War veteran Kerry returns to Vietnam’s Mekong Delta
US Secretary of State is investigating climate change

US Secretary of State John Kerry returned on Sunday to Vietnam’s Mekong Delta, whose waters he navigated as a wartime gunboat skipper, to investigate climate change in his role as Washington’s top diplomat.
Kerry, who arrived in Ho Chi Minh City on Saturday on a trip aimed at shoring up ties with Southeast Asia, travelled by boat through Ca Mau, a once-dangerous Viet Cong stronghold, an official with the local US consulate said.
“I’ve travelled on this river many times,” Kerry said as his small speed boat set off down the Cai Nuoc river in Ca Mau, according to the official Thanh Nien newspaper.
The one-time presidential hopeful, whose political activism was inspired by his experiences patrolling the area’s waterways on US Swift Boats during the Vietnam War, was due to inspect agriculture projects and see first-hand the impact of climate change on the region’s delicate ecosystems.
Kerry served with the US Navy from 1966 to 1970 as a naval lieutenant. He was decorated with three Purple Hearts, awarded for combat injuries, as well as a Bronze Star and a Silver Star for bravery.