Experiences of American Prisoners of War in VietnamJoin now to read essay Experiences of American Prisoners of War in VietnamP.O.W.: THE EXPERIENCE OF AMERICAN PRISONERS OF WAR IN VIETNAMPrisoners of War (POWs): In international law, term used to designate incarcerated members of the armed forces of an enemy, or noncombatants who render them direct service and who have been captured during wartime.1
This definition is a very loose interpretation of the meaning of Prisoners of War (POWs). POWs throughout history have received harsh and brutal treatment. Prisoners received everything from torture to execution. However, in recent times efforts have been made to reduce these treatments and to get humane treatment for POWs. These attempts include the Geneva Convention of 1949. Unfortunately, during the Vietnam Conflict, these “rules” of war were not always obeyed, as they are now.
The Geneva Convention (III) Relative to the Treatment of Prisoner of War, signed August 12, 1949, provided restrictions and obligations that a country with captured enemy POWs must meet and abide by. These obligations consisted of feeding, clothing, medical treatment, mail, and delivery of parcels from prisoners.
The official tally of American POWs who were captured by the North Vietnamese Army (NVA) during the Vietnam War totaled 766, and of these 114 died while in captivity2. Those that died were many times deprived of both medication and sufficient food or facilities, and were also ravaged by many diseases that affected the Americans.
The guards and cadre refused to accept the fact that adequate food was all that was necessary to reduce if not eliminate the malnutrition and disease among the POW’s. How many times I had heard, “the Front provides adequately for your livelihood.”3
The Vietnamese prison guards and higher ranking officers (cadre) sometimes did not understand why the American prisoners had trouble eating rice and developed “rice rejection” This was more of a mental instability than a physical disease. The prisoners also routinely developed dysentery, beri beri, and sometimes suffered from constant massive dehydration.
The food that the POWs had available was very little and almost always consisted of a large portion of rice because rice was the major staple crop for the Vietnamese. The American prisoners had a very tough time adjusting to this new diet though. Another of the main parts of any prisoner’s meal was nouc mam. This was a native Vietnamese dish that is fish that has been fermented for a period of time and then is put in pots. This is eaten with rice and sometimes, fresh fish. Not a specific torture, but a very painful experience that POWs had to deal with everyday, was hunger. Malnutrition, and hunger became a POW’s worst enemy, and led to many of the 114 deaths among the prisoners.
Another excruciating obstacle that prisoners sometimes faced was torture. Torture was against the Geneva Accords, but then again, so were many other acts that the NVA and Vietcong (VC) committed against American POWs. Torture sometimes only consisted of a few blows with a bamboo stick, to an all out beating until the prisoner was unconscious, to sometimes even worse acts of violence.
They grabbed him off the stool, backward, out the doorway of the bamboo house, across a muddy yard to an even smaller outbuildingTwo more guards burst into the crowded little room and unleashed a cascade of kicks and clubbing, striking Gruters about the chest, belly, and arms.4
Guy Gruters, a United States Air Force F-4 pilot, was shot down over Vietnam on December 21, 1967, and when he would not answer his captors’ questions, was beaten severely. After this his interrogators gave him the “rope torture”.
Behind him, three of the soldiers got to work with a length of rough hemp rope. They tied a series of shockingly tight hitches around his naked right bicep, then dragged the coiled line under his left armpit and yanked, hard. Gruters felt muddy, cleated boot soles on the back of his neck where the soldiers were getting leverage. What the hell are they DOING, he thought, trying to rip my ARM off?5
This torture bound the subject’s arms in such a way as to cut of blood circulation and cause severe pain throughout the torso, shoulders, neck, and arms. Another torture that was used on prisoners was used on Green Beret Lieutenant James N. Rowe. His guards had taken his clothes and mosquito net for “washing” and didn’t give them back for the nighttime. This was bad for Rowe because of the many mosquitoes that infest the Vietnamese jungles and come out at night. This was a very painful experience for him, and caused him to lose much needed sleep, which contributed to a slow physical and mental letdown. Lieutenant Rowe escaped after 5 years of being held by the National Liberation Front (NLF) only to be later assassinated by Communist insurgents in the Philippines on April 21,
”A report written by a prominent American civil rights advocate, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., titled “Threats of Human Rights” (May 17, 1975) provides for a review of human rights:
The purpose of this list is to present evidence regarding the human rights situation of Vietnamese refugees, who were once held in American camps, after their initial detention. It contains recommendations for actions taken to help bring about changes in Vietnam’s legal and political conditions and civil and labor laws.
While these actions may include measures to promote a peaceful and sustainable transition but will be very likely to create serious barriers for persons of color and other marginalized groups to return to their homeland, there is sufficient evidence for the need to address a continuing and fundamental problem for the Vietnamese people.
”Numerous sources in Vietnam that have a role to play provide human rights data.
H.D. LaVey—Executive director of the Viet Cong in the Southeast Asian, known for his advocacy for the liberation of the country, and other organizations—has written numerous articles for the National Vietnam Archive and the Vietnamese Veterans of America, and, along with the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), is a member of Vietnamese Vietnamese Veterans of America
In the 1960s the Vietnamese government imposed human rights laws and laws that provided universal access, free education, and an environment free of harassment, discrimination, and abuse. The Vietnamese Constitution provided the president universal access and the right to petition for an individual to participate in an elected official’s work. With the U.N. mandate the Senate had to set a higher standard for human rights legislation. At its founding in 1975, the Committee on Human Rights and Freedoms was set up in the Republic of Vietnam to provide universal access to public and private human rights. It was chaired by Robert Kennedy and gave its authority to establish an independent human rights institution with the right to be consulted at all times on human rights matters. In 1974, the NCAH set forth the Human Rights and Freedoms Commission as the body responsible for drafting and implementing Human Rights Acts which would define Vietnam’s human rights system. These acts were known as the Human Rights Council, in part due to their support for and in part on the United States State Department’s policy of expanding in Vietnam into the Human Rights Council of the United Nations.
In 1985, the Human Rights Council was created as a group as part of the U.N.’s International Committee for the Prevention of National Security-Related Practices (ICNRP-NDP-USA and PNP-SVP-USA) initiative to protect children and vulnerable persons from military or private military establishments in Vietnam. By 1997, the ICCNRP was the most prominent NGO in the world dedicated to addressing the plight of children under military rule. The Council’s work underpins the U.N.’s Human Rights Goals and Policy under the ICCNRP-NDP-USA which provide for the expansion of the right to education, employment and housing