T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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573.1 | | CSC32::GORTMAKER | Whatsa Gort? | Thu Mar 07 1991 22:30 | 22 |
| I think without question the reason this war was won quickly was
because the soldiers fighting the war had both hands free to fight.
The powers that were during VN never really wanted to win so they
diden't have a snowballs chance in hell of winning. I think the
60's and 70's saw the worst examples of presidents ever to lead this
country since the civil war. A pretty fair amount of the Hi tech
munitions used in the gulf were availible during the NV conflict
but were not used. Why well thats a tough question but I think
the beauracrats knew that they diden't have any business there in
the first place but coulden't admit they had blundered. It's tough
to fight if your heart isen't in the battle.
The men in wars past have always been the same regardless of which
war you choose they are pawns of the chessboards of their leaders.
-j
I wonder if wars would end if the politicians wanting the war were
required to be at the front fighting with "the boys".
|
573.2 | All the difference in the world | OXNARD::HAYNES | Charles Haynes | Fri Mar 08 1991 01:59 | 9 |
| The difference between a pitched battle and guerilla warfare. The
difference between a readily identifiable enemy and an enemy
indistinguishable (and sometimes identical to) the local civilian
populace. The difference between a fast moving war of maneuver and
position and a slow incremental war of attrition and garrison.
The difference between a free press and a managed press.
-- Charles
|
573.3 | | FSTTOO::BEAN | Attila the Hun was a LIBERAL! | Fri Mar 08 1991 08:05 | 10 |
| you don't play tiddly-winks with the enemy. you blast the s*!t out of
him and get it over with.
i *hate* the fact that we had this war!!!
but, God bless George Bush and the rest of the coalition leaders for
letting the *real* generals and their military forces fight this one
the right way!
tony
|
573.4 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Turning Circles | Fri Mar 08 1991 08:17 | 14 |
| The three major factors that lead to the Gulf War being so short and
decisive were that the leadership had clear goals and a willingness to
allow those goals to be acheived, our armed forces have vastly superior
weaponry, and our forces are exceptionally well trained.
As Charles mentioned, this was clearly a war with obvious and acheivable
military objectives. The demarcation between the battlefield and civilian
populations was much clearer.
If today's army went into Vietnam even with today's leadership, we would
still have many more casualties than in the gulf war IMO. Geography plays
a large role in Vietnam.
The Doctah
|
573.5 | | FSTTOO::BEAN | Attila the Hun was a LIBERAL! | Fri Mar 08 1991 08:33 | 72 |
| i just re-read the base-note and noticed it's title.
yeah... i'd be willing to consider that so called "NON" baby boomers
might just well be better fighters... and maybe even better at a LOT of
things, than baby boomers were/are.
there was a VERY interesting series of video documentarys on Public
Television recently...my father-in-law taped them so we could watch
them a couple weekends ago.
the series started by defining "baby boomers" as being that generation
of children who were born immediately after WWII...around 1944 to 1950.
it observed that the parents of baby boomers were largely folks who had
lived thru the Depression of the '30s and also WWII, and were trying to
give their kids more than they themselves had.
the economy of the '50s boomed, suburbia blossomed, colleges
flourished, and in general, the years of the baby boomers were really
great years... economically.
result? those kids never had to do without. they never had to live
in the so called REAL WORLD. their quest for personal freedoms went
unchallenged... moms and dads all over had relenquished control of the
family unit.
The "pill" was invented, and the me-first generation was free to
practice what had before been taboo... sexual freedom, no risk
promiscuity, and no one seemed to care.
All sorts of events occured nearly simultaneously which caused this one
generation of kids to become radically different from their forebears.
They never had to learn to deal with authority... and when authority did
something they didn't like, they rebelled.
They dropped out of society. became outcasts from society. hippies.
flower children. moonies.
Then, just as that was happening: Viet Nam.
Nobody liked VN. (except a few politicians and govt. contractors).
But, the draft was "in" and suddenly these same kids were told they had
to go and fight a war they didn't believe in. And they had never in
their lives been required to DO ANYTHING they didn't believe in.
