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Wounds That Won't Heal W/ Author Info

 
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PostPosted: Tue Nov 28, 2006 3:56 pm    Post subject: Wounds That Won't Heal W/ Author Info Reply with quote

Danny "Greasy" Belcher, Executive Director
Task Force Omega of KY Inc.
Vietnam Infantry Sgt. 68-69
"D" Troop 7th Sqdn. 1st Air Cav
Thank you Del.

Greasy,
After an appearance at Wingate College in NC, I was asked to supply a
short essay on the war for the student newspaper. It was published and
seemed to be well received. Here it is, for anyone's general interest,
or your use if you have occasion to try to explain things to some of the
very many (too many!) who have little idea, or mistaken ideas, of what
happened.

Del
Several of you have asked who wrote,"Wounds That Won't Heal". Below is
information from the writer, R.J. Del Vecchio.



Danny, I would be very happy indeed to have my article read by lots of
> people, vets in particular, but young people as well. Please feel free
> to let people know who I am and how to reach me.
>
> In terms of what you can say about me, here's a reasonable short intro-
>
> R J Del Vecchio entered the Marine Corps in 1966, and volunteered to go
> to Viet Nam, arriving there in December '67. From then until November
> '68, he served as a Combat Photographer for the 1st Marine Division,
> traveling throughout most of I Corps to cover the operations of numerous
> battalions and companies of the division. He was wounded in action, and
> his Nikon camera is in the USMC museum, with a bullet hole in it. He has
> become active in a number of veteran-related activities, and lectures on
> the war to colleges and high schools. At the request of a veterans'
> conference on the war held in Boston in 2003, he and another veteran
> prepared an introductory booklet for students of the war,
> "Whitewash/Blackwash: Myths of the Viet Nam War", 5000+ copies of which
> have been distributed by various veterans' groups, and is also available
> directly from Del. He is presently involved in a charity to help the
> disabled ARVN veterans who still suffer in Viet Nam under discrimination
> by the Hanoi government. He believes that the misreporting and flawed
> teaching about the war have not only disrespected those who fought there,
> but have done real harm to our society that continues to this day, which
> is why it's so important to try to set the record straight.
>
>
> R J Del Vecchio
> 1001 Tyler Farms Dr.
> Raleigh, NC 27603
> Secretary, North Carolina Vietnam Veterans, Inc.
>



Wounds That Won't Heal

It's been 31 years since the dramatic scenes of helicopters taking Americans and desperate Vietnamese off rooftops in Saigon were first played on television around the world. Yet that war remains an intensely controversial subject, and passionate referrals to it and its supposed lessons are commonly heard in political debates, media stories, and innumerable discussions, including many Internet forums. WW2 was an enormously more significant event of the 20th century, yet never generated anything like the level of dispute and accompanying anger, guilt, insecurity, and recrimination that are clearly observable even today. Why is this, why is the experience of that conflict still an open sore on our national body?

Basically, there are three factors involved. The first and foremost is that the USA suffered its only serious international defeat; in the end, the communist North did conquer the US-sponsored democratic South and the allies we had committed to help remain independent went down to total defeat. To a nation that had never lost or run away from a conflict before, and a generation that had heard and ascribed to John Kennedy's words that "we shall pay any price, bear any burden, …. in order to assure the survival and the success of liberty", this was truly a traumatic experience. It was as if the team that had won the Super Bowl last year played a charity game with an unrated college team, but abandoned the field in the third quarter, with the score in dispute. The players and all the team fans could feel nothing but badly about it, and sadly wonder where they went wrong, and if they'd lost their edge altogether.

Secondly, it was a long drawn out tragedy that went through several stages over a period of over 15 years, and emotionally exhausted everyone. The later stages involved the most bitter internal strife the society had experienced since the lead up to the Civil War, and the fact that other social conflicts like the Civil Rights Movement and Women's Liberation were also going on added even more to the stresses people felt. By the time Saigon fell, the great majority of Americans just wanted the whole subject to go away. Avoidance is a classic response to contemplating a highly stressful past that you cannot do anything about; but it often leaves many loose ends, and in this case, very sensitive ones.

Lastly, the complexity of the events and the increasing inaccuracies and biases of media coverage, combined with the very effective promulgation of antiwar views on campuses and elsewhere, added up to a "fog of war" in the sense of the recording and perceptions of what had gone on. Those veterans who had become active in the antiwar movement tended to remain much more politically active than the bulk of other veterans, who went on to jobs, families, and dealing with their memories in various ways. For some the effects of PTSD became very troublesome (as it has for veterans of previous wars), but most blended back into the population and kept their memories sealed away.

Between the publicity generated by the antiwar veterans (both genuine and phony) and dramatic media stories, and then the movies which contributed to the image of Vietvets as messed up losers haunted by involvement in an unwinnable war, the public continued to hear and see things that did nothing to dispel their discomfort about the war. Many veterans experienced feeling levels of isolation and even rejection. By contrast, antiwar activists felt they had won a great victory, and for many, their involvement was as much a source of pride and satisfaction as the accomplishments of the Civil Rights Movement were to its supporters.

