Maine Writer

Its about people and issues I care about.

My Photo
Name:
Location: Topsham, MAINE, United States

My blogs are dedicated to the issues I care about. Thank you to all who take the time to read something I've written.

Sunday, August 26, 2018

Senator John McCain memorial in Hanoi Vienam

Flowers, tributes offered for McCain at Vietnam War crash site

On the banks of the Ho Truc Bach Lake in downtown Hanoi. Monument. A stone sculpture of a person with arms raised and head lowered. To the right of the person is USA and a star. To the left of the person is the text in Vietnamese.

HANOI (Reuters) - On the shores of a still and peaceful lake on the edge of downtown Hanoi, the inscription on a faded monument stands as a reminder of a violent event 51 years ago.
“On Oct 26, 1967, at Truc Bach Lake, the military and people of Hanoi arrested Major John Sidney McCain (MaineWriter: This is not correct, at the time, Lt.Cdr John McCain was a Lieutenant Commander USN), a pilot of the American Navy’s air force,” it says on the sculpture, which depicts an airman with his hands above his head in front of a broken plane wing.

McCain, a U.S. senator who ran unsuccessfully for president as a self-styled maverick Republican in 2008 and became a prominent critic of President Donald Trump, died on Saturday, his office said. He was 81.

The naval aviator was flying one of 10 planes that were shot down by the North Vietnamese military on the same day, according to the inscription on the statue, which McCain himself visited on a return to Vietnam in 2009.

“I felt compelled to come out here and bring some flowers,” said Robert Gibb, an American in Hanoi who placed a bouquet of yellow chrysanthemums at the foot of the monument after hearing the news of McCain’s death on Sunday morning.


Gibb was one of several U.S. citizens living in the Vietnamese capital to visit the monument with tributes. Most brought flowers. One man offered a folded U.S. flag.

“He was the last guy I ever voted for president,” said Gibb. “The moment he dropped in here changed his life forever.”


‘HANOI HILTON’

McCain was dragged out of Truc Bach lake and spent the next five-and-a-half years as a high-profile prisoner of war in Hoa Lo prison - the infamous “Hanoi Hilton’ - where he said he and others were tortured.

Vietnam says the American prisoners were treated well.

A statue marking the spot by the lake was erected in 1967, and renovated in the 1980s and 1990s.


The monument is easy to miss - on the tree-lined street, it stands on what is now a popular tourist destination, dotted with cafes, ice cream parlors and vendors selling cotton candy from the back of bicycles.

The U.S. Embassy in Hanoi said on Sunday it planned to launch a fellowship to support a “young Vietnamese leader committed to public service” to travel to the United States on a study tour annually.

The program will be named the “McCain/Kerry Fellowship” in honor of McCain and John Kerry, another Vietnam War veteran who has promoted U.S.-Vietnam issues during his political career, the embassy said in a statement.

Le Ma Luong, the former director of the Vietnam Military History Museum in Hanoi who met McCain soon after 2010, told Reuters he remembered the late senator as an articulate and professional man who contributed greatly to building relations with Vietnam.

Luong said he felt sorry that in return Vietnam had been unable to locate the ring McCain was wearing on the day he was dragged out of the lake.

“That was the ring his wife gave him and it went missing after he was shot down and rescued. We have tried our best to find it but in vain,” said Luong. “Anyone who lost a ring from their beloved would be devastated by it, not just him”.

“His contribution to the Vietnam-U.S. relationship will be remembered.”

Additional reporting by Khanh Vu and Kham Nguyen; Editing by Paul Tait

Labels: , ,

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home