Wednesday, March 5, 2008

Vietnam showcases McCain at 'Hanoi Hilton' | World | Reuters




ed note: see over 50 photos of my Hanoi Hilton visit in 2005
-> http://www.pbase.com/ckuhn55/hanoi_prison

the prison everyone calls the "Hanoi Hilton", artifacts in glass cabinets and black-and-white photographs on the walls recall the historic link between Republican presidential candidate John McCain and Vietnam.
Vietnamese are mostly reticent about their views on U.S. politics, but they know the story very well of U.S. Navy pilot John McCain's plane being shot down in 1967 over Hanoi and how he was dragged out of a lake to spend 5-½ years as a prisoner of war.


The Hoa Lo prison, dubbed the "Hanoi Hilton" by the Americans, is now a museum and was visited by Senator McCain in 2000. Most of the complex was torn down a few years ago to make way for an apartment and office tower complex.
McCain and other veterans such as Democratic Senator John Kerry were instrumental in helping the U.S. government establish diplomatic relations in 1995 with their former enemies, 20 years after the end of the Vietnam War.
"He conducted activities that had a positive impact on bringing the two nations closer," said retired Colonel Nguyen Van Phuong, 81, who headed a Vietnamese delegation in 1973 that negotiated with the U.S. on the repatriation of American prisoners of war, including McCain.
"That is a point that Vietnamese people who follow current affairs do recognise," the greying, uniformed Phuong said in an interview in his modest house along a narrow lane in Hanoi.
McCain clinched the Republican presidential nomination, U.S. media projected on Tuesday, capturing enough support nationwide to be the party's candidate in the November election.
At the prison whose entrance still bears the words "Maison Centrale" from the 1899-1954 period it was used by French colonial rulers to imprison Vietnamese independence fighters, tourists pull up regularly in buses to walk around. Continued...

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