Vietnam Generation
Notwithstanding
the fact that we all admire and respect "The Greatest Generation", for
their winning efforts and valor in WW II, I reserve my "Greatest"
Admiration and Respect for the Viet Nam era veterans. They fought this
"unpopular" war, (with more than 58,000 of our finest giving their
life), without the total support of our Government, our congress, and
our citizens. They won that war! But our country lost it! I confess to
being somewhat bitter about how they were and are treated. I am
delighted that our brave troops fighting in the middle east today are
more appreciated.
Heroes of the Vietnam Generation By James Webb
The
rapidly disappearing cohort of Americans that endured the Great
Depression and then fought World War II is receiving quite a send-off
from the leading lights of the so-called 60s generation. Tom Brokaw has
published two oral histories of "The Greatest Generation" that feature
ordinary people doing their duty and suggest that such conduct was
historically unique.
Chris
Matthews of "Hardball" is fond of writing columns praising the Navy
service of his father while castigating his own baby boomer generation
for its alleged softness and lack of struggle. William Bennett gave a
startling condescending speech at the Naval Academy a few years ago
comparing the heroism of the "D-Day Generation" to the drugs-and-sex
nihilism of the "Woodstock Generation." And Steven Spielberg, in
promoting his film "Saving Private Ryan," was careful to justify his
portrayals of soldiers in action based on the supposedly unique nature
of World War II.
An
irony is at work here. Lest we forget, the World War II generation now
being lionized also brought us the Vietnam War, a conflict which today's
most conspicuous voices by and large opposed, and in which few of them
served. The "best and brightest" of the Vietnam age group once made
headlines by castigating their parents for bringing about the war in
which they would not fight, which has become the war they refuse to
remember.
Pundits
back then invented a term for this animus: the "generation gap." Long,
plaintive articles and even books were written examining its
manifestations. Campus leaders, who claimed precocious wisdom through
the magical process of reading a few controversial books, urged fellow
baby boomers not to trust anyone over 30. Their elders who had survived
the Depression and fought the largest war in history were looked down
upon as shallow, materialistic, and out of touch.
Those
of us who grew up, on the other side of the picket line from that era's
counter-culture can't help but feel a little leery of this sudden gush
of appreciation for our elders from the leading lights of the old
counter-culture. Then and now, the national conversation has proceeded
from the dubious assumption that those who came of age during Vietnam
are a unified generation in the same sense as their parents were, and
thus are capable of being spoken for through these fickle elites.
In
truth, the "Vietnam generation" is a misnomer. Those who came of age
during that war are permanently divided by different reactions to a
whole range of counter-cultural agendas, and nothing divides them more
deeply than the personal ramifications of the war itself. The sizable
portion of the Vietnam age group who declined to support the
counter-cultural agenda, and especially the men and women who opted to
serve in the military during the Vietnam War, are quite different from
their peers who for decades have claimed to speak for them. In fact,
they are much like the World War II generation itself. For them,
Woodstock was a side show, college protestors were spoiled brats who
would have benefited from having to work a few jobs in order to pay
their tuition, and Vietnam represented not an intellectual exercise in
draft avoidance, or protest marches but a battlefield that was just as
brutal as those their fathers faced in World War II and Korea.
Few
who served during Vietnam ever complained of a generation gap. The men
who fought World War II were their heroes and role models. They honored
their father's service by emulating it, and largely agreed with their
father's wisdom in attempting to stop Communism's reach in Southeast
Asia.
The
most accurate poll of their attitudes (Harris, 1980) showed that 91
percent were glad they'd served their country, 74 percent enjoyed their
time in the service, and 89 percent agreed with the statement that "our
troops were asked to fight in a war which our political leaders in
Washington would not let them win." And most importantly, the
castigation they received upon returning home was not from the World War
II generation, but from the very elites in their age group who
supposedly spoke for them.
Nine
million men served in the military during Vietnam War, three million of
whom went to the Vietnam Theater. Contrary to popular mythology,
two-thirds of these were volunteers, and 73 percent of those who died
were volunteers. While some attention has been paid recently to the
plight of our prisoners of war, most of whom were pilots; there has been
little recognition of how brutal the war was for those who fought it on
the ground.
