The New York Review Abroad

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Authors: Robert B. Silvers

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THIS IS A NEW YORK REVIEW BOOK
PUBLISHED BY THE NEW YORK REVIEW OF BOOKS

THE NEW YORK REVIEW ABROAD
FIFTY YEARS OF INTERNATIONAL REPORTAGE
Copyright © 2013 by The New York Review of Books
Prologues © 2013 by Ian Buruma
All pieces © by individual authors:

“Left Out in Turkey” © 2005 by Christopher de Bellaigue. Reprinted with permission.
“A Farewell to Haiti” © 2012 by Mischa Berlinski. Reprinted with permission.
“Liverpool: Notes from Underground” © 1979 by Caroline Blackwood. Reprinted with permission.
“Tibet Disenchanted” © 2000 by Ian Buruma. Reprinted with permission.
“Delusions in Baghdad” © 2003 Mark Danner. Reprinted with permission.
“In El Salvador” © 1982 by Joan Didion. Reprinted with permission.
“Going Crazy in India” © 1981 by Rosemary Dinnage. Reprinted with permission.
“The Nowhere City” © 1993 by Amos Elon. Reprinted with permission.
“AIDS: The Lesson of Uganda” © 2001 by Helen Epstein. Reprinted with permission.
“An Exclusive Corner of Hebron” © 2012 by Jonathan Freedland. Reprinted with permission.
“The Revolution of the Magic Lantern” © 1990 by Timothy Garton Ash. Reprinted with permission.
“Letter from South Africa” © 1976 by Nadine Gordimer. Reprinted with permission.
“Love and Misery in Cuba” © 1998 by Alma Guillermoprieto. Reprinted with permission.
“Sad Brazil” © 1974 by Elizabeth Hardwick. Reprinted with permission.
“The Sakharovs in Gorky” © 1984 by Natalya Viktorovna Hesse and Vladimir Tolz. Reprinted with permission.
“With the Northern Alliance” © 2001 by Tim Judah. Reprinted with permission.
“Fire on the Road” © 1986 by Ryszard Kapuściński. Reprinted with permission.
“The Suicide Bombers” © 2003 by Avishai Margalit. Reprinted with permission.
“Report from Vietnam I. The Home Program © 1967 by Mary McCarthy. Reprinted with permission of
The Mary McCarthy Literary Trust.
“The Corpse at the Iron Gate” © 1972 by V.S. Naipaul. Reprinted with permission.
“Is Libya Cracking Up?” © 2012 by Nicolas Pelham. Reprinted with permission.
“ ‘I Am Prepared for Anything’ ” © 1984 by Jerzy Popieluszko. Reprinted with permission.
“The Battle for Egypt’s Future” © 2011 by Yasmine El Rashidi. Reprinted with permission.
“The Burial of Cambodia” © 1984 by William Shawcross. Reprinted with permission.
“Godot Comes to Sarajevo” © 1993 by Susan Sontag. Reprinted with permission of The Wylie Agency, Inc.
“Paris in the Spring” © 1968 by Stephen Spender. Reprinted with the kind permission of the Estate of Stephen Spender.
“Arrested in China” © 2001 by Kang Zhengguo. Reprinted with permission.

All reasonable attempts have been made to contact the proper copyright holders.
If insufficient credit has been shown please contact the Publisher for proper citation in all future editions.

All rights reserved, which includes the right to reproduce this book or portions thereof in any form whatsoever.

Published by The New York Review of Books, 435 Hudson Street, Suite 300, New York, NY 10014
www.nyrb.com

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

The New York Review Abroad: Fifty Years of International Reportage/ edited and with a preface by
Robert B. Silvers.
p. cm. — (New York Review Books collections)

Cover Design: Pentagram

eISBN: 978-1-59017-632-0

v3.1

Contents
A Note from the Editor

OVER THE LAST
fifty years, many of the writers of these reports set to clarify some corner of history they thought was misunderstood, particularly the ways people were being treated and mistreated by governments and by their neighbors. In some cases they took considerable risks in order to observe and understand baffling violence. How much we owe them and how grateful we are to all of them.

—Robert B. Silvers

1
Report from Vietnam I. The Home Program

Mary McCarthy

Mary McCarthy traveled in Vietnam after Operation Rolling Thunder began in 1965, and before the Tet Offensive of 1968. Rolling Thunder (along with Operation Arc Light and Operation Commando Hunt) was a terrifying bombing assault on North Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia that laid a toxic trail of devastation for several years. The US mission was to stop North Vietnamese support of the Vietcong, Communist guerrillas operating in the South. The mission failed
.

In 1968, during the Tet, or Chinese New Year holiday, the Vietcong managed to attack dozens of cities in South Vietnam. Vietcong guerrillas even penetrated the US embassy in Saigon. Their mission was to spark a national uprising in the South. This, too, failed, at least in a military sense. Politically, it was the beginning of the end of the US war in Indochina
.