So, many of them ran away from the draft. And a lot of those who wound
up in one service or another, were half-spirited about it.
No wonder our military had problems with drugs. Many of those kids
were already doing drugs before they were drafted. Why stop just 'cuz
you have a uniform on?
put that together with the WAY the war was being fought, it's no wonder
we were whipped.
Todays military is all voluntary. Every single one of those men and
women *chose* to be in the army. Of course, there is some talk about
recruitment gone haywire... false pretenses and all that. But, even if
that is true, it has to be a very small percentage of the case. The
vast majority of enlistees in the service are there because they CHOSE
to be; it was a place to get a job.
and they are emotionally better fit for the job then the baby boomers.
the men and women of todays military seemed (to me) to be "up" for this
one.
and there was a clearly defined enemy. and a clearly defined war-plan.
and decisive leadership. and a country that backed them.
tony
|
573.6 | | WRKSYS::STHILAIRE | like you but with a human head | Fri Mar 08 1991 09:59 | 11 |
| re .5, I think the fact that today's army is all volunteer had a lot to
do with it. They also believed that what they were doing was right.
That's a lot different than an army made of guys who got drafted
against their will, and really felt that what they were made to do was
wrong.
Also, officers may be much better trained and educated today. There's
an article about this in Time magazine this week.
Lorna
|
573.7 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Fri Mar 08 1991 10:00 | 4 |
| I'd appreciate it if the discussion could be kept on the topic of men, and
away from general discussions about the military. Thanks.
Steve
|
573.8 | | COMET::DYBEN | | Fri Mar 08 1991 11:30 | 8 |
|
Steve,
Considering the topic and subsequent questions pertain to men
and the military,I think all preceding notes are relevant...
Sincerly,
The Basenoter...
|
573.9 | No can do. | MORO::BEELER_JE | Never bring a knife to a gun fight | Fri Mar 08 1991 11:54 | 12 |
| To separate "men" from the "issues" is difficut if not impossible and
would only serve to dilute the intent of the base note.
We live in a time where it is becoming increasingly difficult to
separate civilian from soldier, individual crime and organized
violence, and, terrorism and war. "Men" have not changed, their
environment has changed - to discuss one without the other is fruitless
at best.
I agree with the basenoter.
Jerry
|
573.10 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Fri Mar 08 1991 15:05 | 7 |
| I just want to avoid the never-ending arguments about the war itself,
several of which have already been shut down. If you think you can keep
this on a civil basis and keep it relevant to the subject of men, go
ahead - for now. If the topic becomes a general political argument, I'll
ask you to take it elsewhere.
Steve
|
573.11 | | SOLVIT::KEITH | Real men double clutch | Fri Mar 08 1991 15:42 | 8 |
| I thought that the defination of Baby-Boomers were those born from
after WWII to 1962?
I suppose like that note a ways back stated that the Baby-Boomers were
an aberation from those generations before, sorta like Disco....
Steve
|
573.12 | | SA1794::CHARBONND | You're hoping the sun won't rise | Fri Mar 08 1991 16:10 | 12 |
| lotsa reasons - clear objectives, clear heads on the soldiers,
battle management left to professionals, clear strategy. Better
technology. Demoralized, non-partisan opposition. Lack of
leadership/expertise on the other side. Soldiers treated as
valuable team members and not 'cannon fodder'.
Of all the above I'd say the first, 'clear objective', is the
most decisive. In Vietnam the objective changed daily, with
idiotic measures of success. You don't win by racking up body
counts, or by bombing targets chosen by politicians instead of
military strategists, you win by achieving a clear objective.
The Iraqi military is out of Kuwait.
|
573.13 | just asking... | COOKIE::CHEN | Madeline S. Chen, D&SG Marketing | Fri Mar 08 1991 17:33 | 7 |
|
Maybe we did better in the Gulf because there were more Women in combat
positions? Just thought I'd ask ;)
-m
|
573.14 | | FSTTOO::BEAN | Attila the Hun was a LIBERAL! | Fri Mar 08 1991 18:03 | 8 |
| re: .13
I know you were being facetious, Madeline... (I saw the smiley)
But, lest we forget... there WERE a lot more women involved in this war
than before... and, I for one, believe their efforts were a very
significant contribution.
