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Is America Ready For "Vietnam War Re-enactments" (ala Civil War Re-enactments)??
AmericanInTokyo ^
| 10 July 2002
| AmericanInTokyo
Posted on 07/10/2002 11:30:33 AM PDT by AmericanInTokyo
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Has anything on a large-scale been planned? Would this flop?
To: AmericanInTokyo
Hmmm my father was there in 71 I wonder what he would think.
2
posted on
07/10/2002 11:37:25 AM PDT
by
weikel
To: AmericanInTokyo
Not a good idea...
My oldest brother served in Nam during TET....got wounded. I saw the nightmares he had when he came home... first hand.
Don't see this happening
3
posted on
07/10/2002 11:38:03 AM PDT
by
Dog
To: AmericanInTokyo
How about re-creating the Gulf of Tonkin battle. Everyone could sit and do nothing. Then someone could phone DC and cite the battle (which some say never happened) as reason to increase the war effort. That would be exciting to watch.
To: weikel
It to me is an amazing question and possibly quite a debate. I would imagine some would not mind going to see it, and others perhaps would steer clear for fear of opening old wounds. It might be something good, though, for kids born way after Nam to at least see, to educate them from a historic perspective. I wonder what other Freepers with Nam experience would think.....
To: CecilRhodesGhost
Cool. Thanks. I guess a Mayaguez incident could be stage, circa 1975, but you'd need a lot of water and some fake islands.
To: AmericanInTokyo
I've seen living history displays of the World Wars and of the Korean war, but not actual reenactments. There's one slight problem: the battlefields were "over there". Reenactments from the French and Indian War, the War for Independance, and the War Between the States are done on the actual battlefields. Anything else is a "muster", or a "living history display", or some such.
To: weikel
My premise is that 'time heals' but that perhaps in this case (Vietnam), there has not been adequate
time. (On the other hand, we could probably do a Grenada or Panama re-creation?)
But then again, I could be wrong. I thank Freepers for kicking this around a little bit.
To: AmericanInTokyo
The Gulf of Tonkin, near the northern Vietnamese coast, was the site of one of the key incidents that that deepened American involvement in the war in Vietnam. In what is known as the Gulf of Tonkin Incident, the American government claimed that Vietnamese patrol boats fired on the U.S. destroyer Maddox, pictured above, on two separate occasions in early August 1964 in the waters of the Gulf of Tonkin. Although later serious questions were raised about the nature and even the existence of the attacks, President Lyndon Johnson seized the opportunity to secure a Congressional resolution authorizing him to take "all necessary measures to repel any armed attacks against the forces of the United States and to prevent further aggression" in Vietnam. This authorization, often called the "Gulf of Tonkin Resolution," essentially provided the Johnson Administration with a blank check for further expansion of the war without having to seek additional Congressional approval.
To: AmericanInTokyo
Well he was a doctor in Saigon not a combat grunt so I don't think he had any "issues" after coming back but he did say he was shot at a few times( Vietnam had no true front though Saigon was certainly safer than Quang Tri).
10
posted on
07/10/2002 11:44:56 AM PDT
by
weikel
To: ArrogantBustard
Yes, the problem would definitely be that the location is not there and the terrain problem. But then again, that could be overcome with some ingenuity.
To: weikel
Gotcha on that. (Saigon safer than Quang Tri)
To: AmericanInTokyo
The socialists are always trying to react the 1960s. Wait a second...
To: AmericanInTokyo
I think a Vietnam War Re-enactment could be happening real soon.
It's called Iraq.
To: AmericanInTokyo
Too late, already going on. Doesn't have a lot of oomph yet. Friend of mine that's in the SCA (medieval/ renaissance re-enactment) and a few years ago he went to a "re-enactment fair" outside of Flagstaff (northern AZ, not very near the Grand Canyon) that had re-enactors (and merchants selling to re-enactors) of just about every major conflict ever, including WWI, WWII, Korea and Viet Nam (they had Hueys, actual honest to God Hueys... only 2 but DAMN).
15
posted on
07/10/2002 11:49:12 AM PDT
by
discostu
To: CecilRhodesGhost
And to think, in 2002 now that place is turned into a money making tourist operation, complete with all these rinkydinky boats that take Americans, Europeans and Japanese all throughout Halong Bay, just off the Gulf of Tonkin......
To: AmericanInTokyo
Reenactments are big business. I think Living History is great up to a point - it's wholesome fun, preserves history, etc.
There are some Civil War reenactors who are fanatics, though. Plenty would sign up if real bullets were used.
17
posted on
07/10/2002 11:49:52 AM PDT
by
Old Lady
To: discostu
Thanks. I figured that someone would have an idea or a report. Do they include enemy NVA? Wondering how that would look if you had some 6'1"" fellow, 220 lbs. with a beer gut (rather odd, I think)...
To: AmericanInTokyo
Things change. Who would have guessed Argentina would be broke and pathetic in 2002? As for re-enactments, let's also consider re-creating CIA operations like Chile in the early 1970s. We'll need plenty of planes to toss people out into the ocean. Could actor Ron Silver be prodded into playing Kissinger again?
To: discostu
Thanks. I figured that someone would have an idea or a report. Do they include enemy NVA? Wondering how that would look if you had some 6'1"" fellow, 220 lbs. with a beer gut (rather odd, I think)...
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