Never Forget, Never Forgive- The
American War Crime Atrocity At My Lai, Vietnam
Frank Jackman comment:
Recently I made a short comment about
the contradiction between those who generally write the history of any
particular war, the “winners” according to more than one source, and the fact
that in the case of Vietnam the losers have had a chance to re-write the
history to make it appear that that historic American loss was less than a
loss. You know the obfuscation and outright lies of those who “won” every
battle yet lost the war. And in the case of Vietnam when the deal went down and
the reality was that those forces fighting against the monster that loss rightfully
so. Which brings us to the question of atrocities of which there were almost an
infinite number committed by the sheer ferocity of the American air bombing and
fields of fire on the ground (most of them unnamed and un-mourned except by
family, fellow villagers and friends).
One atrocity that stands out, that
should stand out for all eternity along with the long line of such horrific
events which dotted the 20th and now 21st century was My
Lai (a name which is hard to write down even now without rage at the monster
still with us). My Lai-a name that spoke volumes of what the American presence
was about when after years of believing they would “win” in a cakewalk the fury
of the loss confronting them drove them to even greater levels of depravity.
That “they” by the way was us, us from dog soldiers without any real mission to
dogged taxpayers without and real regard for human life. The human life of the
other side. We can give it a name My Lai. We can give it another
name-scandalous-scandalous that those directly involved from MACV to the
lowlier grunt paid not price. So yes we should honor guys like gunship
helicopter pilot Hugh Thompson, maybe along with his crew the only American
heroes of the Vietnam War. So yes as well we should make sure that the physical
monument to that atrocity is not taken to ground.
My Lai, nothing more needs to be said
once those two short words are spoken. Except maybe we should take up the suggestion
mentioned above by a Vietnam Vet who knew what the real deal was when American
GIs, the dog soldiers, were ordered in to “save” villages, search and destroy
or “pacify” or whatever the desperate military strategy of the moment dictated.
Yeah, that needed to be said. Thanks American gunship pilot Hugh Thompson and
crew for taking dead aim at American ground troop mass murderers when it
mattered and saved what innocent Vietnamese lives you could save out of that
massacre. Presente!
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