Thanks to them. And to the men they fought with.
|
573.15 | Circa 2010: "Everyone in the '90's was lame, right?" | PENUTS::HNELSON | Resolved: 192# now, 175# by May | Fri Mar 08 1991 18:32 | 69 |
| Why was this middle-east war so much more "successful" than Viet Nam?
I daresay the North Vietnamese deserve some credit; I'd say the Viet
Nam war was their victory, more than our loss. I don't want to make
heros out of the enemies of U.S. VN veterans, but they DID persist
despite enormous disadvantages in logistics, armaments, etc. The NVA
didn't have any air cover either. They *did* have a cause, something
which our military and political leadership never managed to pass along
to the U.S. troops. "The Vietnamese do not value life the way we do..."
I heard something just yesterday about the Republican Guard which we
bombed and tanked into misery and withdrawal. It turns out that the Guard
stationed in southern Iraq was the second string, eight or so divisions
created in 1987 after the original Guard was decimated fighting Iran.
The remainder of the original Guard was consolidated into two divisions
and kept near Bahgdad and Hussein, in part to protect Hussein and in
part to be in reserve for putting down any possible insurrection. This
original Guard is largely from Hussein's own region and tribe, and are
loyal to Hussein. They are presently fighting the rebellious troops in
the south of Iraq.
The point is that the Republic Guard we met in that legendary tank
battle was NOT the first-line troops, nor were they particularly in
Hussein's camp, as the rebellion *may* be showing now. They were not
highly motivated to fight us... especially after six weeks of bombing.
Finally, Hussein deserves some credit: he did an extremely poor job of
managing the war. To paraphrase the Senator from Texas, Saddam Hussein
is no Ho Chi Minh.
I question whether the present infantry is even AS capable as the U.S.
Viet Nam trooper. The volunteer army is composed of people who didn't
have anything better to do, either because they hadn't the skills or
they lacked the imagination. The Viet Nam war was supposed to be fought
by the poor kids, since the rest of us had college deferments. That is
greatly exaggerated: lots of college-quality kids enlisted, because we
were still naive gung-ho types then; lots of kids couldn't hack college
for reasons like they weren't very mature and didn't do their homework;
and lots of kids graduated and promptly got drafted. I'd be willing to
bet real money that the test scores of the current U.S. infantry is
*significantly* lower than during the Viet Nam era.
Finally, don't characterize all of 1960's humanity based on your dad's
diatribe about the Spock generation and what you saw in the Doors
movie. The sixties had lots of people smoking dope and putting flowers
in national guardmen's rifles and grooving on the vibrations... at
least five percent did that. Lots of people studied engineering, too,
or chemistry or metallurgy, and the sixties came in over their radio.
MOST people took jobs as retail clerks and auto mechanics, just like
always. The hippy-dippy crowd was teensy and got an incredibly large
amount of press, because they were new. They were NOT the people who
fought in Viet Nam; they were too few to be significant.
Frankly, I think this topic is an insult to the Viet Nam vets toward
whom we were all offering belated congratulations a couple weeks ago.
Hey, do you vets think you lost the war because your parents were too
permissive? I'd like to point out that exactly ZERO of the combatants
in the U.S. forces in the middle-east were there because their nation
was at war and they heard the call of patriotism. The vast majority of
them enrolled in the military with the deep conviction that they'd
never fight! See the world! Get job skills: become an airline pilot or
skilled mechanic! They just happened to have the bad luck of being
enrolled in the military vocational school when the war alarm went off.
Many U.S. soldiers in Viet Nam volunteered because they thought the
fight was vital to the interests of the United States. Right or wrong,
they heard the call and they answered. THEY do not deserve our insults.
