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Peace at any cost is a Prelude to War!


HITRAP
Honesty, Integrity, Trust, Responsibility, Accountability and People.
by Robert L. Pappas,
Col. USMC (RET)

It's time to get this off my chest On November 26th, Larry King hosted US
Secretary of State Colin Powell for a wide-ranging discussion of the War on
Terrorism. It was an excellent performance by General Powell who deftly
maneuvered through the maze of King's "land mines." A long time commentator,
anchor and moderator of "FACE THE NATION," CBS News chief Washington
correspondent, Bob Schieffer, followed General Powell. It was the latter
interview that prompts this essay. Messieurs King and Schieffer were involved
in a dialogue about how the American people are reacting to the War on
Terrorism.

SCHIEFFER: "... it's a story on two fronts, but it's a story that we not only
are covering, it's a story that we know whose side we're on here. This is not
covering Vietnam, where there's a big debate over whether American troops
ought to be sent off to some country that none of us had ever heard of before
the troops went there. To help people, form a democracy, or whatever it was
we were trying to do." "...And I'm still not sure we really know."

SCHIEFFER: "This (ed. note, the attack on America) is something where these
are our people. These were Americans, innocent Americans, women and children.
I now know two people who died."

KING: "Do you?"

SCHIEFFER: "As a result of this. And I mean, this is something we were all
involved in. So this is different."

Ah, yes. How "marvelously" arrogant and blissfully ignorant, "THIS IS
DIFFERENT."

With that "pile" of bovine scatology, scar covered wounds that have been slow
healing for decades were reopened as with a rusty knife. The wounds came, not
just from the 500 missions this writer flew, not only from being shot down,
and not even from enduring the capture or loss of close friends. The lasting
wounds came from serving the interest of a nation whose political,
educational, entertainment, and spiritual leaders understood pathetic little
of the reasons for US involvement, and could have cared less about the men
and women who served there.

The scars came from protecting the broad interests of a generation that did
not deserve it, and who to this day are so arrogant and ignorant as to
believe that they were righteous in their opposition to the Vietnam War. It
is this writer's assertion that it was the United States' action in Vietnam,
in conjunction with the brilliant geopolitical skills of Richard Milhous
Nixon notwithstanding his lack of other virtues, that rendered the first body
blow to the Soviet Union, thus stemming its quest for world domination and
resulted in its eventual collapse both as an economic system and
totalitarian, evil empire and has made possible unprecedented economic
well-being.

The beauty of this great Republic is that Americans are able to exercise
constitutionally guaranteed freedoms without fear of government reprisal. In
this land, unlike most others, reasonable people can disagree on issues of
importance without resorting to violence, as was eloquently illustrated
during the 2000 elections. It was for the Constitution, for freedom and the
blessings of liberty that the writer devoted a major portion of his adult
life in the armed service of this great nation.

Schieffer's manifest bewildering, arrogant and ignorant attitude about the
Vietnam War reflects the attitude of many during the sixties and early
seventies. In fact, his and others with similar attitudes grown large
gradually affected the outcome of that war and the loss of 58,000 patriots.
Although the writer has strongly held opinions about that war, they are about
the conduct thereof not about its underlying purpose.

In the early 1990s, Mr. Russ Davis wrote a commentary in the Utica, New York,
"Observer Dispatch" titled, Let God sort sinners from the saints. In the
article he exemplified a segment of the U.S. population whose behavior during
the Vietnam War was characterized as heroic by some and dishonorable by
others. Fleeing to Canada or spending time in jail was for them a welcome
alternative to the risk of dying in a poorly understood and worse, poorly
executed war.

Traditionally, through the elective process, patriotic loyalty has been
imputed in the nation's elected leaders; and by extrapolation to the nation,
states, communities, and ultimately to one another. Mr. Davis' article noted
above touched lightly on the essence of loyalty when he described a man who
he greatly respected, but who did not come to grips with the reality of his
own student deferment until he faced the "names on The Wall." There, in front
of Davis' friend was the name of someone he knew and who out of loyalty to
his fellows, to the Constitution of the United States, had the personal
integrity to do what was difficult but right; and that made it possible for
Davis' friend to live a fulfilled life.

Given Schieffer's contemporary remarks, memories of the Vietnam War evidently
remain as clouded by ignorance, arrogance and perhaps benign malice today
that was virulent and rampant during the War. Distortions of reality thus
created, made it impossible then and difficult even now for people on
opposite sides of the issue to objectively assess US involvement. Those over
the age of sixty should be able to recall that the overarching US policy of
"Containment" was first devised during the Truman Administration, and was
ultimately responsible for US involvement in that War.

The "Containment Doctrine" as it was called, resulted in the US government
negotiating mutual security treaties with a number of nations on the
periphery of the Soviet Union, the Peoples Republic of China and other
communist nations. Communism's rate and methods of expansion made it a real
threat with frightening prospects and the aforementioned mutual security
treaties constituted a bulwark against unrestrained worldwide territorial
expansion. Communism was branded in many ways, but none more aptly than by
President Reagan when he labeled it the "Evil Empire."

