Vang Pao lobbied hard and at times ruthlessly to influence U.S. relations with his native Laos.Tej yam hais lus tsis tshua saib yus haiv neeg muaj nqi li no ntshe VP pab mekas yuam kev thaum pib lawm pob... cas tsis cia nyab laj muab mekas cov pilots hlais ciaj ciaj ned......
http://www.sacbee.com/2011/01/08/3310804/vang-influenced-us-policy-long.htmlWASHINGTON — Vang Pao lobbied hard and at times ruthlessly to influence U.S. relations with his native Laos.
Members of Congress heeded the Hmong leader. His countrymen acted in his name. Diplomats once tread carefully around him and his troops.
"They would come to Congress, dressed in their uniforms and carrying their banners," Doug Hartwick, a former U.S. ambassador to Laos, said in an interview Friday, "and the politicians on Capitol Hill just ran from it."
But even before Vang's death Thursday in Clovis, the 81-year-old former Laotian army general's hold over the Hmong community had been weakening. The shrinking of his Capitol Hill stature had accelerated with his 2007 indictment in Sacramento on charges of plotting to overthrow the Lao government.
Federal prosecutors dropped the charges in 2009. By then, he and others who'd largely promoted a hard line toward Laos were being overtaken by competition from fresher voices.
"These things take a while," another former U.S. ambassador to Laos, Wendy Chamberlin, said of the way generations succeed one another there. "It takes people who will stand up."
Vang, Chamberlin noted Friday, "had an enormous impact on how we related to Laos."
Still, that influence didn't last forever. In a hint of Vang's diminished Capitol Hill stature, only one member of Congress issued a press statement during the first 24 hours following his death.
In his prime, Vang could mobilize organizations that included the Lao Family Community and, up until a 2004 split, the Lao Veterans of America, based in Fresno.
The organization rallied at Capitol Hill receptions, demonstrations and presentations on behalf of the Hmong. Dozens, and sometimes hundreds, of Hmong men would appear dressed in military fatigues.
Relied on vast network
Personally, Vang could rely on a vast network of former spies, soldiers, diplomats and journalists who'd known him for decades.
"He didn't have the body of a warrior, but he had the spirit of a warrior," said Rep. Dana Rohrabacher, R-Huntington Beach. "People wouldn't think anyone as courageous as he was, and as inspiring a leader as he was, would be in that body."
Born in 1929, Vang had begun fighting as a teenager against the Japanese. He then fought with the French against the North Vietnamese. In 1961, he started fighting alongside the CIA and U.S. Special Forces. When the communists took over Laos in 1975, he became a leader of many Hmong in the United States.
Hartwick, who served as U.S. ambassador from 2001 to 2004, cautioned that it could be "hard to connect the dots between Vang Pao and the Hmong organizations."
Still, Hartwick underscored how hard-line factions aligned with Vang were "very effective in positioning themselves as the voice of the Hmong people."
For example, Vang's Capitol Hill allies succeeded in blocking the appointment of a U.S. ambassador to Laos from 1999 to 2001.
Persistent lobbying also helped secure special citizenship benefits in 2000 for Hmong veterans and family members, enabling them to take the U.S. citizenship test in their native language. In 2001, further lobbying secured an additional 18-month extension for the unusual citizenship program.
Every passing year, though, seemed to undercut that hard-line power.
"As the Vietnam War (generation) faded, it slowly but surely disappeared," Rohrabacher said of Vang's political influence.
Bee Washington Bureau reporter Michael Doylecan be reached at
mdoyle@mcclatchydc.com or 202-383-0006.
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