use a weapon of mass destruction, namely, rocket propelled grenades. Mr. Chhun's defense, our Mr. Gerstein reported Wednesday, is arguing that he was engaged in a noble, if naive, attempt to free his countrymen from a despotic regime and that he had no desire to see anyone killed in the process. The head of the regime against which he plotted, Hun Sen, was, the defense has pointed out, a brigade commander under Pol Pot, one of the worst mass murderers in history.

The second case, which Mr. Gerstein has also been covering, involves the Hmong freedom fighter, Vang Pao, who, with ten other men, was indicted in June at Sacramento on a strikingly similar set of federal charges for their attempts to liberate their homeland of Laos. They were also charged with conspiring to violate the Neutrality Act and conspiring to kill abroad. The Hmong group also faces weapons charges because it allegedly tried to purchase weapons here in America. We have already voiced in these columns our alarm at the case against Vang Pao. In league with our Central Intelligence Agency, he led the Laotian hill tribes in the twilight struggle against the communist conquest of his, and neighboring, countries in Indochina. There are few men alive on the planet today to whom the cause of freedom owes as much as is owed to Vang Pao.

* * *

The issues in these trials, however, go way beyond Vang Pao and Yasith Chhun — to the question of America's traditional role in the world. "At least since 1848, the year of democratic revolutions in Europe," Judge Noonan wrote in the immigration case cited above, "the United States has been a hotbed of sympathy for revolution in other lands, often with emigres to this country organizing moral and material support for their countrymen oppressed by European empires such as those of Austria, Britain and Russia." He cited such famous figures as David Ben Gurion and Nelson Mandela and made a reference to the struggle for Tibet. The jurist issued a call for an evaluation of evidence rather than speculation that couldn't be more important as America regards the freedom-fighters operating against the remnant communist dictators in Indochina.

Monday, August 20, 2007

How America Betrayed Loyal Allies

August 20, 2007
By Geoff Metcalf
NewsWithViews.com

“Ah! The best righteousness of our man-of-war world seems but an unrealized ideal, after all; and those maxims which…we busily teach to the heathen, we Christians ourselves disregard.” --Herman Melville
I recently wrote about the embarrassing hypocrisy of our government persecuting Gen. Vang Pao for plotting the overthrow of Communists in Laos.

It is a national disgrace that the 30,000 plus Hmong who helped Americans were abandoned and ignored by our government after we crawled out of Southeast Asia.

I observed with regret that selective memory loss and denial became policy. However, apparently our collective sins are worse than just gutless unappreciative wonkishness.

It has been brought to my attention that ‘The Real Identity Act’ includes language that states that any refugee who has borne arms against his/her country (even if it was to aide the United States) is considered a ‘terrorist’ and as such is refused entry into America. What is wrong with this picture?

Hmong who provided unbridled aide and comfort to the United States are considered ‘traitors’ by their government and the communists for having helped us. They have been, and are being, hunted like rabbits in Australia and Laotian government policy is genocide.

Those courageous and resourceful Hmong who have managed to get out of the jungles eventually learn they have been branded ‘terrorists’ and are being refused entry into the very country they fought to defend.

We have a regrettable history of supporting bad guy regimes for wrong minded strategic rationalizations. Noriega, Saddam Hussein, al Qaeda, were all allies…until they weren’t. Our own genocide against Native Americans is an embarrassment routinely ignored.

It is being suggested we need a campaign to change American thinking specifically about the Hmong Lao. However, there is a more basic necessity that Americans (regardless of political affiliation) need to acknowledge and accept. There are United States Secret War Veterans and dependants that want, need, and deserve our support.

Notwithstanding official protestations to the contrary, there WAS a secret war in Laos and Cambodia. Studies and Observation Group (SOG) routinely engaged in extraordinary missions that were largely ignored and/or denied (until they were fictionalized into movies).

John Plaster has written three or four amazing books about the exploits of MACV-SOG.

A group of Vietnam vets are trying to create a certificate and are hunting for someone (ANYone) without the federal leadership to conduct a ceremony to thank those US Secret War Veterans for their service. Good luck!

It is a simple task. We have apologized to Hawaiians for crimes we did not commit. We have apologized for slavery. We have apologized for a gaggle of real and imagined sins. However, despite the forthcoming elections, is there anyone of rank with the stones to offer a simple official ‘thank you’ to our Secret War Veterans and dependants?

American citizens (although they don’t know it) are funding a bank that is the driving force behind the Laotian genocide.
  • The Genocide order (captured 1/4/07) states, LAO PDR Government orders "complete extermination" of Hmong.
  • The stated ‘reason’ for genocide is to clear the way for Ethnic and Urban Projects that are funded by Asia Development Bank (ADB).
  • ADB is partially funded by the US.
US Veterans from Laos who fought for US during Vietnam:
  • Stopped troops and shipments of Ho Chi Minh Trail.
  • Saved countless American lives during war.
  • We have turned our backs on their pleas for help
  • Christians are now being murdered in Laos. The Communists believe that Christianity is an "American" religion and believe that any Christian automatically supports America!
August 6th the Prime Minister of Thailand announced they will return 8,000 Hmong refugees back into the hands of Laos. The refugees will most likely ‘disappear’ like thousands of others have who previously surrendered.

However the most outrageous and egregious wrinkle is ‘The Real Identity Act’ (under the Patriot Act) which states that anyone who has borne arms against their country (even if it was in support of the United States of America) will be considered a terrorist and not allowed to enter this country.

The fact that some Hmong who have been rescued from Laos have been denied entry into the US because of this myopic legislative brain flatulence is Ionesscoish. It ain’t right!

Our government asked the Hmong to fight their communist government FOR US…and we reward them for their loyalty and dedication with a death sentence?

To paraphrase Sarah Patton Boyle, the Hmong placed “fairness above profit, generosity above possessions, hospitality above comfort, courtesy above triumph, courage above safety, kindness above personal welfare, honor above success.” Such allies deserve better than we have given.
-----
"Geoff Metcalf is a nationally syndicated radio talk show host for TALK AMERICA and a veteran media performer. He has had an eclectic professional background covering a wide spectrum of radio, television, magazine, and newspapers. A former Green Beret and retired Army officer he is in great demand as a speaker. Visit Geoff's
Web Site: www.geoffmetcalf.com.
E-mail: geoff@geoffmetcalf.com