- Hoyt
|
573.16 | | TORREY::BROWN_RO | it ain't over yet... | Fri Mar 08 1991 19:24 | 2 |
| You can't win a war where you can't tell the civilians you are
fighting for, from the enemy you are fighting against.
|
573.17 | | COMET::DYBEN | | Sat Mar 09 1991 01:43 | 12 |
|
573.15(Hnelson)
I in no way intended to smear the effort given by the men who
fought in VN..I just asked a question..My apologies to anyone
who might have been offended..I don't think there is really a
fair comparison to draw between the two wars..I also don't think
that the IQ comment was appropriate..You all( Viet vets, PG vets)
are all heroes regardless of your level of education..
Peace,
David
|
573.18 | | COMET::DYBEN | | Sun Mar 10 1991 18:24 | 10 |
|
Mr. Holt,
My apologies for the lousy reception some Americans gave you
back then..Perhaps some of the praise for todays PG vets will
carry over to the VN vets..I truly wish we could turn back time
and do it right....
David
|
573.19 | | SOLVIT::KEITH | Real men double clutch | Mon Mar 11 1991 08:53 | 13 |
| One problem with VN as shown to a lesser degree in Q8 (a basic tenant
of war) is that you cannot fight in the country you are trying to save
(for any real length of time) and have a country in the end that is
worth anything. In VN we should have fought in N-VN, not S-VN.
I can remember in 65 when I was a junior in HS watching ther 'news'
films about VN. Kinda got you all rosed up to go help. I myself was
swayed by this good cause (which It was IMHO, just executed criminally by
LBJ et. al.). At one point in time in late 65, I even thought of
joining myself.
Steve
|
573.20 | ARMCHAIR GENERALS AND POLITICIANS. | MILPND::CIOFFI | | Tue Mar 12 1991 11:21 | 20 |
| This kind of topic really gets me wound up and it really burns me up to hear
people talk about the heroes of the Vietnam war like they were from some lower
level of society. I'm a baby boomer and I was drafted and my friends died and
were crippled in Vietnam. For those of you who think you know what war is all
about, I think you're in the wrong line of business. Nobody likes what
happened in and during Vietnam. Anybody who thinks that they are a better
fighter because they were born in this era should take their note down to
Washington and read it to all those dead names on the black wall they might
have something to say about it.
To the moderator:
I think this is a very bad subject to be discussing in this conference and it
should be moved to one named "I CAN DO IT BETTER THAN YOU CAN".
I'm getting emotional now.
I'm gone.
|
573.21 | Were not all spittung on you.. | COMET::DYBEN | | Tue Mar 12 1991 14:56 | 11 |
|
-1
Just asking questions..I haven't made any statements about the
value of soldiers who fought and died in Vietnam..I do have a
observation to make tho'..It gets me angry to here VN vets like
yourself suggesting your still being treated like lower class
citizens..Do you only here what the Knee Jerk liberal crowd says
about you??Did'nt you here me and my family cheering for you
when you came home???
David
|
573.22 | SOLDIERS JUST GET YOUNGER NOT BETTER | SPCTRM::REILLY | | Tue Mar 12 1991 15:00 | 39 |
| I agree with .20, This note can stir up alot of emotions in people,
but maybe it's needed.
First thing I would like to say is Why compare soldiers????? Today's
are the same as yesterday.All (men/women) are/were young and served
their country, to compare them is like comparing one springtime
from the other, both are the same it's just the time that change.
AS I read though these notes some of the responces upset me. My
brother served in Vn from 1966-1969 (25th inf div)To this day I
am still proud of him as well as all those who served our country.
I am a Baby Boomer (I believe BB was up to 1958-9) but I wasn't
born with a silver spoon in my mouth( as one noter thinks) My parents
were young when WWII started and my Dad joined the Army. Just before
he shipped out he and my mom got married (ripe old age of 17) When
he got back things weren't handed to them and later (6 kids) he
just couldn't face the responsibility he left!!!!! So My brothers
and Sisters grew up without him and just my mom, She was a waitress
and my dad paid no child support. I was #5 of 6....and I saw alot
throughout the 60's....I don't really want to go into my life but
I never did drugs in my life and I'm still going to college on my
own at night. Most kids I see today have their parents pay for
their car, college,food and many even still live at home.
