Trump Praises Coronavirus Response as American Death Toll Eclipses That of Vietnam War
As the number of Americans who have died from complications arising from COVID-19 continues to climb, President Trump has relished spinning the nations struggle to contain the virus as a war against an invisible enemy. The same language has long been used to describe Americas ill-fated involvement in the Vietnam War, which on Tuesday became the deadlier of the two tragedies, at least as far as American lives are concerned.
On Tuesday night, the coronavirus death toll in the U.S. reached 58,365, according to Johns Hopkins University, more than the 58,220 Americans who died in the Vietnam War. It took only two months for nearly 60,000 Americans to succumb to the coronavirus the first death was reported on February 29th in Washington state and many experts believe the death toll could actually be far higher. It took 20 years from 1955 to 1975 for the same number of Americans to die in Vietnam.
The death count isnt the only similarity between the pandemic and perhaps of the most misguided war in American history. As mentioned, both featured unconventional enemies, as well as a presidential administration that refused to acknowledge the reality of the situation. The phrase light at the end of the tunnel was used often by President Nixon and others to instill hope that the nation was on the verge of ending the conflict. Trump, too, has preached about a light at the end of the tunnel to reassure Americans that his team has the coronavirus under control.
The association with Vietnam seems lost on the president. People of Trumps generation, and mine, would recognize that light at the end of the tunnel is not what you would say if you wanted to convey genuine confidence, any more than you would say, I am not a crook if you wanted to convey genuine innocence, James Fallows wrote recently for The Atlantic. You cannot have been alive in that time and not have absorbed this phrase.
https://www.rollingstone.com/politics/politics-news/coronavirus-death-count-higher-vietnam-war-991394/