This an opinion piece and
I don’t include it to spur controversy.
Whether you agree with Terry or not I'm sure you will agree that he definitely has a point about revisionist
history.
From: Julian
Black
Date: 2/1/2018 8:21:46 PM
To: Julian
Black
Subject: Propagandists masquerading as
historians
This was
written by a Soldier who earned his Purple Heart in Viet Nam and whose children
have served in the GWOT. It is another very accurate representation of the
falsehood that was the Burns-Novick Fantasy Series, Viet Nam. Well done Terry
Garlock! Everyone with any interest at all in what really happened ought to
read this and those who served might wish to read and pass it on to those they
know and love and beyond. The travesty of the Burns-Novick Propaganda is that
for eternity, that will appear to those who do not the the truth, to be the
gospel! I believe Veteran's groups might want to send this on to their troops.
FYI ... author
with some insight on Burns' Viet Nam mockumentary.
Propagandists masquerading as historians
Propagandists masquerading as historians
by
Terry Garlock
Scheduled
for publication Wed, Jan 31 in The Citizen, a local Fayette County, GA
newspaper
I was only one of many Vietnam
veterans who wrote opinion columns criticizing the Vietnam War film by Ken
Burns and Lynn Novick, opining their work seemed more like propaganda than
history. In doing so I occasionally used “Burns” as shorthand for the pair, to
which Ms. Novick emailed me her objection. She is correct, I should
consistently include her name as co-producer because she is equally culpable in
the hit piece they brazenly call a documentary.
So, Ms. Novick and Mr. Burns,
this is for you. My back-handed compliment is that your wholly inaccurate film
is a slick rationalization for aging Americans who, decades ago, loudly
encouraged our enemy while we were killing each other in combat. For those
harboring doubts about actively opposing us in their youth while we served our
country in a war, your film may have supplied just the soothing salve they
need.
You bent the truth in your film
too far, too consistently, too repetitively, and omitted too much to leave any
room for me to believe those errors, omissions, distortions, half-truths and
complete falsehoods were remotely accidental.
Like a house of distorted
mirrors, you portrayed the murderous and avowed Stalinist Ho Chi Minh as a
nationalist driven by reunification of North and South Vietnam rather than his
real commitment to Communist conquest of free South Vietnam. Your film
repeatedly depicted the war as unwinnable, the North Vietnamese cause as just,
war crimes between the two sides as morally equivalent, American troops as
victims, South Vietnamese as mere bit players, all that and much more of your
content completely opposite of the truth. You selected for dominant interviews
from the tiny percentage of American combat veterans with a grievance who
joined the protestors when they returned home.
I cannot know the motivation in
your hearts, but I have the stark impression that your plan from the very
beginning was to delegitimize America’s role in the war and justify the
anti-war left by very selectively emphasizing negatives and minimizing
positives to shape the film’s message to your liking.
There is a tragic irony in
protests by the anti-war left and your justification for them. The noble cause
of the Vietnam War was trying to stop the spread of Communism in Southeast
Asia, especially important given the hegemony of China in the region. Even so,
while we answered our country’s call and honorably performed our difficult
duty, leadership in the White House and Pentagon created a patchwork of
micromanagement and idiotic war-fighting limitations, obstacles that got
thousands of us killed while preventing victory. Those egregious and very real
failures alone would have been worthy of protest, but your buddies on the left
either didn’t notice or felt compelled to manufacture their own demons, like
John Kerry’s fantastic lie that we were raping, murdering and rampaging in
Vietnam like Genghis Khan.
The outrage is our enemy’s
daily atrocities against their own people, juxtaposed against how we Americans
defended and helped those civilians in a hundred ways, both ignored by the news
media while American troops were maligned.
Ms. Novick, you were just
eleven years old when America withdrew from Vietnam in 1973, so you might have
missed personally knowing the effects of false stereotypes about Vietnam and
its veterans.
Like so many others, I came
away from that experience with my eyes opened, having learned by watching young
Americans the true meaning of honor, courage and trust. Those men and women
were then and still are the finest people of character I have ever known.
I saw my fellow helicopter
pilots fly into enemy fire routinely, taking mortal risks to protect civilians
and their brothers, and I saw grunts do the same crazy things for each other. I
flew gun cover for Dustoff crews braving enemy fire to pick up wounded, and I
flew gun cover for LRPs sneaking in enemy turf, the bravest men I have ever
seen; if you have an open mind, read Six Silent Men by Gary
Linderer to understand how bold our Rangers were.
I saw doctors, nurses and
orderlies drive themselves to physical and emotional exhaustion every day as
they struggled to send us home alive, and still we found time to send medical
help to poor villages where medicine had never been seen. There was much to
admire, and when I finally wrote a book my title tells my sentiments: Strength
and Honor: America’s Best in Vietnam.
Anti-war voices were
overwhelming, and America never knew what a fine job their youth had done in
Vietnam, despite impediments imposed by our own government, despite
collaboration with the enemy by our own fellow citizens.
When we came home, the country
seemed to us to have turned principles upside down. Wearing the American
uniform invited hostility while refusing to serve was somehow a virtue. These
remarkable troops, young enough to be called boys but now battle-hardened men,
never lost a single significant battle against a very tough enemy, but they
didn’t know how or want to engage in political argument. And so many like me
kept their head down and went on with life. Nobody wanted to hear about our
experience anyway, for two reasons.