I did 6 yrs 8 mo. in the Army (Jan 75-Aug81) Like many I had no
money for school. The soldiers that want to fight in the Gulf didn't
join to fight they joined to get an education and the Bennies I
don't think many would have signed up if they thought that there
was the slightest chance of war.
I tip my hat to those soldiers that went to the Gulf, and I'm proud
of what they've done. Wars cannot and should not be compared, I
think that what really need to be done is to have the same type
of parades for the VN Vets today and lets give them the HERO treatment
that they should have gotten.
Well I let off enough steam
Just my 2 cents
Bob
|
573.23 | good man, that's what I like to hear. | MILPND::CIOFFI | | Tue Mar 12 1991 15:51 | 7 |
| I wasn't born with the silver spoon either, my father also fought in WWII and
then came home and made 5 kids. I worked part time to get through a community
college associates degree, then went into the service and then used my GI bill
and working to get through my Bachelor's degree.
Carl.
|
573.24 | | SX4GTO::OLSON | Doug Olson, ISVG West, UCS1-4 | Tue Mar 12 1991 16:23 | 13 |
| re .21, David,
> Just asking questions..I haven't made any statements about the
> value of soldiers who fought and died in Vietnam.
Your basenote explicitly compared today's military to Vietnam-era
veterans, and your title asks "better?" Perhaps you could understand
that deliberately or not, that looks like an unfavorable comparison,
and you probably deserve to hear some of the resentment your careless
words caused. If you didn't mean to hurt people, then you could
indicate that you regret having done so.
DougO
|
573.25 | | COMET::DYBEN | | Tue Mar 12 1991 16:51 | 10 |
|
DougO
If you even took the time to read all the notes I have posted in
this topic you should be able to see that I did just that..I have
said on more than one occasion I am simply asking the question...
Read and Heed please,
David
|
573.26 | Combat ready? | CUPMK::DROWNS | this has been a recording | Wed Mar 13 1991 12:54 | 6 |
|
I'm wondering if the lack of drugs and alcohol in this war had
anything to with it's success.
bonnie
|
573.27 | Call it as I see it | SPCTRM::REILLY | | Wed Mar 13 1991 15:17 | 12 |
| re:26
I really don't think that lack of Drug or Alcohol had much to do
with winning this war or losing the other.
I think a big factor in the Gulf was the lack of the enemy wanting
to fight! Just look and all those who surrender (some to the News
teams), not to mention the World support and allied power. In the
Mid East they had battle lines that were very clear, Vn they had
to keep re taking the same hills, and you couldn't (weren't supposed)
to go over a certain line. Let's face the fact's the Military
was allowed to win this?????
Bob
|
573.28 | LACK OF DRUGS AND ALCOHOL. | MILPND::CIOFFI | | Wed Mar 13 1991 16:44 | 10 |
| What makes you think there was a lack of drugs and alcohol. Just because you
didn't see it on TV. What do you think soldiers in the field look like when
they're using drugs and alcohol? They don't let anybody get that close to the
troops and a soldier who's sitting out in the desert in the dark watching for
the enemy smoking hashish or anything else looks the same as that same soldier
sitting in the dark smoking a cigarette. Those desert countries pump out a lot
of drugs. When I was in the service one person in particular used to go away
every weekend whether he was supposed to or not. He went to the middle east
to make pickups. He eventually got caught and went to Fort Leavenworth for 2
years.
|
573.29 | If you must compare, consider -If you must compare, consider - | BOOKIE::CROCKER | | Wed Mar 13 1991 17:10 | 25 |
| 1. American units with good leadership had outstanding records
in Viet Nam. (sources: BRIGHT SHINING LIE, ABOUT FACE, neither
of which are "pro-establishment")
2. Schwartzkopf, Powell, and many of the other architects of victory
in Gulf War were company and battalion commanders in Viet Nam.
3. The VC and the NVA most certainly did have air cover -- the
jungle.
