Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

To: yazoo
I remember some casual conversations around our C ration meals around that time. Since most of the RPG and AK rounds being fired at us were being trekked through Cambodia our attitude was pretty much, “F*$K em.”

Your service is greatly appreciated - more now than it was at the time. I was 14 or 15 when they ended the draft. Had it pounded into my head by our liberal teachers that Vietnam was a lost cause. At the time, I believed them.

In the hindsight that I gained through the 1980's and later, I learned that these particular teachers were quite wrong. Frankly, and I still love my brother dearly despite him being a tree-hugging liberal to this day, my brother was wrong as well. I just didn't know it yet.

I took a very interesting class at Baldwin-Wallace college in 1998 or 1999 - "Vietnam - Causes and Consequences" taught by Dr. L. A. Barone. It was excellent, and it gave me a little more understanding of the war from beginning to end. Obviously, I never got the feeling that I was in a combat situation, but I got an excellent overview of the war from the French losses in Bein Mein Phu (sp?) through the final withdrawel of US troops in 73 to the fall of Saigon in 75.

I have worked with, and am friends with many men who were soldiers, marines, or other military involved in the Vietnam War. I learned a great deal from them, and I hold that knowledge almost as dearly as those friendships.

I had the opportunity to visit the travelling Vietnam Memorial Wall last summer in Sevierville, Tennessee. It was quite an experience. I had never seen the "real" wall in Washington so I didn't really know what to expect.

I arrived at the location very early in the morning, before any visitors were there (I was photographing the wall for a friend that volunteered to help with the exhibition). Before I even pulled out the camera equipment, I walked out to the center of the wall. I started looking at the names - the names of patriots that left their homes at a young age, never to return. The names of people that left behind friends, families, children, and parents. I was overcome for a few minutes as all of that sunk in - I felt it. I can't describe it - I just felt it.

Thank you for your service!

27 posted on 04/26/2009 6:44:56 PM PDT by meyer (Obama is to the USA as Mugabe is to Zimbabwe.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 14 | View Replies ]


To: meyer

Thank you for you kind comments. The interesting thing is that when I was in Vietnam I don’t recall ever getting into a conversation about whether the was was wrong or not. I doubt most of us ever spent a lot of time thinking about it one way or another. I was drafted and the idea of trying to get out of it or get into some branch that would keep me out of Vietnam never crossed my mind. In fact, my thought was “in for a pound, in for a dollar,” so I volunteered for the infantry so could experience what war was like. I was not after glory or heroics but just felt it was an opportunity few get.

It wasn’t till I got home and went to college on the Gi bill that I took a course in Vietnam and read some books that I really understood what it was about. In fact, we won the war and it was only the lack of air support for the South Vietnamese army in 1975 that led to our defeat. I do believe we fought it badly and the fact we didn’t mine harbors or invade North Vietnam was a mistake, and that going into any war without a strategy for victory clearly laid out is a mistake. It was one we didn’t make in the first Iraq war.


39 posted on 04/27/2009 2:52:16 PM PDT by yazoo (was)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 27 | View Replies ]

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article


FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson