T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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570.1 | One Opinion | EXPRES::GILMAN | | Wed Feb 20 1991 15:41 | 39 |
| One point of view from a Vietnam Vet: I got out of the service in 68
after a tour of duty on a carrier in the Tonkin Gulf. I didn't have it
nearly as rough as the guys ashore but I still felt I had risked my
life by spending six months in the Tonkin Gulf aboard a 'floating
bomb'. Upon my return home I went to college from 68-72 and watched my
fellow students protest the War. I didn't have bad feelings against
them... they were sincere and indirectly 'were trying to have saved my
and others lives', why should I resent that? Nam had a different
feel from the Gulf War... the aims were nebelous and I didn't believe
in them at the time but as other servicemen were was trapped in the
situation.
How could I expect people who didn't believe in the situation to be
cheering me when I got back... from their perspective I was part of the
problem. So I guess you could say I didn't take it personally.
There are other vets who feel far more cheated than I do. When I joined
the service I realized that I might be expected to take part in a war..
the draft was after me but that didn't change what I would be expected
to do in the service.
I did what I had to do... but that didn't mean that other Americans had
to like it. Hell, I didn't like it either.
I think the real crime in this is the lack of sufficient support to
those vets who were emotionally and physically injured by the war.
I was one of the lucky ones... I came out of it unhurt physically and
with my head still on straight mentally.
Jeff
So, IMO 'what can you do now'? You have already done it... you
have realized that the guys over there risked their lives for the
misguided Gov. of the U.S. and 'you' all seem to appreciate THAT part
of it. Thats enough for me.
Jeff
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570.2 | | FSTTOO::BEAN | Attila the Hun was a LIBERAL! | Wed Feb 20 1991 17:01 | 34 |
| I was in the Viet Nam theater of action from '64 to '65.
I don't feel cheated. And, quite frankly, I don't know any vet who
does (I am sure some do).
You don't go to war to get treated a certain way when you come home.
What happens happens. Like Jeff said... the folks then were expressing
their feelings and opinions.
But, what I _was_ bothered by was the dishonesty of our government.
They were telling the folks at home one thing, while the reality of
what was going on was another. I think that single fact destroyed the
confidence citizens had in the government (remember the phrase
"credibility gap" came from that era). The result was, many (younger)
people felt righteous about their position, and when vets returned
home, they found discord, disagreement, and worst of all, they were
shunned or ignored.
So, what to do?
When the vets from this war return... don't shower them with praise.
don't have ticker tape parades (except for genuine "heros" that may
emerge)... and don't ignore them.
understand that what they do and did was for a purpose, whether you
agree with that purpose or not. be open with them... but treat them as
regular folks, who did a job, and came home to try to start up where
they left off.
the congress is today considering a big Gulf-war Veteran's package...
and I guess that's ok... unless it goes too far. These are regular
people over there and they will be regular people when they come home.
tony
|
570.3 | | USWS::HOLT | Holtski | Thu Feb 21 1991 02:07 | 25 |
|
This is really a different time from 20 years ago..
I really don't know what to think of it.
What with the glorious news from the front every day,
I feel like my generation blew "our war" royally and
sometimes I think the most merciful thing to do is
let it go unmentioned.
The flag waving and yellow ribboning certainly strikes
me as an empty gesture though, along with all the "we
support the troops" declarations which cost nothing to
make...
We are killing thousands of people in a poor third world
country because they had the bad fortune to have SH in
their midst. We are fat and happy in this country, and our
losses don't amount to a hill of beans compared to those
of the Iraqis.
I sincerely hope that there is some thought given to the
thousands of Iraqi orphans and war widows who find themselves
on the wrong side and whose plight seems to be forgotten midst
all the jingoist rhetoric...
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570.4 | I think I'll just ... "fade away" .... | MORO::BEELER_JE | Moderation in war is imbecility | Thu Feb 21 1991 02:26 | 12 |
| Mr. Gilman, Mr. Bean and Mr. Holt have put it quite succintly and I
don't know that I could possibly add anything else with the single
exception of my limited "feelings".
I joined the USMC in 1965 .. not the best time in the world to join the
USMC but I had my reasons ... I believe that I did the right thing,
and, to this day believe that I did the right thing. As MacArthur said
in his farewell speech "... the world has turned many times since I
took the oath..." and like Mr. Holt, I'm not sure of what to think
right now.
|
570.5 | | PELKEY::PELKEY | Pelican's wings been clipped. Film @ 11 | Thu Feb 21 1991 12:25 | 52 |
| A few years ago, the band I worked in for ten years, had a job
at an out door Party ... We had no idea who the people we were
working for were, just assumed it was something big. We drive
for what seemed like hours to get to this field in the middle
of nowhere, as we pull into the area, all we can see are hundreds
of motor cycles, gruley men and women hagning around them, all with
chaines, knifes, bottles of budwisers... My wife, sitting in the
seat next to me, simply melted, she says to me "You're gonna
pay for this one Pelkey"
Well, needless to say, as everyone stopped their cars, and began
to gather, the unified feeling was, "We're dead, That's all there is
to it"
But within minutes, we discovered that this is the Mass Chapter of
Viet Nam Vets. Hundreds belonging to this particular chapter, all
getting to gether once a year.
To make a long story short, the evening was a blast, even though the generator
ran out of gas mid way through the final set... we continued to work these
events for three or four years complete with a wedding ceremony
where the Groom and Best man drove up on Harleys, black leather
vest, no shirts, tuxedo ties, (a riot, I've got pictures!).
They were without a doubt the best, most appreciative crowd you could ever
imagine. Their generosity to us, and their desire to make us feel a
part of their party, not just the 'band who played there' really
touched all of us more then they realize.
Each party, there would be a span of time, about 2 or 3 minutes,
when everyone would just stand together, for the most intense moment of
silence I've ever been involved with. Druing this moment, it was if the
wieght of all their 'lost brothers' (as they chose to refer to them as),
fell on everyone shoulders. But at the conclusion of this, the entire
gathering just let out the most intense war hoop you could imagine, and
the party roared on.
these days spent with these guys, were the most powerful days I can recall.
I wasn't in Nam, I was a bit too young. Had I been born 5 or 6 years earlier,
I know I would have been there. But the connection I made with the
Vets who belonged to this chapter, should change forever, any illusion
that anyone has about this.
Like one vet already said, these guys just want to get back to a normal
life, be proud of who the are, the country they fought for, thankful they're
back, and remember those who they left there.
Thanks for a lesson well learned.
(An outsiders opinion)
|
570.6 | | USWRSL::SHORTT_LA | Total Eclipse of the Heart | Thu Feb 21 1991 17:00 | 6 |
| I think the best thing we can do for them is prove we learned
something from our mistake: make sure we don't do what we did
to the service people in Saudi Arabia.
L.J.
|
570.7 | Phu Cat '71 | BONKER::DUPRE | The Sherrif of Noting-ham | Fri Feb 22 1991 08:54 | 5 |
|
If you just remember that soldiers fight wars not start
them, it will be enough for me.
|
570.8 | | BTOVT::THIGPEN_S | sun flurries | Tue Feb 26 1991 10:08 | 26 |
| Thank you all for your replies. You have read me a lesson in humility;
it makes me sad in some inexpressible way that you ask for so little.
Part of what Tony wrote crystalizes the era for me. Quote follows:
Note 570.2 FSTTOO::BEAN "Attila the Hun was a LIBERAL!"
But, what I _was_ bothered by was the dishonesty of our government.
They were telling the folks at home one thing, while the reality of
what was going on was another. I think that single fact destroyed the
confidence citizens had in the government (remember the phrase
"credibility gap" came from that era). The result was, many (younger)
people felt righteous about their position, and when vets returned
home, they found discord, disagreement, and worst of all, they were
shunned or ignored.
---------------------------------------------------------------------
The older people, the WWII folks, their experience up to then did not
include expecting the govt to lie; the younger folks saw the gap
between ideal and real, between de facto and de jure, in so many
aspects of our society (including and besides the Vietnam war) that
they came to disbelieve and discredit any assertion from the
Establishment. Sigh, all extremes are at least partly wrong...
