вторник, 4 ноября 2014 г.

The United States lost the war there, but won the argument. Vietnam is still ruled by the Communist


I’m finished writing about Cuba, but you are not yet finished reading about Cuba. Two of my essays haven’t been published online yet except in the e-book which has been privately distributed to those who backed my fundraising project on Kickstarter. (Those essays will appear here eventually, but I sold them to magazine editors and can’t publish them anywhere else in advance. One of them has, however, appeared in the print version of World Affairs , so you can always pick up a hardcopy northwoods inn restaurant if you didn’t back my Kickstarter project and want to read it right now.)
Check out the new project northwoods inn restaurant page for all the details. With Kickstarter, you can see how much money I need and how much I’ve raised. I won’t get any money at all unless northwoods inn restaurant the entire project is funded, so please make sure I don’t come up short. You and I both need me out of my office, but alas traveling costs money. northwoods inn restaurant There’s northwoods inn restaurant a promo video on the Kickstarter page you can watch, but here’s the text.
The United States lost the war there, but won the argument. Vietnam is still ruled by the Communist Party, but it junked Marxist economics and leapt with both feet into the global economy. The country is eradicating extreme poverty faster than almost northwoods inn restaurant any other in history. And its people are enthusiastically friendly to Americans—surprising considering our history in the 60s and 70s.
Is it because they realize we were right about Ho Chi Minh, Mao, and the Soviet Union from the beginning? Or is it not that at all? Perhaps there something in the Vietnamese national psyche—tragically lacking in some parts of the world—that lends itself to reconciliation with former enemies. Maybe it’s simply because most Vietnamese are too young to remember the war, or because they were more wounded by the war with each other. The Vietnamese themselves might not even know. But I’m going to try to find out.
Vietnam’s citizens no longer live in a vast prison state like the Cubans, but is that enough? Is the country taking the same path Taiwan and South Korea did earlier, or will it stagnate like Belarus, Europe’s last total dictatorship? Will Vietnam one day join the United States northwoods inn restaurant as a major non-NATO ally like Japan, or will it plod along as a smaller and non-imperial version of China? Is Vietnam’s government blazing a path out of totalitarianism and toward democracy, or will the country explode all over again?
I don’t know, but either way, Vietnam should provide a dramatic contrast to Castro’s hard-line police state. My first-person narrative dispatches from Middle Eastern countries at war and in the throes of revolution garnered me three blogging awards and a book prize from the Washington Institute. But I still work as a freelancer. I don’t have a salary, let alone a travel expense account.
That’s where you come in. Fund my next trip—to Vietnam this spring—so I can produce a brand-new batch of first-person northwoods inn restaurant narrative dispatches. You can follow along as I publish them on my blog. And at the end of the project, I’ll publish all my material as a dispatch pack—including full-color photographs—that you can read on your iPad, your Kindle, or any other tablet or reading device. And if you don’t have a tablet or reading device, you can read them on your computer. Generous backers will receive public thank-yous from me, on my blog, and in the dispatch pack when it’s published.
Nina Shea on religious cleansing by Islamists, Jeffrey Gedmin on Germany’s foreign policy, Mary Kissel on Australia’s beleaguered premier, Michael Zantovsky on Vaclav Havel, Michael Totten on Vietnam, and more.

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