Burying Vietnam, Launching
Perpetual War
How Thanking the Veteran Meant Ignoring What
Happened
By Christian Appy
The 1960s -- that extraordinary decade -- is
celebrating its 50th birthday one year at a
time. Happy birthday, 1965! How, though, do
you commemorate the Vietnam War, the era’s
signature catastrophe? After all, our
government prosecuted its brutal and
indiscriminate war under false pretexts,
long after most citizens objected, and
failed to achieve any of its stated
objectives. More than 58,000 Americans were
killed along with
more than four million Vietnamese,
Laotians, and Cambodians.
So what exactly do we
write on the jubilee party invitation? You
probably know the answer. We’ve been
rehearsing it for decades. You leave out
every troubling memory of the war and simply
say: “Let’s honor all our military veterans
for their service and sacrifice.”
For a little perspective
on the 50th anniversary, consider this:
we’re now as distant from the 1960s as the
young Bob Dylan was from Teddy Roosevelt.
For today’s typical college students, the
Age of Aquarius is ancient history. Most of
their parents weren’t even alive in 1965
when President Lyndon Johnson launched a
massive escalation of the Vietnam War,
initiating the daily bombing of the entire
country, North and South, and an enormous
buildup of more than half a million troops.
In the post-Vietnam
decades, our culture has buried so much of
the history once considered essential to any
debate about that most controversial of all
American wars that little of substance
remains. Still, oddly enough, most of the
180 students who take my Vietnam War class
each year arrive deeply curious. They seem
to sense that the subject is like a dark
family secret that might finally be
exposed. All that most of them know is that
the Sixties, the war years, were a “time of
turmoil.” As for Vietnam, they have few
cultural markers or landmarks, which
shouldn’t be surprising. Even Hollywood --
that powerful shaper of historical memory --
stopped making Vietnam movies long ago.
Some of my students have stumbled across old
films like
Apocalypse Now and
Platoon, but it’s rare for even
one of them to have seen either of the most
searing documentaries made during that war,
In the Year of the Pig
and
Hearts and Minds. Such relics
of profound antiwar fervor simply
disappeared from popular memory along with
the antiwar movement itself.
On the other hand, there
is an advantage to the fact that students
make it to that first class without strong
convictions about the war. It means they
can be surprised, even shocked, when they
learn about the war’s wrenching realities
and that’s when real education can begin.
For example, many students are stunned to
discover that the U.S. government, forever
proclaiming its desire to spread democracy,
actually blocked Vietnam’s
internationally sanctioned reunification
election in 1956 because of the near
certainty that Vietnamese Communist leader
Ho Chi Minh would be the overwhelming
winner.
They’re even more
astonished to discover the kind of “free-fire
zone” bloodshed and mayhem the U.S.
military unleashed on the South Vietnamese
countryside. Nothing shocks them more,
though, than the details of the
My Lai massacre in which American ground
troops killed, at close range, more than 500
unarmed, unresisting, South Vietnamese
civilians -- most of them women, children,
and old men -- over a four-hour stretch on
March 16, 1968. In high school, many
students tell me, My Lai is not discussed.
An American
Tragedy
Don’t think that young
students are the only products of a
whitewashed history of the Vietnam War.
Many older Americans have also been affected
by decades of distortion and revision
designed to sanitize an impossibly soiled
record. The first step in the cleansing
process was to scrub out as much memory as
possible and it began even before the
U.S.-backed regime in South Vietnam
collapsed in 1975. A week before the fall
of Saigon, President Gerald Ford was already
encouraging citizens to put aside a war
that was “finished as far as America is
concerned.” A kind of willful amnesia was
needed, he suggested, to “regain the sense
of pride that existed before Vietnam.”
At that moment, forgetting
made all the sense in the world since it
seemed unimaginable, even to the president,
that Americans would ever find a positive
way to remember the war -- and little
wonder. Except for a few unapologetic
former policymakers like
Walt Rostow and
Henry Kissinger, virtually everyone,
whatever their politics, believed that it
had been an unmitigated disaster. In 1971,
for example, a remarkable
58% of the public told pollsters that
they thought the conflict was “immoral,” a
word that most Americans had never applied
to their country’s wars.