4. Unlike Gulf War, American military had lousy PR in Viet Nam.
(VC and NVA were creamed in the '68 Tet Offensive, but military
failed to capitalize on this -- many Americans think the U.S.
lost '68 Tet.)
5. Bush stayed out of the way. LBJ said "They can't bomb an outhouse
without my approval."
6. VC and NVA withstood enormous losses, but never gave up.
7. VC and NVA had Soviet and Chinese back-up.
|
573.30 | | SSGBPM::KENAH | The man with the eyes of a child | Wed Mar 13 1991 17:56 | 17 |
| About drugs and alcohol -- yes, those determined to get them probably
did, but this time the US government didn't help provide it. As a
gesture of respect to the official policies of Saudi Arabia, the US
military didn't provide alcohol to its troops.
As for "those desert countries pumping out a lot of drugs..." yes,
some Middle eastern countries do produce drugs, especially hashish and
various opiates. However, if you take a look at where our troops were
stationed, you'll notice that they really were in the middle of the
desert. You need agricultural conditions to grow any crop, and those
conditions did not apply where our troops were located.
While I doubt that drugs and alcohol caused our defeat in Vietnam,
their presence certainly damaged (and sometimes destroyed) the lives
and spirit of many, many good men.
andrew
|
573.31 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | 9� Weeks ==> life? | Thu Mar 14 1991 08:56 | 8 |
| The drug and alcohol problem in VN was exacerbated by the duration of the
military action. It seemed to be an endless trip to hell. The action in the
Persian Gulf, particularly the ground war, was seen by most everyone to be
a very close ended situation and thus less likely to suffer from the types
of morale problems that contribute to the use of drugs. Plus the availablity
was not the same.
The Doctah
|
573.32 | No excuse for drugs.... | COMET::DYBEN | | Thu Mar 14 1991 12:52 | 8 |
|
Yo Doctah,
The troops were rotated every year right in VN weren't they ???
> endless trip to hell.
|
573.33 | | BTOVT::THIGPEN_S | sun flurries | Thu Mar 14 1991 13:19 | 11 |
| yo dyben
a year can be a helluva long time. ANY amount of time in hell can seem
like eternity.
don't know you or your age, but if you're younger than 32ish you weren't
there, and weren't around at the time, and you don't know what it was
like then.
kinda like fervent anti-smokers who've never smoked saying "Hey! Just
quit cold turkey!"
|
573.34 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | 9� Weeks ==> life? | Thu Mar 14 1991 13:38 | 9 |
| >No excuse for drugs....
Explanations and excuses are different things. I gave an explanation, without
offering excuses.
And Sara is correct. Even a year could seem to be an open ended committment
to someone who was there.
the Doctah
|
573.35 | I think I've got it now. | MILPND::CIOFFI | | Thu Mar 14 1991 13:41 | 5 |
| It is naive to think that because you are out in the middle of the desert that
the drugs can't get to you. If you've got money and you want it, it will find
you anywhere.
Carl
|
573.36 | | COMET::DYBEN | | Thu Mar 14 1991 14:32 | 8 |
|
Yo Thigpens_S,
Yeah I am only 30..So perhaps I was to quick to judge..
David p.s. Anybody know the best way to eat crow :-)
|
573.37 | EAT CROW. | MILPND::CIOFFI | | Thu Mar 14 1991 16:04 | 4 |
| Soy sauce with a little salt and pepper.
Carl
|
573.38 | Don't teach your grandmother to suck eggs... | SSGBPM::KENAH | The man with a child in his eyes... | Thu Mar 14 1991 17:02 | 9 |
| >It is naive to think that because you are out in the middle of the desert that
>the drugs can't get to you. If you've got money and you want it, it will find
>you anywhere.
I'm hardly naive about getting drugs. I simply stated that our
troops were not sitting in the middle of an area where drugs were
growing all around them.
andrew
|
573.39 | Battlefield sure weren't Equal | WMOIS::MAY_B | IT'S LIKE THE SAME, ONLY DIFFERENT! | Fri Mar 15 1991 09:53 | 23 |
| How can you compare the warriors of two different wars when the wars
were so different!!!!