Dropped
onto the enemy's terrain 12,000 miles away from home, America's
citizen-soldiers performed with a tenacity and quality that may never be
truly understood. Those who believe the war was fought incompletely on a
tactical level should consider Hanoi's recent admission that 1.4
million of its soldiers died on the battlefield, compared to 58,000
total U.S. dead.
Those
who believe that it was a "dirty little war" where the bombs did all
the work might contemplate that is was the most costly war the U.S.
Marine Corps has ever fought-five times as many dead as World War I,
three times as many dead as in Korea, and more total killed and wounded
than in all of World War II.
Significantly,
these sacrifices were being made at a time the United States was deeply
divided over our effort in Vietnam. The baby-boom generation had
cracked apart along class lines as America's young men were making
difficult, life-or-death choices about serving. The better academic
institutions became focal points for vitriolic protest against the war,
with few of their graduates going into the military. Harvard College,
which had lost 691 alumni in World War II, lost a total of 12 men in
Vietnam from the classes of 1962 through 1972 combined. Those classes at
Princeton lost six, at MIT two. The media turned ever more hostile. And
frequently the reward for a young man's having gone through the trauma
of combat was to be greeted by his peers with studied indifference of
outright hostility.
What
is a hero? My heroes are the young men who faced the issues of war and
possible death, and then weighed those concerns against obligations to
their country. Citizen-soldiers who interrupted their personal and
professional lives at their most formative stage, in the timeless phrase
of the Confederate Memorial in Arlington National Cemetery, "not for
fame of reward, not for place of for rank, but in simple obedience to
duty, as they understood it." Who suffered loneliness, disease, and
wounds with an often-contagious elan. And who deserve a far better place
in history than that now offered them by the so-called spokesman of our
so-called generation.
Mr.
Brokaw, Mr. Matthews, Mr. Bennett, Mr. Spielberg, meet my Marines. 1969
was an odd year to be in Vietnam. Second only to 1968 in terms of
American casualties, it was the year made famous by Hamburger Hill, as
well as the gut-wrenching Life cover story showing pictures of 242
Americans who had been killed in one average week of fighting. Back
home, it was the year of Woodstock, and of numerous anti-war rallies
that culminated in the Moratorium march on Washington. The My Lai
massacre hit the papers and was seized upon the anti-war movement as the
emblematic moment of the war. Lyndon Johnson left Washington in utter
humiliation.
Richard
Nixon entered the scene, destined for an even worse fate. In the An Hoa
Basin southwest of Danang, the Fifth Marine Regiment was in its third
year of continuous combat operations. Combat is an unpredictable and
inexact environment, but we were well led. As a rifle platoon and
company commander, I served under a succession of three regimental
commanders who had cut their teeth in World War II, and four different
battalion commanders, three of whom had seen combat in Korea. The
company commanders were typically captains on their second combat tour
in Vietnam, or young first lieutenants like myself who were given
companies after many months of "bush time" as platoon commanders in he
Basin's tough and unforgiving environs.
The
Basin was one of the most heavily contested areas in Vietnam, its torn,
cratered earth offering every sort of wartime possibility. In the
mountains just to the west, not far from the Ho Chi Minh Trail, the
North Vietnamese Army operated an infantry division from an area called
Base Area 112. In the valleys of the Basin, main-force Viet Cong
battalions whose ranks were 80 percent North Vietnamese Army regulars
moved against the Americans every day. Local Viet Cong units sniped and
harassed. Ridgelines and paddy dikes were laced with sophisticated booby
traps of every size, from a hand grenade to a 250-pound bomb. The
villages sat in the rice paddies and tree lines like individual
fortresses, crisscrossed with the trenches and spider holes, their homes
sporting bunkers capable of surviving direct hits from large-caliber
artillery shells. The Viet Cong infrastructure was intricate and
permeating. Except for the old and the very young, villagers who did not
side with the Communists had either been killed or driven out to the
government controlled enclaves near Danang.
