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by Leonard Magruder VIETNAM VETERANS FOR ACADEMIC REFORM
CNN did briefly acknowledge this meeting in their Monday night news, but could not describe the plan or its origin because the public would have asked, "What success"? The media never told America about the success of the plan in Vietnam. Peter Spiegel of "The Los Angeles Times" in an article in "The Lawrence Journal-World" on Saturday, Nov. 25, coincidentally, brought out facts about the Vietnam War, which turn out to be related to this plan, that have been suppressed for decades.
This is the one truth, above all other truths, that the university hoped would never see the light of day. We expand on this in this article. Actually the retreat began under President Johnson who wrote to General Westmoreland shortly after the Tet Offensive that to "pursue the war more aggressively was politically unfeasible" because he had, "no choice but to calm the protestors lest they precipitate an abject American pull-out." ("America in Vietnam," Lewy, 1978). The protestors were protesting the significant American victory at Tet. (For details on this phenomenon see "Tet" at v-v-a-r.org ) Also, it was not public
opinion that led to blocking funding. Sometime in 1972, the American
soldier having fought the war successfully to a peace treaty left South
Vietnam, leaving the South Vietnamese army to fight Said Major General Ira Hunt, "For two years the Army of South Vietnam were cleaning their clocks, they were giving more than they were getting, there is no question about it. But when we pulled the plug logistically there was no way they could carry on. We simply abandoned an ally." The American soldier won the war, but it was thrown away by the Democrats. Is this going to happen again? Apparently not if Bush can help it. To begin with, one thing university faculty always hide from students is any idea of the overall overwhelming success of American forces and ARVN, or the Army of South Vietnam, in the five major offensives of the Vietnam War. Here are the statistics, from "Vietnam in Military Statistics - A History of the Indochina Wars ," by Micheal Clodfelter, Vietnam War combat veteran and noted war historian. 1968 - The Tet Offensive
1969 -
1970
(includes Cambodian Incursion)
Laos Invasion (Lam Son 719 ) (with U.S. air support)
1972
-Easter Offensive (with U.S.air support)
For the full scope of the true tragedy of Vietnam, that it was a war that had been won and then thrown away to placate those at home who would not serve, we now have new histories that fill in what happened after 1968. This is a period of the war in which there was significant progress under General Abrams new "hold and secure" policy, following General Westmoreland's initial "search and destroy" policy, a period widely neglected in discussions of the Vietnam War. Very little of this progress was made known at the time to the American people by the media. Two of the most important of these new histories are "Unheralded Victory: The Defeat of the Viet Cong and the North Vietnamese Army," by Mark Woodruff, and "A Better War: The Unexamined Victories and Final Tragedy of America's Last Years in Vietnam", by Lewis Sorley. Following are a few revealing excerpts from "Unheralded Victory" by Woodruff:
Said Sir Robert Thompson, "In my view, on December 30, 1972, after eleven days of those B-52 attacks on the Hanoi area , you had won the war. It was over. They had fired 1,242 SAMs, they had none left. They and their whole rear base were at your mercy." (Sir Robert Thompson is the world's foremost authority on People's Revolutionary War, who as Secretary of Defense of the Malaysian Federation defeated the communist insurgency there. Often critical of Nixon's policies, nevertheless in a special report to him on progress under Abrams in Vietnam he wrote:
Where had all this progress come from, if not from the efforts and sacrifices of the American soldier?) "That spring, a secret delegation of Communist military experts from North Korea, China, and Cuba visited the war theatre, reporting back that the North Vietnamese and the Viet Cong forces could not hold out much longer against the United States and its allies." "What may have been missing for both the Americans and the Australians was not a "welcome home parade", but some acknowledgement of the victory they had achieved over the Viet Cong and the North Vietnamese Army." (This is where the war protestors really betrayed the American soldier, who got back at them good when they denied Kerry the presidency. According to a poll we took of some 6,000 Vietnam vets from 32 groups during the 2004 election, 80% of them planned to vote against Kerry, viewing him as an anti-war leader. This finding was reported in an article in United Press International, but the national press elsewhere frantically suppressed the finding. The national press campaigned for Kerry, just as it campaigned for Democrats in the recent elections, telling America the lie that the Democrats "have the solution." Which of course they don't. --------------------------
Here are some excerpts from "A Better War ", by Lewis Sorley. Sorley is also the narrator in a highly objective new 4-part film series on the war, "The Long Way Home Project" which students need to see. Particularly the two parts that document the thesis of this article:
Part 2 - How the War Was Won
"There was never any popular uprising in support of the enemy in South Vietnam. Not too surprising in view of the enemy's record, year after year, of assassinations, kidnappings, terror bombings, impressments, and indiscriminate shellings of population centers throughout South Vietnam. The enemy's response to the success of pacification, said General Harold K. Johnson, was "cut throats faster, cut throats faster." Said General Michael Davidson, "It is fair to say that by the middle winter of 1970-1971 the Viet Cong had been virtually eliminated and the North Vietnamese Army which had endeavored to go big time with divisional size units, had been driven across the border into Cambodia." "In the villages and hamlets the People's Self-Defense Force had mushroomed during 1969. At year's end, now organized into a combat arm and a support arm, this PSDF had more than 1,300,000 men and women in the combat arm, backed up by about 1,750,000 women, children, and elderly men in the support arm. (In other words, just about all of South Vietnam had mobilized in support of the American effort, but students are never told this, they are taught the South didn't want us there.) By late 1969 almost the entire population of South Vietnam was thought to be living under substantially secure conditions. More persuasive than the statistics were the obvious improvements in both security and prosperity reflected in daily village life. In March 1970 President Thieu introduced his "Land to the Tiller" program. All rents were suspended and almost 400,000 farmers would received title to a million and a half acres of land. Prior to that, in an even more dramatic move, he had provided arms to most civilians. Had he been an unpopular president, as argued by the anti-war movement, he would never have risked doing that." "In these later years the press simply missed the war. Maybe it wasn't exciting enough. But it was what the American soldier had done for South Vietnam; hamlets in which the population remained secure, refugees able to return to their villages, distribution of land to the peasantry, miracle rice harvests, roads kept open for farm-to-market traffic, the election and training of village governments. Some of what the press did see in Vietnam never got to the public back home." They didn't want the American people to know the war was being won. Nor did the anti-war forces. As David Horowitz, an editor of the radical antiwar movement's journal, "Ramparts" during those years later acknowledged, "Let me make this perfectly clear. Those of us who inspired, and then led, the antiwar movement did not want just to stop the killing as so many veterans of those domestic battles now claim. We wanted the Communists to win." The truth is, the "peace"