If was pretty clear that the enemy in the Gulf was;
-In the North and the loccation was known unlike Vietnam where they
could come from any direction.
-The enemy in the Gulf Was wore a uniform and was easily recognized,
unlike Vietnam where the enemy could be an eighty year old grandmother
walking towards you with a hand granade in her hand.
-There is big big difference between an all out frontal assault
with a half million men and gorrila warfare tactics of Vietnam
where the enemy could pick their best potential time to hit you.
I have the utmost respect for veterans of both wars but I honestly feel
the the political climate and the two different types of battle fields
is the reason for the differences in the outcome. Vietnam could play
one hell of a headtrip on any soldier,,,,, todays or yesterdays!!!
Bruce
|
573.40 | fyi on VN memoires ... re: 573.32 | AHIKER::EARLY | Bob Early T&N EIC /US-EIS | Fri Mar 15 1991 10:33 | 25 |
| re: Note 573.32 Non Baby Boomers better fighters?????? 32 of 38
>--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
> -< No excuse for drugs.... >-
>
>The troops were rotated every year right in VN weren't they ???
Some were, some weren't. Some spent up to three continuous years, and
some spent three 1 year periods.
> endless trip to hell.
The year I was there was the year they Court Martialed "The Hatchet
Brigade", and also offered Amnesty to all Army Drug Users/Offenders
promising rehabilitation and counseling. After all the ones who
wanted rehabilitation came forward and we removed to holdin centers;
they were the all court martialed.
In a way the US Govt is funny. They'll court martial marijuana users,
and continue to move beer and liquor and cigaaretted by the shipfull.
I guess its ok to be adicted to alchohol, but unacceptable to have
a few joints. ;^)
|
573.41 | tho the soya suggestion was funny ;') | BTOVT::THIGPEN_S | a real sap | Fri Mar 15 1991 11:26 | 12 |
| David,
apology accepted. No need to eat crow. Just please remember to
question authority, and to be slow to condemn the failings of others.
There but for fortune, and all that. Each of us is responsible for our
choices and actions, but once a path is embarked upon it can be damned
hard to break off it, onto another.
Sara
(a reformed smoker, stupid enuf to have started at 21, took me YEARS to
quit. I'm responsible for the stupid decision to start, but have a
little understanding of how hard it was to quit.)
|
573.42 | maybe... | COOKIE::CHEN | Madeline S. Chen, D&SG Marketing | Mon Mar 18 1991 15:42 | 26 |
| It's difficult to compare two different wars' warriors. But we must
face the fact that attitudes have certainly changed over the years...
My father mentioned several times that he had been too young for
WWI and too old for WWII. His emotion was *regret* that he never
got to fight. My oldest brother was *thankful* that he was exempt
from the draft (married, with kiddies) during the Korean conflict.
My youngest brother was *angry* that Kennedy flubbed the Bay of Pigs,
and he never *got to see combat* (he was in the army at the time).
And my husband was *relieved* that his draft number did not
come up during Vietnam.
As far as I can tell, these were the popular feelings of people in
these same circumstances during the above mentioned wars. So maybe the
"effectiveness" of a war, and the armies fighting it, is due to the
effectiveness of the popular propaganda accompanying it?
It's also quite possible that our all volunteer army is truly better
trained, with better technology, than any previous American armed
forces.
It's allso quite probable that I don't know what I'm talking about.
-m
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573.43 | everything seemed 'right' this time | IMTDEV::BERRY | Dwight Berry | Tue Mar 19 1991 02:12 | 25 |
| My gut feeling is that our troops are better trained, today. Just as a
business must continue improving to survive, so must the military. The
military leaders of today have admitted that they have learned from the past.
VN taught them much, and many of them were there to learn first hand. Our
government leaders also learned from the past. President Bush said this
wouldn't be another VN, as he knew that Americans feared this. Maybe we all
learned from VN. I hope so. The country learned you don't motivate the troops
or the politicians by dogging their efforts.
