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| Tran Trong Duyet, the former director of the infamous 'Hanoi Hilton' prison, grew to respect the young John McCain (AFP Photo/Nhac NGUYEN) |
Haiphong
(Vietnam) (AFP) - As a prisoner of war in the "Hanoi Hilton", navy
pilot John McCain was known as uncompromising, frank and an avid reader who
fiercely debated the war with his Vietnamese jailers.
One of
them, the former director of the infamous Hoa Lo prison, recalls verbally
sparring with the famous inmate and says McCain's refusal to budge on his views
eventually earned his admiration.
"It
was his stubbornness, his strong stance that I loved when arguing with
him," retired colonel Tran Trong Duyet told AFP.
In the
decades following the Vietnam War, McCain -- who died Saturday at the age of 81
-- forgave the enemies who once held him captive, and helped reconcile the two
countries that today enjoy strong ties.
His five
and a half years in prison began in October 1967 when McCain was thrown into
the French-built jail after his Skyhawk divebomber was shot down over Hanoi's
Truc Bach lake.
Fished out
with a broken leg and two broken arms he was shipped to the cold, crowded
facility where some 500 prisoners of war were held.
His captors
quickly learned McCain's father was a navy admiral, and the young prisoner soon
developed the nickname "Crown Prince".
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John McCain's
flight suit is displayed at the ‘Hanoi Hilton’, now a museum in
the Vietnamese
capital (AFP Photo/HOANG DINH Nam)
|
The early
years were grim.
McCain was
held in solitary confinement and suffered from dysentery. For months on end, he
was fed only bread and pumpkin soup. He communicated with fellow inmates by
tapping codes on the thick concrete walls.
In his
memoirs, McCain wrote that solitary "put me in a pretty surly mood"
and that he would ward off depression by hollering insults at guards.
And then
there were the interrogations and beatings.
"Ropes
were put on me and I sat that night bound with ropes," McCain wrote after
his 1973 release, recalling one brutal session.
"For
the next four days, I was beaten every two to three hours by different guards.
My left arm was broken again and my ribs were cracked."
English
classes, jokes
Duyet
denies McCain or others were mistreated and says he punished any fellow guards
who stepped out of line.
"There
was no torture, Vietnamese people saved him," Duyet said in an interview
earlier this year at his home in the port city of Haiphong, where he displays
both photos of American POWs and more recent images of himself in military
uniform posing with US officials.
By the end of McCain's long years in prison, Duyet said his relationship with McCain started to warm.
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Tran Trong
Duyet, John McCain's wartime jailor, points to photos of US prisoners
of war on
display at his home (AFP Photo/Nhac NGUYEN)
|
By the end of McCain's long years in prison, Duyet said his relationship with McCain started to warm.
"Out
of working hours, we considered each other friends," he said. "He
taught me English... he had good teaching skills."
In his
post-prison writings, McCain said things got easier for him in the early 1970s,
which he called the "coasting period".
He read
propaganda texts about Vietnam communist revolutionary leader Ho Chi Minh, and
was allowed to roam the prison yard with fellow Americans, who named different
sections of the compound after Vegas hotels.
His former
jailor preferred to focus on the rosier memories, recalling how they joked,
shared stories about family and travel, and even dished about women.
"We
laughed together and agreed that women are the same everywhere -- they like
flattery, they like to sulk, and they're jealous," he told AFP, smiling.
'America's POW'
McCain left
the navy in 1981 for a long career in politics, most notably as Republican
Senator for Arizona. But his "Hanoi Hilton" experience resonated
throughout his life.
Donald
Trump said during the campaign for the presidency that McCain was "not a
war hero" because he was captured in Vietnam.
The controversial comments inflamed his throngs of supporters, many of whom saw his time as a POW as a defining experience.
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Hoa Lo
prison, which has been turned into a museum, was home to 500 prisoners
of war
when McCain was held there (AFP Photo/Nhac NGUYEN)
|
The controversial comments inflamed his throngs of supporters, many of whom saw his time as a POW as a defining experience.
"John
McCain will always be America's prisoner of war, that experience is now
inseparable from the name John McCain and the person that has been John
McCain," said Alvin Townley, author of "Defiant" about American
POWs held in Hoa Lo.
McCain was
also celebrated for his role in reconciling the United States and Vietnam,
which in the half century since the war's end have become close allies.
"(His)
openness towards Vietnam and the willingness to revisit not only the country,
but his experiences there have certainly helped heal a lot of wounds,"
Townley said.
McCain
visited the Southeast Asian country several times after the restoration of
diplomatic ties in 1995, even returning to the "Hanoi Hilton" -- now
a popular tourist attraction -- for an emotional meeting with another former
jailer.
Duyet never
got a chance to reconnect with McCain, but imagined what he might say if he
had.
"If he
came to Vietnam, I would greet him, not as a former prisoner and a jailer, but
as two veterans, from both sides of the battlefield, now meeting again in the
spirit of reconciliation," he said.
When
informed of McCain's death, Duyet said Sunday he was "so sad."
"Please
if you can, convey my condolences to his family for me."




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