In
the rifle companies, we spent the endless months patrolling ridgelines
and villages and mountains, far away from any notion of tents, barbed
wire, hot food, or electricity. Luxuries were limited to what would fit
inside one's pack, which after a few "humps" usually boiled down to
letter-writing material, towel, soap, toothbrush, poncho liner, and a
small transistor radio.
We
moved through the boiling heat with 60 pounds of weapons and gear,
causing a typical Marine to drop 20 percent of his body weight while in
the bush. When we stopped we dug chest-deep fighting holes and slit
trenches for toilets. We slept on the ground under makeshift poncho
hootches, and when it rained we usually took our hootches down because
wet ponchos shined under illumination flares, making great targets.
Sleep itself was fitful, never more than an hour or two at a stretch for
months at a time as we mixed daytime patrolling with night-time
ambushes, listening posts, foxhole duty, and radio watches. Ringworm,
hookworm, malaria, and dysentery were common, as was trench foot when
the monsoons came. Respite was rotating back to the mud-filled
regimental combat base at An Hoa for four or five days, where rocket and
mortar attacks were frequent and our troops manned defensive bunkers at
night. Which makes it kind of hard to get excited about tales of
Woodstock, or camping at the Vineyard during summer break.
We
had been told while training that Marine officers in the rifle
companies had an 85 percent probability of being killed or wounded, and
the experience of "Dying Delta," as our company was known, bore that
out. Of the officers in the bush when I arrived, our company commander
was wounded, the weapons platoon commander wounded, the first platoon
commander was killed, the second platoon commander was wounded twice,
and I, commanding the third platoons fared no better. Two of my original
three-squad leaders were killed, and the third shot in the stomach. My
platoon sergeant was severely wounded, as was my right guide. By the
time I left, my platoon I had gone through six radio operators, five of
them casualties.
These
figures were hardly unique; in fact, they were typical. Many other
units; for instance, those who fought the hill battles around Khe Sanh,
or were with the famed Walking Dead of the Ninth Marine Regiment, or
were in the battle of Hue City or at Dai Do, had it far worse.
When
I remember those days and the very young men who spent them with me, I
am continually amazed, for these were mostly recent civilians barley out
of high school, called up from the cities and the farms to do their
year in hell and he return. Visions haunt me every day, not of the
nightmares of war but of the steady consistency with which my Marines
faced their responsibilities, and of how uncomplaining most of them were
in the face of constant danger. The salty, battle-hardened 20-year-olds
teaching green 19-year-olds the intricate lessons of the hostile
battlefield. The unerring skill of the young squad leaders as we moved
through unfamiliar villages and weed-choked trails in the black of
night. The quick certainty when a fellow Marine was wounded and needed
help. Their willingness to risk their lives to save other Marines in
peril. To this day it stuns me that their own countrymen have so
completely missed the story of their service, lost in the bitter
confusion of the war itself.
Like
every military unit throughout history we had occasional laggards,
cowards, and complainers. But in the aggregate, these Marines were the
finest people I have ever been around. It has been my privilege to keep
up with many of them over the years since we all came home. One finds in
them very little bitterness about the war in which they fought. The
most common regret, almost to a man, is that they were not able to do
more for each other and for the people they came to help.
It
would be redundant to say that I would trust my life to these men.
Because I already have, in more ways than I can ever recount. I am alive
today because of their quiet, unaffected heroism. Such valor epitomizes
the conduct of Americans at war from the first days of our existence.
That the boomer elites can canonize this sort of conduct in our fathers'
generation while ignoring it in our own is more than simple oversight.
It is a conscious, continuing travesty.
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Former
Secretary of the Navy James Webb was awarded the Navy Cross, Silver
Star, and Bronze Star medals for heroism as a Marine in Vietnam. His
novels include The Emperor's General and Fields of Fire.
I was one of those who wrote the check and signed it and truned it in, glad it wasn't cassed but it still hasn't been returned to me
ReplyDeleteEd Mikel