In 1967, General Westmoreland still promised a victory against the Communists by the end of the year. The South was showered not just in weaponry, but fine American cars, refrigerators, rock-and-roll records, ice cream, hot dogs, Coca Cola, TV sets, garden sprinklers, and dollars. Meanwhile, the bombing rolled and thundered on and on and on
.

—Ian Buruma

I CONFESS THAT
when I went to Vietnam early in February I was looking for material damaging to the American interest and that I found it, though often by accident or in the process of being briefed by an official. Finding it is no job; the Americans do not dissemble what they are up to. They do not seem to feel the need, except through verbiage; e.g., napalm has become “Incinder-jell,” which makes it sound like Jello. And defoliants are referred to as weed-killers—something you use in your driveway. The resort to euphemism denotes, no doubt, a guilty conscience or—the same thing nowadays—a twinge in the public-relations nerve. Yet what is most surprising to a new arrival in Saigon is the general unawareness, almost innocence, of how what “we” are doing could look to an outsider.

At the airport in Bangkok, the war greeted the Air France passengers in the form of a strong smell of gasoline, which made us sniff as we breakfasted at a long table, like a delegation, with the Air France flag planted in the middle. Outside, huge Esso tanks were visible behind lattice screens, where US bombers, factory-new, were aligned as if in a salesroom. On the field itself, a few yards from our Caravelle, US cargo planes were warming up for takeoff; US helicopters flitted about among the swallows, while US military trucks made deliveries. The openness of the thing was amazing (the fact that the US was using Thailand as a base for bombing North Vietnam was not officially admitted at the time); you would have thought they would try to camouflage it, I said to a German correspondent, so that the tourists would not see. As the Caravelle flew on toward Saigon, the tourists, bound for Tokyo or Manila, were able to watch a South Vietnamese hillside burning while consuming a “cool drink” served by the hostess. From above, the bright flames looked like a summer forest fire; you could not believe that bombers had just left. At Saigon, the airfield was dense with military aircraft; in the “civil” side, where we landed, a passenger jetliner was loading GI’s for Rest and Recreation
in Hawaii. The American presence was overpowering, and, although one had read about it and was aware, as they say, that there was a war on, the sight and sound of that massed American might, casually disposed on foreign soil, like a corporal having his shoes shined, took one’s breath away. “They don’t try to hide it!” I kept saying to myself, as though the display of naked power and muscle ought to have worn some cover of modesty. But within a few hours I had lost this sense of incredulous surprise, and, seeing the word, “hide,” on a note-pad in my hotel room the next morning, I no longer knew what I had meant by it (as when a fragment of a dream, written down on waking, becomes indecipherable) or why I should have been pained, as an American, by this high degree of visibility.

As we drove into downtown Saigon, through a traffic jam, I had the fresh shock of being in what looked like an American city, a very shoddy West Coast one, with a Chinatown and a slant-eyed Asiatic minority. Not only military vehicles of every description, but Chevrolets, Chryslers, Mercedes Benz, Volkswagens, Triumphs, and white men everywhere in sport shirts and drip-dry pants. The civilian takeover is even more astonishing than the military. To an American, Saigon today is less exotic than Florence or the Place de la Concorde. New office buildings of cheap modern design, teeming with teazed, puffed secretaries and their Washington bosses, are surrounded by sandbags and guarded by MP’s; new, jerry-built villas in pastel tones, to rent to Americans, are under construction or already beginning to peel and discolor. Even removing the sandbags and the machine guns and restoring the trees that have been chopped down to widen the road to the airport, the mind cannot excavate what Saigon must have been like “before.” Now it resembles a gigantic PX. All those white men seem to be carrying brown paper shopping bags, full of whiskey and other goodies; rows of ballpoints gleam in the breast pockets of
their checked shirts. In front of his villa, a leathery oldster, in visored cap, unpacks his golf clubs from his station wagon, while his cotton-haired wife, in a flowered print dress, glasses slung round her neck, stands by, watching, her hands on her hips. As in the American vacation-land, dress is strictly informal; nobody but an Asian wears a tie or a white shirt. The Vietnamese old men and boys, in wide, conical hats, pedaling their Cyclos (the modern version of the rickshaw) in and out of the traffic pattern, the Vietnamese women in high heels and filmy ao-dais of pink, lavender, heliotrope, the signs and Welcome banners in Vietnamese actually contribute to the Stateside impression by the addition of “local” color, as though you were back in a Chinese restaurant in San Francisco or in a Japanese suki-yaki place, under swaying paper lanterns, being served by women in kimonos while you sit on mats and play at using chopsticks.

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