How quickly times change.
Jump ahead a decade and Americans had
already found an appealing formula for
commemorating the war. It turned out to be
surprisingly simple: focus on us, not them,
and agree that the war was primarily an
American tragedy. Stop worrying about
the damage Americans had inflicted on
Vietnam and focus on what we had done to
ourselves. Soon enough, President Ronald
Reagan and his followers were claiming that
the war had been disastrous mainly because
it had weakened an American sense of pride
and patriotism, while inhibiting the
nation’s desire to project power globally.
Under Reagan, “Vietnam” became a
rallying cry for both a revived
nationalism and militarism.
Though liberals and
moderates didn’t buy Reagan’s view that
Vietnam had been a “noble”
and winnable war, they did generally support
a growing belief that would, in the end,
successfully supplant lingering antiwar
perspectives and focus instead on a process
of national “healing.” At the heart of that
new creed was the idea that our own veterans
were the greatest victims of the war and
that their wounds were largely a consequence
of their shabby treatment by antiwar
protestors upon returning from the battle
zone to an unwelcoming home front. Indeed,
it became an article of faith that the most
shameful aspect of the Vietnam War was the
nation’s failure to embrace and honor its
returning soldiers.
Of course, there was a
truth to the vet-as-victim belief. Vietnam
veterans had, in fact, been horribly
ill-treated. Their chief abuser, however,
was their own government, which first lied
to them about the causes and nature of the
war, then sent them off to fight for an
unpopular, dictatorial regime in a land
where they were widely regarded as foreign
invaders. Finally, on their return, it
failed to provide them with either adequate
support or
benefits.
And corporate America was
also to blame. Employers were reluctant to
hire or train them, in many cases scared off
by crude 1970s media stereotypes about
wacko, drug-addled, and violent vets. Nor
did
traditional veterans’ organizations like
the American Legion or the Veterans of
Foreign Wars provide a warm welcome to those
coming home from a deeply contested and
unpopular war filled with disillusioned
soldiers.
The Antiwar
Movement Dispatched to the Trash Bin of
History
In the 1980s, however, the
Americans most saddled with blame for
abusing Vietnam veterans were the antiwar
activists of the previous era. Forget that,
in its later years, the antiwar movement was
often led by and filled with antiwar vets.
According to a pervasive postwar myth,
veterans returning home from Vietnam were
commonly accused of being “baby killers” and
spat upon by protestors. The spat-upon
story -- wildly
exaggerated, if not entirely invented --
helped reinforce the rightward turn in
American politics in the post-Vietnam era.
It was a way of teaching Americans to
“honor” victimized veterans, while
dishonoring the millions of Americans who
had fervently worked to bring them safely
home from war. In this way, the most
extraordinary antiwar movement in memory was
discredited and dispatched to the trash bin
of history.
In the process, something
new happened. Americans began to treat
those who served the country as heroic by
definition, no matter what they had actually
done. This phenomenon first appeared in
another context entirely. In early 1981,
when American diplomats and other personnel
were finally released from 444 days of
captivity in Iran, the former hostages were
given a
hero’s welcome for the ages. There was
a White House party, ticker-tape parades,
the bestowal of season tickets to
professional sporting events, you name it.
This proved to be where a new definition of
“heroism” first took root. Americans had
once believed that true heroes took great
risks on behalf of noble ideals. Now, they
conferred such status on an entire group of
people who had simply survived a horrible
ordeal.
To do so next with Vietnam
veterans, and indeed with every soldier or
veteran who followed in their footsteps
seemed like a no-brainer. It was such an
easy formula to apply in a new, far more
cynical age. You no longer had to believe
that the missions American “heroes” fought
were noble and just; you could simply agree
that anyone who “served America” in whatever
capacity automatically deserved acclaim.
