If
for no other reason, it could be worth watching the PBS Ken Burns
extravaganza on the US war on Viet Nam just to see how many hours and
how much video imagery can be spent rehashing what establishment
accounts have already been foisting on the public for decades.
No
doubt about it, Burns, PBS and NPR are masters of what they do. They
jump all over showering the viewer with imagery, factoids and
interviews to make it seem like a wide range of incisive questions
are being raised and all viewpoints are being aired. Rather
than a basis for historical analysis, however, it’s little more
than ambiguity, equivocation, obfuscation and contradiction carefully
kept within established parameters about US good intentions, innocent
cultural misunderstanding, communist evil deeds, and sympathy for any
US collaborators who were less murderous and corrupt than its first
chosen partner Ngo Dinh Diem—in short, anything but the possibility
that the US consciously instigated the war to maintain and expand its
power in Asia.
Lying
by omission is a standard political strategy, but PBS is not going to
give naysayers an equivalent 18 hours to fill in what was left out.
All we can hope for is getting a few words in edgewise. (For
some specifics
seehttp://vietnamfulldisclosure.org/index.php/burns-novick-documentary-brief-first-thoughts-episode-1/)
Thus, my focus here will be on veterans.
One
NPR commentator recently stated that many veterans may not watch the
series because according to some “research,” they will recall how
unpleasantly they were treated when they got home. This idea of
vicious or continuous attacks on returning veterans has been refuted
many times. Veterans would be better advised to recall how
their government treated them. More likely they do
not want to watch and be reminded of how what they were told was at
such variance with what they experienced.
Secondly,
experiencing war violence as a defender of one’s homeland is
different from experiencing it as an invader. Of course, US GIs (and
ARVN soldiers) were told that they were defenders—defenders of
freedom against aggressive communists. Nevertheless, even if they
were convinced, it would be very different from the experience of
Vietnamese fighters who were literally defending their villages and
family members from foreign invasion.
Veterans
do need healing but there are few good options. They may feel better
if they can be convinced that the terrible things that they did and
saw were necessary, or even if unnecessary, were done in good faith.
This is what they are likely to get from Ken Burns, but it is
tantamount to embracing the rationalizations of their oppressors—the
very ones who drafted them and lied to them—vs. confronting the
violence and evil that they were forced to be part of as well as
confronting those who planned and orchestrated it. The real
terrorists live in Washington D.C. and wear 3-piece suits and
wing-tip shoes, not black pajamas and sandals made from car tires.
For
recent US wars, we now have the Support the Troops campaign, to avoid
the past abuse supposedly suffered by returning vets at the hands of
disrespectful war protestors. I suspect the real purpose is simply to
suppress dissent. Toward the end of the VN war US soldiers like me
were quite in agreement with the protestors if not ahead of them;
hence the so-called “soldiers’ revolt.” In any case, today’s
Support the Troops movement forces vets and the public to suppress
criticism of US wars by making criticism of war tantamount to
criticism of vets or making support for vets tantamount to support
for wars.
Lastly,
apology could certainly hasten healing, not only to veterans and
their families but also to the Vietnamese people as well but it has
not been forthcoming.
War
makers have learned a lot from and since the VN war. They have
learned that hiring mercenaries like the Kurds or turning cities into
piles of concrete rubble from the air is preferable to American
corpses coming back home in boxes to Pleasantville, America.
What
the entire nation needs—civilians as much as vets—is a critical
analysis of the history and cause of the war. Reporting vaguely
that there were differences of opinion about the war among Vietnamese
or Americans in the style of PBS pabulum is not the same as
critically assessing the origins and motivations of those who
initiated these policies and sent soldiers off to kill and die. The
Kennedy who escalated the war by sending special forces troops to
Vietnam to engage in covert warfare in May 1961 was the same Kennedy
who authorized the Bay of Pigs invasion of the previous April. This
tells us something, things that we won’t get from politicians’
speeches or press conferences…or most likely from PBS either.
These
days presidents and their children do not go off to war. They are
busy pursuing careers at Harvard or whatever. They will not ask the
hard questions, not just about the VN war but about the patterns of
US history from the Native American genocide to slavery to carpet
bombing in Korea and Southeast Asia to drone killings in the Middle
East. That will be up to the rest of us.
>> The article above was written by Bob
Kosuth, US
Army 1971-1972.
2 comments:
Excellent analysis from which to point the right way forward, thank you.
Since when did socialists become pacifists?
Answer the fucking question.
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