My concern was, if the fighting had have gotten nasty, how strong could the
American people remain. As a friend once said at the dog track, after winning,
"This is fun." My other friend replied, "Of course dummy. It's always fun and
easy when you're winning." If we were losing many lives in the desert, Many of
the Americans would have turned their support because they wouldn't have the
strength to face a nasty war. It's easy to take Iraq when the troops are
ripping up their shorts to make white flags.
And I'm sure the combat area made a difference. I think the men that flew the
sorties are the best pilots in the world. I know that technology has paid off
too. And the men that marched and dropped into enemy territory were ready to
'get it on' and go home.
We won for a lot of reasons. Mainly, cuz we were right.
db
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573.44 | it was fought right | NOVA::FISHER | It's Spring | Mon Mar 25 1991 07:26 | 12 |
| I think the reasons the Gulf War came off so easily were that the war
was fought the way The General wanted to fight it.
I think Hussein expected us to attack Kuwait and try to push him back
to the border similar to Vietnam and Korea. The way everything was
fortified certainly said that's what he expected.
Instead, The General just said "This is all stupid, I'd flunk this
guy if he were taking courses in military strategy, ..."
ed
|
573.45 | In "men" terms .... | MORO::BEELER_JE | PROUD to be an American | Mon Mar 25 1991 21:18 | 19 |
| .44> I think the reasons the Gulf War came off so easily were that the war
.44> was fought the way The General wanted to fight it.
I think that Mr. Fisher has hit the proverbial nail on the proverbial
head! The "quality" of the fighting soldier has not changed
significantly since our first major engagement in WWI. The quality
of our leadership has changed .... significantly .. since 'Nam.
Have you *listened* to any of the interviews with Schwartzkopf? He's
said time and again that every classical "War College" scenario told
him NOT to 'go' with the ground offensive .. yet he did. He (his
staff) had studied the Iran/Iraq war in detail ... and .. as General
Schwartzkopf put it "... we were not wrong one single time". There
were no surprises.
If you want a man-to-man comparison ... Schwartzkopf has gonads where
Westmoreland mush!
Jerry
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573.46 | | USWS::HOLT | | Mon Mar 25 1991 22:40 | 13 |
|
it was not a complicated war... deserts are really just big shooting
ranges;
No rice farmers getting in the way, no coke girls or boy-sans
able to plant bombs and get intelligence. No complex alliance systems
like the Cao Dai or the Buddhists or the francophiles. No triple
canopy, no Ho Chi Minh Trail, no stalwart Bo Dois dragging those 2
mortar bombs down from the North, often ending up in forgotten graves..
No doubt about who the enemy is now; can anyone tell we who it was in
VN?
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573.47 | IMHO | MORO::BEELER_JE | PROUD to be an American | Tue Mar 26 1991 01:10 | 3 |
| .46> ..can anyone tell we who it was in VN?
Start with Westmoreland and work your way up.
|
573.48 | | COOKIE::BADOVINAC | | Fri Apr 05 1991 19:09 | 17 |
| <<< Note 573.20 by MILPND::CIOFFI >>>
-< ARMCHAIR GENERALS AND POLITICIANS. >-
<<This kind of topic really gets me wound up and it really burns me up to hear
<<people talk about the heroes of the Vietnam war like they were from some lower
<<level of society. I'm a baby boomer and I was drafted and my friends died and
<<were crippled in Vietnam. For those of you who think you know what war is all
<<about, I think you're in the wrong line of business. Nobody likes what
<<happened in and during Vietnam. Anybody who thinks that they are a better
<<fighter because they were born in this era should take their note down to
<<Washington and read it to all those dead names on the black wall they might
<<have something to say about it.
This is about the first coherent thing I've read in here. I too am a VN
vet.
patrick
|
573.49 | | LJOHUB::CRITZ | John Ellis to ride RAAM '91 | Wed Apr 24 1991 17:24 | 12 |
| This is my first time here.
573.1 talks about fighting with both hands. Good point.
Charles, in 573.2 talks about guerilla warfare, etc.,
which is also a good point.
The bad thing about all this is it took the death of
58,000+, and untold damage to thousands more, before
they ended the foolish thing.
Scott
|