By the time the Vietnam
Veterans Memorial was opened on Washington’s
Mall in 1982, a consensus had grown up
around the idea that, whatever you thought
about the Vietnam War, all Americans should
honor the vets who fought in it, no matter
what any of them had done. Memorial
planners helped persuade the public that it
was possible to “separate
the warrior from the war.” As the black
granite wall of the Memorial itself so
vividly demonstrated, you could honor
veterans without commenting on the war in
which they had fought. In the years to
come, that lesson would be repeated so often
that it became a bedrock part of the
culture. A classic example was an ad run in
1985 on the 10th anniversary of the war’s
end by defense contractor United
Technologies:
“Let others use this occasion
to explain why we were there, what we
accomplished, what went wrong, and who was
right. We seek here only to draw attention
to those who served... They fought not for
territorial gain, or national glory, or
personal wealth. They fought only because
they were called to serve... whatever
acrimony lingers in our consciousness... let
us not forget the Vietnam veteran.”
Since the attacks of 9/11,
ritualized support for troops and veterans,
more symbolic than substantive, has grown
ever more common, replete with
yellow ribbons,
airport greetings,
welcome home ceremonies,
memorial highways,
honor flights,
benefit concerts, and
ballgame flyovers. Through it all,
politicians, celebrities, and athletes
constantly remind us that we’ve never done
enough to demonstrate our support.
Perhaps some veterans do
find meaning and sustenance in our endless
thank-yous, but others find them hollow and
demeaning. The noble vet is as reductive a
stereotype as the crazy vet, and repeated
empty gestures of gratitude foreclose the
possibility of real dialogue and debate.
“Thank you for your service” requires
nothing of us, while “Please tell me about
your service” might, though we could then be
in for a disturbing few hours. As two-tour
Afghan War veteran Rory Fanning has
pointed out, “We use the term hero in
part because it makes us feel good and in
part because it shuts soldiers up... Thank
yous to heroes discourage dissent, which is
one reason military bureaucrats feed off the
term.”
13 Years’ Worth of
Commemorating the Warriors
Although a majority of
Americans came to reject the wars in both
Afghanistan and
Iraq in proportions roughly as high as
in the Vietnam era, the present knee-jerk
association between military service and
“our freedom” inhibits thinking about
Washington’s highly militarized policies in
the world. And in 2012, with congressional
approval and funding, the Pentagon began
institutionalizing that Vietnam “thank
you” as a multi-year, multi-million-dollar
“50th Anniversary Commemoration of the
Vietnam War.” It’s a thank-you celebration
that is slated to last 13 years until 2025,
although the emphasis is on the period from
Memorial Day 2015 to Veterans Day 2017.
You won’t be surprised to
learn that the Pentagon’s number-one
objective is “to thank and honor veterans of
the Vietnam War” in “partnership” with more
than 10,000 corporations and local groups
which are “to sponsor hometown events to
honor Vietnam veterans, their families, and
those who were prisoners of war and missing
in action.” Additional goals include: “to
pay tribute to the contributions made on the
home front” (presumably not by peace
activists) and “to highlight the advances in
technology, science, and medicine related to
military research conducted during the
Vietnam War.” (It’s a little hard to imagine
quite what that refers to though an even
more effective Agent Orange defoliant or
improved cluster bombs come to mind.)
Since the Pentagon
realizes that, however hard you try, you
can’t entirely “separate the warrior from
the war,” it is also seeking “to provide the
American public with historically accurate
materials and interactive experiences that
will help Americans better understand and
appreciate the service of our Vietnam
veterans and the history of U.S. involvement
in the Vietnam War.” However, it turns out
that “accuracy” and “appreciation” can both
be served only if you carefully scrub that
history clean of untoward incidents and
exclude all the under-appreciators,
including the thousands of American soldiers
who became so disgusted with the war that
they
turned on their officers, avoided or
refused combat missions, deserted in record
numbers, and created the
most vibrant antiwar GI and veterans
movement in our history.
