[NYTr] A Vietnam War in Orange County: California's Vietnamese Nuts
All the News That Doesn't Fit
nytr at blythe-systems.com
Mon Sep 10 03:34:51 EDT 2007
LA Times - Sep 6, 2007 via rick kissell
http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/commentary/la-oe-schou6sep06,0,4635055.story?coll=la-news-comment-opinions
A Vietnam War in O.C.
Right-wing exiles in Orange County are on an increasingly
desperate mission to root out any hint of communism.
By Nick Schou
Thirty-two years after the fall of Saigon, the war against communism
rages on in Orange County's Little Saigon, the largest concentration of
Vietnamese exiles in the world. Years ago, being called a communist
there could get you killed -- between 1987 and 1990, a right-wing death
squad claimed responsibility for the murders of five Vietnamese American
journalists, including Tap Van Pham, editor of the Westminster-based
weekly Mai.
But after more than a decade of free trade, restored diplomatic
relations between the U.S. and Vietnam and the emergence of a new
voting-age generation of Vietnamese Americans too young to remember the
war, Little Saigon's extreme anti-communist bloc is finally losing its
political monopoly. Though not without a fight.
The same folks who in 1999 hounded a video store owner by the tens of
thousands for hanging a poster of Ho Chi Minh above his counter are now
waging what seems like a last, desperate offensive against the commies.
The initial target of their ever-expanding boycott was Viet Weekly, a
Vietnamese-language newspaper based in Garden Grove. Beginning July 21,
hundreds of demonstrators, many wearing camouflage fatigues and waving
South Vietnamese and American flags, have surrounded the newspaper's
office once a week on Garden Grove's historic Main Street to accuse Viet
Weekly of supporting communism and terrorism. The evidence? In early
May, just after the 32nd anniversary of the end of the Vietnam War, the
paper printed two Op-Ed articles debating the war's meaning.
The first, by University of Michigan professor and Vietnam War veteran
Keith Taylor, defended the U.S. role in the war and celebrated South
Vietnamese soldiers as heroes. The more controversial article, by
ex-Viet Cong soldier Ha Van Thuy, attacked Taylor's essay and referred
to Ho Chi Minh as a "world-recognized cultural leader and great
personality." Thuy added that "the 9/11 attacks were an appropriate
price for America to pay for the things it did to the world."
Although Viet Weekly Publisher Le Vu insists that Thuy's piece, which
he reprinted from a Vietnamese-language website, doesn't reflect his own
opinion, it was the last straw for Vu's critics, including Republican
Assemblyman Van Thai Tran of Garden Grove, the most powerful Vietnamese
American elected official in the country. A week before the boycott
began, Tran attended an organizing meeting at the Westminster Civic
Center and told the crowd that in 2003 -- the same year Viet Weekly
began publishing, back when Tran was still a Garden Grove City Council
member -- he'd met with three FBI officials who told him that communist
agents had infiltrated Little Saigon's media.
Tran denies that he was involved in the boycott against /Viet Weekly/
and insists that his comments about the FBI weren't meant to imply that
the newspaper's employees are agents of Hanoi. "Only they would know
that," he told me. "I don't want to speculate. I don't read their
newspaper." Still, the paper does help "divide and confuse" the
Vietnamese American community, which is the primary goal of the
Vietnamese government, Tran alleged.
So far, /Viet Weekly/ has persevered despite losing numerous advertisers
and distributors and receiving e-mails threatening to burn down its
office. Each week the paper prints updates on the protests, which have
now broadened to target any local business or event perceived as
pro-communist. "They realize they cannot win against /Viet Weekly/, so
they need easier targets," Vu said.
One of those targets was a July 29 variety show at the OC Pavilion in
Garden Grove featuring performers from Vietnam, such as Tommy Ngo, who
demonstrators accused of being a communist because he appeared in
posters for the event wearing a Macy's belt buckle shaped like the word
"Love." Because the inside circle of the letter "O" had been replaced
with a five-pointed star -- familiar to Americans as part of the Macy's
logo -- activists accused Ngo of subliminally broadcasting support for
the Vietnamese government, whose flag also includes a star.
About 150 protesters gathered outside the performance with placards and
flags and accused anyone who entered of being a communist. Trinh Hoi, a
refugee lawyer and the evening's master of ceremonies -- he is also the
son-in-law of former South Vietnam Vice President Nguyen Cao Ky and a
friend of Van Thai Tran -- says the protest reflected anger over Hoi's
participation in a similar event in Australia this year.
Also boycotted was the Aug. 26 premiere of "Saigon Love Story,"
Vietnam's first vaudevillian movie musical, at Costa Mesa's Pacific
Amphitheater. Right-wing Vietnamese-language websites called for a
protest of the screening because the film was made in Vietnam. The
chatter apparently began when activists noticed a poster for the
premiere that called it a "red carpet" event.
"This film has no political slant whatsoever," said director Ringo Le,
29, who grew up in San Jose. "It's about love. There's a very
anti-Vietnam sentiment right now, and they're just using every scapegoat
imaginable. It's becoming like a Salem witch hunt."
As a boat person whose family fled communist-ruled Vietnam in 1979,
Viet Weekly's Vu understands why first-generation residents tend to
be touchy about the war. Still, he says, "Being called a communist in
this town is just a tactic. Even some of the people criticizing us have
been accused of being communist. But if we are successful in putting up
a fight, they will lose their magic power."
[Nick Schou is news and investigations editor of the OC Weekly.]
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