First, everybody already knew
all the answers about Vietnam, they had seen it on TV. Second, in those days
the Vietnam War was a shunned topic, something dirty not discussed in polite
company.
Even some family members
skirted the subject, wary of the rumors they heard about rampant war crimes,
drug addiction and vets prone to snap into violence. During his first visit
home, Tony Foster’s mother asked him what kind of drugs he was on.
False stereotypes took root from
repetition in a media leaning hard against the war. Movies reinforced the lies
with absurd stories and unreal characters that indulged Hollywood’s ridiculous
fantasies of the war. Period fiction followed suit, and TV dramas occasionally
created a Vietnam vet when they needed an unbalanced, unpredictable and
dangerous character.
Spreading these attitudes has
consequences. Not everyone thought the worst of us, but enough did to change
the national mood.
Even small slights left lasting
impressions. Jay Standish escorted his date to their seats near the front of an
off-Broadway theater, proudly wearing his Marine Corps dress blues, prompting
boos from many in the audience. A Sgt. named Chip went to see a Priest for
pre-marital counseling wearing his Army dress greens, and the Priest told him
to come back when he was wearing decent clothing.
Vietnam vets learned to leave
the war off their resume to avoid rejection in the first cull of job
applicants. They soon knew to keep quiet in college classes since anti-war
professors used their grading pen as a weapon.
ROTC membership plummeted and
some professors wouldn’t accept members as students. Military recruiters were
ejected from campus. The uniform was not popular, as R.J. DelVecchio learned by
hostility to his Marine Corps uniform at the University of Maryland and was
advised not to wear it again on campus. Wearing a uniform made some feel
invisible waiting to be served in a restaurant.
Drew Johnson, who ferried Navy
aircraft to Vietnam over an extended period, returned through California
airports at least two dozen times and saw the escalation of vitriol aimed at
our returning troops by anti-war protestors who, by my measure, were unfit to
shine a veteran’s shoes. Officials and most in the public merely looked the other
way while protestors yelled “babykiller” and worse at returning vets, threw
nasty splatter packets at them and frequently used their own spit.
In 1971, my commanding officer
told me to remind my men not to wear their uniform off-base, for their own
personal safety.
Some anti-war tactics were
despicable. An F-105 fighter pilot I will leave nameless bet his life every
time he flew into North Vietnam through the toughest air defenses in the world.
When he was shot down, even before his wife received official notification,
anti-war activists called to say her husband was a baby-killing a**hole and
deserved what he got.
There were many thousands of
these uncouth episodes incited by fabrications from the anti-war left, and they
were made worse that they were aimed at Americans who served honorably and
sacrificed much. And yet every Vietnam vet I know is proud of their service,
fiercely patriotic and doesn’t want even a shred of sympathy.
They do want one thing. They
want the truth told about them, their enemy, their war.
Now, after forty something
years, Ms. Novick and Mr. Burns, along comes the misrepresentation you call a
documentary, very pretty but with only fleeting intersections with the truth
and reviving conflict long ago buried. It seems, to me at least, that you
pre-planned your strategy to build up to your conclusion in support of your
friends on the left, “The Vietnam War was a tragedy, immeasurable and
irredeemable.”
Even with 10 episodes over 18
hours, you left out vital pieces of the story. In 1974, in the aftermath of
Watergate, Democrats were elected in a landslide and the new Congress violated
America’s promise by cutting off funding for South Vietnam’s self-defense. Then
when the Communists attacked South Vietnam in massive force, Congress refused
to honor America’s pledge to come to their aid. The left’s view seems to
be North Vietnam’s conquest had the happy result of reunification. Senator J.
William Fulbright, who provided the forum for that spectacular liar John Kerry,
said about the fall of Saigon that he was “. . . no more depressed than I would
be about Arkansas losing a football game to Texas.”
Trivializing the human cost of
Communist victory, you didn’t mention tens of thousands of executions, the
million or so sent to brutal re-education camps, the panicked populace fleeing
in rickety overpacked boats and dying by the tens of thousands. You neglected
North Vietnam’s obscene practice of bulldozing South Vietnamese graves, and the
influx of North Vietnamese to take over the best farms, businesses, homes and
jobs in South Vietnam. And you swept under the rug America’s shame, the
betrayal of our ally, never mind the genocide by Communists as they murdered
two million in Cambodia next door.
All in all, Ms. Novick and Mr.
Burns, kudos on the slick appearance mixing photos, film clips, tilted
narration and sad music to set the mood for your biased content. I think you
have succeeded in making your semi-factual slop believable to a naïve public,
and students in schools you send it to will likely lap it up because they don’t
know better.
That means we will need to
redouble our efforts to tell the story true.
As I tell students when I speak
to them about the Vietnam War, “Why does this ancient history matter to you?
Because you need to know how a false history takes root, and you need to be
smart enough to beware propaganda when you turn on TV news.” Or watch a film
labeled a “documentary.”
------------------------
Terry Garlock lives in Peachtree City, GA. He
was a Cobra helicopter gunship pilot in the Vietnam War.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Full post disclaimer in left column. PCN Home Page is located at: http://pcn.homestead.com/home01.html
No comments:
Post a Comment