The most ambitious of the
“educational resources” provided on the
Vietnam War Commemoration website is an “interactive
timeline.” As other historians have
demonstrated, this historical cavalcade
has proven to be a masterwork of
disproportion, distortion, and omission.
For example, it offers just three short
sentences on the “killings” at My Lai (the
word “massacre” does not appear) and says
that the officer who led Charlie Company
into the village, Lt. William Calley, was
“sentenced to life in prison” without adding
that he was paroled by President Richard
Nixon after just three-and-a-half years
under house arrest.
That desperately
inadequate description avoids the most
obviously embarrassing question: How could
such a thing happen? It is conveniently
dropped onto a page that includes lengthy
official citations of seven American
servicemen who received Medals of Honor. The
fact that antiwar Senator Robert Kennedy
entered the presidential race on the same
day as the My Lai massacre isn’t even
mentioned, nor his assassination three
months later, nor the assassination of
Martin Luther King, Jr., just weeks after My
Lai, an event that spurred bitter and bloody
racial clashes on U.S. military bases
throughout South Vietnam and the world.
It should not go unnoticed
that the same government that is spending
$65 million commemorating the veterans of a
once-reviled war has failed to provide
sufficient medical care for them. In 2014,
news surfaced that the Veterans
Administration had
left some 100,000 veterans waiting for
medical attention and that some VA hospitals
sought to cover up their egregious delays.
Every day an
estimated 22 veterans commit suicide,
and among vets of Iraq and Afghanistan the
suicide rate, according to
one study, is 50% higher than that of
their civilian peers.
The Pentagon’s anniversary
commemoration has triggered some heated
push-back from groups like
Veterans for Peace and the
Vietnam Peace Commemoration Committee
(co-founded by Tom Hayden). Both are
planning
alternative commemorations designed to
include antiwar perspectives once so common
but now glaringly absent from popular
memory. From such efforts might come the
first full public critical reappraisal of
the war to challenge four decades of
cosmetic makeover.
Unfortunately, in our
twenty-first-century American world of
permanent war, rehashing Vietnam may strike
many as irrelevant or redundant. If so,
it’s likely that neither the Pentagon’s
commemoration nor the antiwar
counter-commemorations will get much
notice. Perhaps the most damaging legacy of
the post-Vietnam era lies in the way
Americans have learned to live in a
perpetual “wartime” without war being part
of daily consciousness. While public
support for Washington’s war policies is
feeble at best, few share the Vietnam era
faith that they can challenge a war-making
machine that seems to have a life of its
own.
Last year, U.S. Special
Operations forces
conducted secret military missions in
133 countries and are on pace to beat that
mark in 2015, yet these far-flung
commitments go largely unnoticed by the
major media and most citizens. We rely on
1% of Americans “to protect our freedoms” in
roughly 70% of the world’s countries and at
home, and all that is asked of us is that we
offer an occasional “thank you for your
service” to people we don’t know and whose
wars we need not spend precious time
thinking about.
From the Vietnam War, the
Pentagon and its apologists learned
fundamental lessons about how to burnish,
bend, and bury the truth. The results have
been devastating. The fashioning of a bogus
American tragedy from a real Vietnamese one
has paved the way for so many more such
tragedies, from Afghanistan to Iraq,
Pakistan to Yemen, and -- if history is any
guide -- an unknown one still emerging, no
doubt from another of those 133 countries.
Christian Appy,
professor of history at the University of
Massachusetts, is the author of three books
about the Vietnam War, including the
just-published
American Reckoning: The Vietnam War and Our
National Identity
(Viking).
Follow TomDispatch
on Twitter and join us on
Facebook. Check out the newest Dispatch
Book, Rebecca Solnit's
Men Explain Things to Me, and Tom
Engelhardt's latest book,
Shadow Government: Surveillance, Secret
Wars, and a Global Security State in a
Single-Superpower World.
Copyright 2015 Christian
Appy