THE LAST WORD
George F. Will
Anh Duong, Out Of Debt
Such are history's caroms—she was involved in the end of the Vietnam War and the beginning of the War on Terror.
History, said Emerson, is "the biography of a few stout and earnest persons." But history also is a story of unpredictable contingencies and improbable caroms, and of a 4-foot-7, 15-year-old girl's leap from a dangerously bobbing boat to a pitching South Vietnamese ship in the South China Sea. It was April 1975. The Communists were overrunning South Vietnam. At that time, Osama bin Laden was 18. The arc of his life, and Anh Duong's, would intersect.
Her leap propelled her to freedom. She grew up to be a 5-foot-1 chemist who, 26 years later, led the development of a bomb efficient at killing America's enemies in Afghanistan's caves. As a result, fewer American soldiers have had to enter those caves to engage Osama's fighters. This is Anh Duong's story.
The U.S. Navy took her and her family to Subic Bay in the Philippines. Next stop was a refugee camp in Pennsylvania. After five months this Buddhist family was adopted by the First Baptist Church in Washington, D.C. Soon Anh was in a suburban Maryland high school, headed for the University of Maryland and, eventually, degrees in chemical engineering, computer science and public administration.
"I wanted to work for the Defense Department," she says, "because I wanted to pay back the guys who protected us all those years." On September 11, 2001, she was working on Navy munitions and explosives—on, she says, "things that go swish and boom." Rockets go "swish." What they carry goes "boom." Soon after 9/11 it was apparent that U.S. forces would be fighting in Afghanistan, where the enemy often would be sheltered in the deep recesses of caves, reached after many twists and turns.
Sending U.S. forces into those caves would involve a terrible butcher's bill that might be avoided if a new munition could be developed—a new thermobaric (traveling blast and heat) bomb. At lunch at the Ritz-Carlton hotel near the Pentagon, as she delicately eats a hamburger with a knife and fork, she explains that normal bombs do their work by delivering fragments (to punch through things) and blast (to collapse things). But delivered by an F-15 to the mouth of a cave, a normal bomb's blast and fragmentation dissipate too quickly to reach deep into the cave and kill those hiding there. The task for her and her team was a challenge of detonation chemistry. They had to "deliver energy more slowly—we want the energy to last longer and travel."
The three-year plan for demonstrating a prototype thermo-baric bomb was scrapped, and Anh and her team set about confirming the axiom that America is like a boiler—there is no telling how much energy it will produce once you light a fire under it. "I did not need to motivate my team," she says. Osama had done that. In 67 days their three-year mission was accomplished. BLU-118/B, a thermobaric bomb whose heat and blast persist and penetrate deep into caves, went to war.
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Member Comments
Posted By: jass @ 07/10/2008 7:02:02 AM
Comment: america should leave the afganistan as the new government formed there can handle the situation over their . the hiking in the oil prices and lack of food all came because of the us war aggainst afganistan
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Posted By: harrison_brown @ 06/23/2008 12:19:24 PM
Comment: We can see the life of a victim of a war.
She becomes a war scientist to kill more human beings (a clear psycho proof: a mass-killer try to avoid her childs from violence)
Further, she feels being indept to the people who destroyed her homeland (maybe she never see the whole picture of a war, just her family picture)
Just so sorry for such a victim and such a generation who are closing their eyes to see the true world and betraying toward their ancestor because of the bias media coveraging their life.
Posted By: scotty_ng1 @ 12/16/2007 12:07:25 PM
Comment: I am a child of South Vietnamese refugees and I have also heard of Anh Duong's story. While I am very happy that she was able to escape the horrible war and make a good life for herself and her family in America, I draw different conclusions from her story than Mr. Will. What debt does she or other refugees owe America? How dare he. What do we really owe America, the country that promised South Vietnam protection and victory, then abandoned the fight a decade later after destroying the countryside and finding themselves unable to defeat under-equipped insurgents? In fact, America owes a debt to immigrants, for all their billions of dollars in taxes, economic contributions, and research discoveries. America really needs to learn a thing or two about paying back debts. Another example is Iraq, where we have accepted fewer refugees (who in many cases risked their lives to help us) than even tiny Sweden.
More South Vietnamese died from American hands than the Viet Cong. American planes dropped more tonnage on South Vietnamese soil than the Communist North, leaving some areas as virtual moonscapes and uninhabitable for decades. Most Viets are Buddhist, and that faith stringently advocates pacifism. I do mourn for the US and ARVN soldiers who died trying to defend the freedom of others, but history is never so black-and-white. I know immigrants and descendants of immigrants should be grateful to their generous hosts, but I can think of other nonviolent ways to give back than design deadlier bombs for a new counterinsurgency war that will kill strangers half a world away (and some of the victims are always innocent bystanders).