Kerry speaks on Vietnam [View all]
http://www.state.gov/secretary/remarks/2016/04/256680.htm
video and transcript at the link.
Watch for this part in the video (26-27 minutes on)
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Oh my.
So its clear today that the Vietnam that we are engaged with none of us could have imagined in the context of the discussion that is taking place here in the context of the war. And its clear that Vietnam is reaching forward towards the globalized world of modernity, and millions of people in Vietnam are already freely expressing themselves on Facebook, and many thousands of Vietnamese workers are already freely associating to defend their interests even though sometimes risky. They are the ones asking their government to guarantee in law the freedoms that they are starting to exercise in practice. And we know that the more progress that occurs in those areas, the more likely it is that our bilateral relationship, which has already come an extraordinary distance, is going to be able to ultimately reach its full potential.
In 1971, when I testified against the war in Vietnam before the Senate, I spoke of the determination of veterans to undertake one last mission so that in 30 years, when our brothers went down the street without a leg or an arm and people asked why, wed be able to say Vietnam and not mean a bitter memory, but mean instead the place where America turned, and where we helped it in the turning. (Applause.)
So it has been 45 years since that testimony, but it is clear that we have turned some very important corners. There are hard choices still to make for our relationship to reach its full potential, but now we can say definitively because so many Vietnamese and Americans themselves refuse to let our past define our future Vietnam, a former adversary, is now a partner with whom we have developed increasingly warm personal and national ties. That is our shared legacy, and its one that I hope we will continue to strengthen in the years to come. Thank you. (Applause.)