On The
40th Anniversary Of The Fall Of Saigon (Ho Chi Minh City)-Vietnam At
The End- Yet Another Time To Try Men's Souls- The Detroit Vietnam Winter Soldier
Investigations-1971
From The Pen Of Frank Jackman
Sometimes a picture is in fact
better than one thousand words. In this case the famous, or infamous depending
on one’s view, photograph of the last American “refugees” being evacuated by
helicopter from the American Embassy rooftop in Saigon (now, mercifully, Ho Chi
Minh City) tells more about that episode of American imperial hubris that most
books. That clinging mass of blurry figures dragging, fighting, pushing to get
that last out before the NVA swooped down in a flash and closed down the old
shop. Books that spent thousands of words talking about “domino theories, red
menaces, communist hegemony, and sticking it to the Soviets by a little proxy
war in far off rice fields.
Recently I reviewed Frank Snepp’s
book about Vietnam at the end of the war, Indecent
Interval , where I noted “as is the case with this little gem of a book,
ex- CIA man Frank Snepp’s insider account of that fall from the American side,
it is nice to have some serious analytical companionship to that photo
[helicopter rescues off the Embassy rooftop].
Moreover, a book that gives numerous details about what happened to who
in those last days in a little over five hundred pages. Naming names about who
the good guys and bad guys really were (from the American imperial perspective).
Especially now, as two or three later generations only see Vietnam through the
hoary eyes of old veterans, both military and radical anti-war, from that
period like me (a veteran in both senses) to tell the tale.”
And such histories, memoirs and
remembrances help to get a fix on that Vietnam episode in the lives of many of
the young in that time. Sometimes though the story of war, about what happened
before the whole edifice came crashing down, can be told another way, in a more
personal way. Who knows in one hundred years the book below may present the
more important story.
Yet Another Time To Try Men's Souls- The Detroit Winter
Soldier Investigations-1971
DVD Review
Winter Soldier, various soldier witnesses, Winterfest Productions, 1972
Winter Soldier, various soldier witnesses, Winterfest Productions, 1972
I am rather fond of invoking,
especially in writing of the American Revolution that we have just again
celebrated, Tom Paine’s little propaganda piece in defense of that revolution
which hails the winter soldiers of 1776 for staying at their posts when others either
ran away or became faint-hearted at the prospects of defeating the bloody
English. It is those efforts by those long ago winter soldiers that other
leftists and I have honored in the past and continue to honor today. We will
leave the hollow holiday rhetoric and mindless flag waving to the sunshine
patriots. Needless to say, given the title of the film under review, I am not
the only one who appreciates that description and the producers here, I
believe, have caught the essence of the spirit of those long ago winter
soldiers in this documentary about the rank and file soldier-driven
investigation in 1971 into the atrocities and horrors produced by the American
military in the Vietnam War.
It is an old hoary truism, if not
now something of a cliché, that war does not bring out humankind’s nobler
instincts. For a very recent example one need look no further back than at the
newspaper headlines of the past few years concerning various atrocities and
acts of torture committed by the American military in Iraq and Afghanistan.
However, Iraq and Afghanistan are hardly the first time that the American
military has been exposed acting in less than its self-proclaimed ‘agent of
liberation’ role in its various imperial adventures. If one rolls the film of
history back to the last generation, for those who have forgotten or were not
around, Vietnam presents that same story. As against prior wars two things made
awareness that something had gone horribly wrong possible in Vietnam. First,
Vietnam was the first televised war and at some point it became impossible for
the military to hide everything that it was doing. Secondly, a small critical
mass of American military personnel, mainly those rank and file personnel who
actually carried out military policy, wanted to clear the air of their
complicity in that policy.
Needless to say, an investigation
into atrocities and torture is not something that the American military
establishment wished to have aired in public (and as the fate of this film
indicates raised hell to successfully keep it out of the major media markets of
the time). That establishment was much more comfortable with internal
governmental investigations or whitewashes of their actions as occurred,
ultimately, in the case of My Lai. However the traumatic reaction of a
significant element of the rank and file soldiery in Vietnam caused this
'unofficial' investigation to take place. For those who grew up, like this
reviewer, believing something of Lincoln’s expression that the American
democratic experience was the ‘last, best hope for mankind’ this was not pretty
viewing. For one, also like the reviewer, who was a soldier during the Vietnam
War period and who had friends and ‘buddies’ just like those that populate this
documentary AND DID SOME OF THE SAME THINGS it was doubly hard. But, dear
reader, for the most part what the citizen-soldiers- our brothers, sons and
other relatives- have to say here needed to be said.
Naturally in a documentary that
films an investigation into atrocities, torture and military standard operating
procedure (SOP) during the Vietnam War the interviewees are going to be a
little more articulate, a little more remorseful and a lot more angry than the
average soldier who went through Vietnam came home and tried to forget the
experience. These soldiers had an agenda- and that agenda was to get their
buddies- the troops still in Vietnam- home. Nevertheless one must be impressed
by the way they expressed themselves –sometimes haltingly, sometimes
inarticulately, sometimes from some depth that we have no understanding of.
Moreover, their testimony has the ring of truth. Not the SOP military truth but
this truth- humankind has a long way to go before it can, without
embarrassment, use the word civilized to describe itself. No, my friends, these
were not our soldiers but, they were our people-these were the winter soldiers
of the Vietnam War.
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