I can see a fair case for diplomatic efforts for reducing his sentence, but otherwise you represented my feelings quite accurately.
I don't know how faithful the movie is to the book (although what I have heard isn't at all flattering to the real Hayes), but the movie character strikes me as a self-righteous criminal, a whinny hypocrite that took a selfish gamble that he was not at all prepared to handle and attempted to take refuge in some particularly sick form of proud nationalism.
In a way it is fascinating, how the story sets up a fascinating premise and merrily runs away from it towards a far less interesting plot. Then again, this is based on a book, so I guess they can only stray so far. And unfortunately, from what I have read Oliver Stone's script seems to have strayed towards attempting to present the protagonist as some sort of implausible "macho" action hero, Rambo-style. That is not missing a plot opportunity, it is deliberately obfuscating it in order to avoid the thorny feelings and questions.
This movie is often accused of racism, but I think the racism is actually rather accidental (both in the book and the movie). It does exist, but it is needed only as a means for the (rather gross) attempt at nationalist, ufanist self-justification of the hypocratical protagonist, who needs a straw to grab in order to run away from the rather obvious fact that _he is a criminal that was caught red-handed and is now feeling sorry for himself_.
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