Friday, November 10, 2017

The Big Lie About Veterans Day

I guarantee you that tomorrow, more than a handful of Veterans Day event speakers will repeat the canard that service members returning from Vietnam were spit upon by war protesters.

It. Never. Happened.

I haven’t seen the Ken Burns Vietnam series yet and given my indifference to Burns, not to mention my outright hostility to his anti-intellectual and anti-scholar claims that professional historians don’t want to engage popular audiences, which is bullshit, I may or may not get around to it. But it has led to a number of editorials about Vietnam, some of which discussing things Burns did not and others reminding us of key issues. I don’t know what Burns said about the pervasive and pernicious lie that protestors spat on veterans, but there is absolutely no actual evidence suggesting this is true. Nothing at all. And the man who exposed this myth, Jerry Lembcke (who I got to know because I interviewed him for my logging book because of his organizing in the 70s) has a good op-ed about this.
But you don’t believe the stories, right? she asked. Acknowledging that I could not prove the negative — that they were not true — I went on to say there is no corroboration or documentary evidence, such as newspaper reports from the time, that they are true. Many of the stories have implausible details, like returning soldiers deplaning at San Francisco Airport, where they were met by groups of spitting hippies. In fact, return flights landed at military air bases like Travis, from which protesters would have been barred. Others include claims that military authorities told them on returning flights to change into civilian clothes upon arrival lest they be attacked by protesters. Trash cans at the Los Angeles airport were piled high with abandoned uniforms, according to one eyewitness, a sight that would surely have been documented by news photographers — if it had existed.
And some of the stories have more than a little of a fantasy element: Some claim the spitters were young girls, an image perhaps conjured in the imaginations of veterans suffering the indignities of a lost war.
Listeners, I speculated, are loath to question the truth of the stories lest aspersion be seemingly cast on the authenticity of the teller. The war in Vietnam was America’s longest war at the time, and its first defeat. The loss to such a small, underdeveloped and outgunned nation was a tough pill for Americans to swallow, many still basking in post-World War II triumphalism. The image of protesters spitting on troops enlivened notions that the military mission had been compromised, even betrayed, by weak-kneed liberalism in Congress and seditious radicalism on college campuses. The spitting stories provided reassuring confirmation that had it not been for those duplicitous fifth-columnists, the Vietnamese would have never beaten us.
The “war at home” phrase captured the idea that the war had been lost on the home front. It was a story line promulgated by Hollywood within which veteran disparagement became a kind of “war story,” a way of credentialing the warrior bona fides of veterans who may have felt insecure about their service in Vietnam. In “First Blood,” the inaugural Rambo film, the protagonist, John Rambo, flashes back to “those maggots at the airport, spittin’, callin’ us baby killers and all kinds of vile crap.” The series supported the idea that decisions in Washington had hamstrung military operations. “Apocalypse Now” fed outright conspiracy theories that the C.I.A.’s secret war run from Washington had undercut the military mission. “Coming Home” and “Hamburger Hill” played on male fears of unfaithful wives and girlfriends, a story line hinting that female perfidy and the feminist subversion of warrior morale had cost us victory.
The whole thing is really important. When I lecture on the Vietnam War, this is a huge part of my lecture, because nearly every student has heard this myth and they all believe it. It’s simply an accepted truth now, a truth not that dissimilar from how southern propaganda framed the War to Defeat Treason in Defense of Slavery for a century. It’s tremendously damaging and helps play into people freaking out by football players kneeling during the national anthem today. It’s a myth that doesn’t just need to be debunked. It needs to be defeated and destroyed and discredited.
There are sincere Vietnam Veterans who will swear up and down that they saw protesters spit on veterans, or even that they themselves were spit upon. After 50 years of repeating it, they will not be persuaded otherwise.

But those of us who cherish hard truth over comforting myths should not let lies, especially lies about war and about anti-war protest, go unchallenged.

If you want the real story behind the spitting lie and many more Vietnam and anti-war lies, read "The Spitting Image: Myth, Memory and the Legacy of Vietnam," by Paul Brauner.
  

5 comments:

Yellow Dog said...

Anonymous: Try again with a name.

Lowell said...

While I did not serve in Vietnam (a bit too old), I do not remember "spitting" stories at the time. They came later. As an American history teacher, I brought Vietnam vets into my classroom every year. One of them claimed he was spit upon but both of these were damaged folks whose life revolved around their tours of duty in 'Nam. They built fire bases, wore fatigues, and sought out similar people for friends. In spite of that, they gave riveting accounts of what it was like to be on a firebase which was under attack. And we became good friends.

TheMgt said...

An even more vile myth is that concocted by Nixon so he could prolong the war long enough for Vietnamization to work. Thus he could exit Vietnam without losing face. So he conflated the POW and MIA categories to create the POW/MIA myth with which he bludgeoned Hanoi and prolonged the war. "MIA, or Mythmaking in America" by H. Bruce Franklin lays out the callous scheme in detail. Nixon tortured the loved ones of the missing dead with false hope and millions of Americans felt for them. Later this lead to distrust of the government which became a handy Republican theme.

I had the distinct feeling that the winner of the 1968 campaign had a mandate to exit Vietnam soon, probably within a year. Maybe that's just me.

Nixon dragged it out for over four years.
He got more of our people killed than his three predecessors combined.
He and Kissinger are as guilty as Pol Pot for the massacre of over two million Cambodians. It was NixKiss who carpet bombed Cambodia's rice bowl and then had GVN forces "incurse" into that region. This lead to the collapse of Cambodian society, all Pol Pot did was gain recruits and seize power. For years he was a nobody rotting away with a tiny band of 5,000 troops until NixKiss made him a star.

TheMgt said...

An even more vile myth is that concocted by Nixon so he could prolong the war long enough for Vietnamization to work. Thus he could exit Vietnam without losing face. So he conflated the POW and MIA categories to create the POW/MIA myth with which he bludgeoned Hanoi and prolonged the war. "MIA, or Mythmaking in America" by H. Bruce Franklin lays out the callous scheme in detail. Nixon tortured the loved ones of the missing dead with false hope and millions of Americans felt for them. Later this lead to distrust of the government which became a handy Republican theme.

I had the distinct feeling that the winner of the 1968 campaign had a mandate to exit Vietnam soon, probably within a year. Maybe that's just me.

Nixon dragged it out for over four years.
He got more of our people killed than his three predecessors combined.
He and Kissinger are as guilty as Pol Pot for the massacre of over two million Cambodians. It was NixKiss who carpet bombed Cambodia's rice bowl and then had GVN forces "incurse" into that region. This lead to the collapse of Cambodian society, all Pol Pot did was gain recruits and seize power. For years he was a nobody rotting away with a tiny band of 5,000 troops until NixKiss made him a star.

Yellow Dog said...

Anonymous: I appreciate your comment about WWII vets attitude toward Vietnam vets. It's true that the VSOs like VFW and the Veterans Administration treated you all shamefully. Please re-post with a name.