Thus these three factors added up to a minefield of emotions, memories, frustrations, guilt, and confusion about the war and what it meant then and means now. When John Kerry made his service in Viet Nam a central element in his presidential campaign, he ran steamroller over that minefield and set off everything.

There are many points in the history of the war, how it developed, how it was conducted, who played what roles, and how it ended, that are so open to debate that no one will ever be able to establish a definitive and unchallengeable analysis of them. The "what ifs" can never be answered, the reading of minds in the past is impossible.

But there are more than enough hard facts about the war available now, particularly since the memoirs and interviews of major figures in North Viet Nam and the Viet Cong/National Liberation Front have been published, to establish many important aspects of the war factually. Many of the myths and legends of the war's events are readily disprovable.

For example, one of the war's most famous images is a naked little girl, burned by napalm, running down a road in pain and terror. She became a symbol of indiscriminate use of US air power and its effect on innocent civilians, a symbol used with great effect by antiwar activists. But we know now there were no US planes or pilots or even military advisers involved in that action, both some villagers and South Vietnamese soldiers were burned accidentally when the SVN air force was bombing positions held in the village by North Vietnamese soldiers who had attacked it earlier in the day. And best of all, that little girl is now a woman living as a refugee in Canada, having defected from communist-controlled Viet Nam in a search for freedom.

We know it was not pajama-clad local guerillas that defeated the South, but a final invasion of 20 Divisions of well trained and very well equipped North Vietnamese Army troops.

We know from dedicated Vietnamese communists and nationalists that they considered themselves to have two crucial allies in their drive to take the South; the Soviet Union, which supplied the many billions of dollars worth of tanks, trucks, cannons, fuel, ammunition, and other supplies that were necessary to conduct the intense conventional warfare it took to defeat the ARVN; and the American antiwar movement, which in the end was the major influence on Congress that caused the choking off of essential military supplies to the South.

And we know that after Saigon fell, a dark night fell on all the people of Viet Nam, an unworkable communist economic system made them the poorest nation in SE Asia, many thousands were executed in merciless reprisals, a million Southerners went into concentration camps for up to 18 years (and thousands more died there). As time went on, two million people from a culture rooted to the land of their ancestors undertook the largest cultural diaspora of the century in the face of terrible dangers and a death rate of over 25%.

Economics are better in Viet Nam now, since the system finally changed to state-controlled capitalism, but it remains a totalitarian country, listed by several international organizations for its suppression of human rights and the holding of political prisoners.

Do we know exactly what we could/should have done better? Not exactly, but certain points became clear. The main one that the world and the enemies of America in particular have observed is that while you cannot defeat the technology and skill of US armed forces, you can simply wear down the will of Americans to fight if you conduct a prolonged and messy conflict.

Perhaps the key lesson of Viet Nam is that America must choose its battles carefully, and once committed to one, must bring all necessary resources to bear to win as speedily as possible, and be prepared to remain determined to wrest a victory. To continue to allow enemies to win by default would amount to a decision to withdraw from the world as a force for good, and ultimately, invite ceaseless attacks of various forms by any who hate us or wish to take away what we have. And what we have is the greatest human freedom and prosperity the world has ever known. If anything has ever been worth fighting for, this is it.


Last edited by Guest on Fri Dec 01, 2006 5:52 pm; edited 4 times in total
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Me#1You#10
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PostPosted: Tue Nov 28, 2006 5:01 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

BOHICA?

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PostPosted: Fri Dec 01, 2006 5:53 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

bump
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Bob51
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Joined: 13 Jan 2005
Posts: 156
Location: Belfast

PostPosted: Fri Dec 01, 2006 9:29 pm    Post subject: Re: Wounds That Won't Heal W/ Author Info Reply with quote

powsmias wrote:
we know now there were no US planes or pilots or even military advisers involved in that action


Thanks for the enlightenment! I checked with this version:

http://www.mystae.com/reflections/vietnam/myth.html

Hadn't heard of this investigation and correction. That's the benefit of coming to this site...

Bob51
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Deuce
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Joined: 19 Mar 2005
Posts: 589
Location: FL

PostPosted: Fri Dec 01, 2006 9:47 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Very poignant...and a good try at reversing 35 years of 'wounds that dont heal'...who knows...if the Senate had not 'cut and run' in 1975 handing South Vietnam to the NVA, would 1) Reagan been the obvious choice in 1980?; 2) Carter been the easily elected 'first Communist President'?; 3) First Failed Media Campaign for Communism taken off under 'useful idiot' Cronkite?; 4) the NEA been as successful becoming the communist organization that exists today?

All these and millions other questions can't be answered! So the paradox is that even putting in words the 'wounds that don't heal' begs the age old question of philosphers...do you give an answer by asking a question! And like we see every day in the 'Media' the failure to ask the right questions only serves to extend the myths (and lies) of old!

So we won't be revising any History Books anytime soon as long as CNN/Turner owns the publishers!

Deuce
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