movement was never really concerned about peace. Although it cloaked
itself in an aura of great ----------------------------- It is absolutely time to demand that the media and the university stop hiding out on the subject of Vietnam and re-enter into dialogue with the rest of America, especially its Vietnam veterans, as to what really happened. We cannot go into a world-wide war on terrorism with these huge lies in our history. Holding on to, and perpetuating myths, has too great a potential for creating another lethal, paralyzing polarization. The media, and the campus, must find the courage to consider "second thoughts," as have David Horowitz and so many others of the anti-war movement, Horowitz now describing what they did in the 60's as "treason." The campus and the media fell for enemy propaganda and it is time they admitted it. As the Chief of Military History-U.S Government wrote in his Final Report,"If there is to be an inquiry related to the Vietnam War, it should be into the reasons why enemy propaganda was so widespread in this country, and why the enemy was able to condition the public to such an extent that the best educated segments of our population (media and academia) gave credence to the most incredible allegations." That this issue of lying about Vietnam has continued to be a problem up to today is shown by the fact that even as Kerry was being nominated at the Democratic Convention in Boston, right next door at Simmons College some of the nation's top historians and military experts on Vietnam were holding a symposium, "Examining the Myths of the Vietnam War." Out of this came the new Vietnam Veterans Legacy Foundation. The President of the group, Col. George E. Day, said in a press release, "A false history of Vietnam has been used to endanger and demoralize our troops in combat, undermine the public confidence in U.S. foreign policy and weaken our national security. Leftists lied about the war 35 years ago and are lying about it today. Our goal is to counter more than three decades of misinformation and propaganda and set the record straight." The media at the Convention next door, demonstrating once again its perpetual cover-up of all issues having to do with the Vietnam War, knew all about this but did not report it to the American people. Not long after, the group published a booklet to be used on college campuses , "Whitewash/Blackwash - Myths of the Vietnam War", by Bill Laurie, who is a member of our Board of Advisors, and R. J. Del Vecchio. (available at TechConsultServ@Juno.com.) As columnist Stephen Young wrote on the 30th anniversary of the Vietnam War, "Our national recollection of the war still matches that of the New Left." The time has come to raise the questions anew, because the new films and the new histories are devastating to the leftist version on campus and could end this debate forever. This is the one great trauma in the tissue of American history that has never been honestly dealt with. The psychology of the phenomenon is elementary. To admit to having been wrong would be to face, not only guilt, butdisproof of their ideological assumptions. But it is these same assumptions that are causing the wave of anti-Semitism on campus, the dangerous "Islam is peaceful" mythology, and the anti-Americanism being pressed on students. "It is because of something we did to them." We cannot win the war against terror with the campus building towards a polarization that could again paralyze a national effort. We invite you to see our two articles at v-v-a-r.org that sum up the complete case against the anti-war movement of the 60's. In the first of these articles, "Kerry Too Naive", we show you straight from literature handed out in the 60's at major protests, that anti-war leaders told their followers that the war was a civil war within the South between the government and Viet Cong "indigenous freedom fighters." The actual enemy, the Communist North Vietnam, of which the Viet Cong was always a combat arm, was never mentioned. In the second article "We Don't Want you Views on War- You Lied About Vietnam," we show how the entire anti-war movement rested on the lie that North Vietnam was never involved in aggression. The main focus of lying by the anti-war movement were two White Papers issued by the State Department in December 1961 and March 1965. Involvment by Hanoi is found in the report "Summary of Fact," issued in 1987 by Hanoi's Military History Institute. Wrote analyst Stephen B. Young, "The Summary confirms the two American White Papers and utterly refutes the position of the anti-war movement." Those who supported the war were never confused about this.The White Papers of 1961 and 1965 had assessed the intentions of Hanoi with complete accuracy. The credibility gap, or cynicism, of the 60's was not created by any fabrication on the part of the Kennedy or Johnson Administrations. It was created by deliberate lying by the leaders of the anti-war movement. Said Stephen B. Young, "The basic question is whether the U.S. involvement resulted from a tissue of lies from Washington, or whether its factual assessment of conditions in South Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia and its consequent policy response to the plight of the South Vietnamese people was rational and justifiable." We now know, with much of the evidence coming from the enemy itself, that the response was rational and justifiable. Therefore, what is taught on campus about the Vietnam War can no longer be tolerated as it is largely based on lies. For how the campus is still lying about Vietnam see "Students Challenge Professor on Vietnam" at v-v-a-r.org. A new additional place to see Magruder articles is WMDterror.com, largely military strategists on the current crisis, by Major Frank C. Stolz, USMC (Ret.) author of the important book, "Stage One-WMD Attacks on America ." If President Bush does
adopt the "secure and hold" plan, it was successful before, and it could
work in Iraq as well. But we must watch the media and the university like
a hawk. magruder44@aol.com
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