I have much to think about. Thank you.
Sara
|
570.9 | cynical manipulation of the military | CLUSTA::BINNS | | Tue Feb 26 1991 13:05 | 22 |
| The veterans' comments here were all very moving. I think much of the
problem stems from the fact that they were used on two fronts -- the
military front in Vietnam and the political front at home. Abroad to
fight the expected enemy, at home to ensure that opposition to the war
could be defined as unpatriotic and unsupportive of them.
Maybe this is inevitable, particularly in a democratic society in which
there is a relatively high need for citizen support. But it is cruel to
put our soldiers in that civilian cross-fire and reprehensible for us
as citizens to accept the political manipulation that uses them this
way and degrades our constitutional system.
Sadly, the current virulent outbreak of jingoism shows the same
symptoms of political manipulation of the military. We can be thankful
that the quick military successes of the last month (and the ensuing
public support of the war) ensure that returning soldiers will be
treated with proper respect. However, the misdefinition of
patriotism as unquestionning support for war will continue to have
increasingly baleful effects on the political atmosphere of this
country.
Kit
|
570.10 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | No easy way to be free... | Tue Feb 26 1991 16:45 | 24 |
| One aspect of a democratic society which is not entirely beneficial to
the military troops is the importance of popular support on the political
machinations which define the boundaries of military engagement and the
parameters within which each soldier may operate. Given the broadly recognized
tendency for politicians to ride the political trade winds regardless of
their direction, the soldier may find himself at increased risk due to nothing
more than political vacillation resulting from overzealous observation of
the current opinion polls by those who wish to retain elected office. Military
objectives are frequently rendered politically impractical out of fear of
offending the masses. To the individual soldier, such a situation may prove to
be extremely harmful- even lethal. I've often wondered if the death certificates
of soldiers so killed state the real cause of death "the decedent died of
a severe case of political indecision."
On the other hand, democratic society often has the means to terminate unjust
or unreasonable military actions through a concerned legislature.
One thing about the current conflict that bothers me is the extreme rapidity
with which anyone supportive of any level of influence in the Gulf has been
labeled as jingoistic. There is not a whit of difference between those that
label al who do not support the war as unpatriotic and those who label all
who support the war as jingoistic, save their chosen extreme.
The Doctah
|
570.11 | | COMET::DYBEN | | Wed Feb 27 1991 03:04 | 6 |
|
Doctah,
Then is the only safe place in the middle??
David
|
570.12 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | No easy way to be free... | Wed Feb 27 1991 08:35 | 10 |
| Not really. The key is the reasoning behind the positions. Without getting into
an extended philosophical discussion in this topic, let me just say that there
is a qualitative difference between disagreeing with the war because one has
an ostrich-like approach to foreign policy and disagreeing with the war because
one has been taught since birth that their religion does not support violence
under any circumstances. (The same goes for supporting the war because one likes
to see one's country "kick some butt" being qualitatively different than
supporting the war as a clear means to eliminate a malignant despot.)
The Doctah
|
570.13 | Ribbons mean a lot | CALS::ALBOROUGH | | Wed Feb 27 1991 22:20 | 9 |
| In '75 my number was 74. Last week I finally realized what all the ribbons
mean, that each one signifies a person who took the time to care. I cried
because in '75 I did not have that feeling about this country, and I was
scared to go, not to fight, but to go with no support.
I hope my children never have to fight, and if they do, I hope to God you and
I know exactly why they are fighting.
Tom
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570.14 | thanks | FSTTOO::BEAN | Attila the Hun was a LIBERAL! | Thu Feb 28 1991 08:12 | 17 |
| re: -1
thanks, Tom... a nice sentiment, and well said.
there've been a lot of statements in this (and other) strings about
"jingoism" and false patriotism... as if the accusers could actually
"feel" the sentiments of others.
i believe that most Americans *do* care this time. they *are* concerned
about their armed forces men and women overseas and here at home. and
the yellow ribbons are just a token of that feeling.
it's a feeling we all missed in the VN thing.
thanks, America. I love you!
tony
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