There were many skirmishes during the Cold War: Korea, the Taiwan Straits,
the Cuban Missile Crisis, Vietnam and others that occurred on a daily or
weekly basis. The Communist, mirroring Free World strategy, attempted to
contain the Free World in much the same way that the Free World was
endeavoring to contain communism. Revisionists, motivated by their anti US
biases, are hard at work attempting to alter the factual historical record.

One treaty created incident to "Containment" was the Southeast Asia Treaty
Organization (SEATO), of which South Vietnam was a member. North Vietnam,
through its agents in the south, and with its own national military and
paramilitary forces, set about to overthrow the Government of South Vietnam.
That eventually led to direct U.S. involvement during the Kennedy and Johnson
Administrations, although there was minimal military advisory involvement as
early as the Eisenhower administration.

As a patriotic young officer who was born and nurtured as a God fearing
anti-communist, this writer believed, and continues to believe that the US
did the right thing but in the wrong way. Strategically and tactically the
Vietnam War was poorly executed, but that did not have to be. The U.S.
possessed the national resources and military power, the strategic and
tactical skills and the training to achieve the same results in Vietnam that
were achieved in the Gulf War, and although "school is still out," the War on
Terrorism. But time, political ignorance, and such notables as a much younger
Bob Schieffer, Russ Davis, Jane Fonda, Bill Clinton and others too numerous
to mention here, as a practical matter, rendered aid and comfort to the
enemy, undermined the national will and resulted directly or indirectly in
the death of 58,000 Americans.

Incompetent political leadership at the highest levels of the Government from
top down, who lacked a fundamental understanding of war, its purposes and
prosecution, and who were mesmerized by McNamara and his whiz kids,
squandered U.S. military power and diplomatic prestige. Meanwhile, the
streets of U.S. cities filled with people responding to the drumbeats of the
divisive, undermining "fifth columnists" in education, entertainment,
government and religion, and, to legitimate confusion.

Was Vietnam a military defeat? No! Contrary to media hype and rhetoric, the
Vietnam War was not a military defeat; rather it was a political and moral
defeat. Though that did not seem to have an immediate, apparent effect on
American security; South Vietnam, Cambodia, and Laos fell into communist
hands, while Indonesia and Thailand were seriously threatened. The genocide
that historically followed communist takeovers, and estimated to be in the
tens of millions remains beyond civilized comprehension.

One cannot refrain from disparaging the Johnson Administration that came to
power under tragic, even questionable circumstances, behaved in a
discreditable manner, and squandered America's treasure, youth, and moral
authority. Johnson's arrogant ignorance, thinking and behaving as though Ho
Chi Minh was some Texas country bumpkin politician who he could "jaw bone"
into submission, and envisioning himself to be some grand military strategist
did nothing but harden Ho Chi Minh's resolve, divide the country, alienate US
allies, prolong and complicate the War and increase the total number of
casualties.

As though this was not enough, there was an important and broader picture
that the Schieffers of the world failed, indeed did not seem to want to see,
and who are only now coming to appreciate. It was a larger "picture" of the
vital need to be loyal to one's neighbors, friends, to one's nation and its
armed forces, and for personal integrity; and at the national level, the need
for credibility with respect to the nation's mutual security treaties and
ultimately the security of each U.S. citizen, individually and collectively.
That "picture" was brought into sharp focus by the dastardly attack on the
World Trade Center, (instead of far off places like Vietnam, or attacks on US
Embassies, ships, or people), that the Schieffer's of this country are
finally able to grasp the importance of patriotism, journalist or not. The
following dialogue illustrates what is meant.

SCHIEFFER: "As a result of this. And I mean, this is something we were all
involved in. So this is different."

KING: "And when it's we and them, you weren't covering things in World War
II, which I imagine was similar in that regard."

SCHIEFFER: "Yes."

KING: "Does that cause you any difficulty, journalistically to be a "we"
journalist?"

SCHIEFFER: "I think and I must say and maybe this is bad, maybe this is good.
I've thought about this. I think in times like this, we do tend to give the
government the benefit of the doubt. Under no circumstances would any
journalist, any responsible journalist I know, disclose plans, or disclose
any kind of troop movements or anything else that would put someone's life in
danger."

Give us a break! During Vietnam, self-righteous "talking heads" and reporters
made great sport of divulging military plans and strategies that undermined
the war effort and cost perhaps hundreds if not thousands of American lives,
divided the nation and lead to humiliating national defeat.

Military service is an honorable hallmark of the American experience born of
the quest for survival and freedom. Regrettably, and tragically, that great
American hallmark was soiled and desecrated during the Vietnam War by the
previously mentioned persons, i.e. Fonda, Clinton, and etc.

It is sadistic and twisted irony that those who fled, evaded the draft or
otherwise avoided military service and whose real purpose was to preserve
their cowardly skins, have been elevated to the status of hero, while those
who responded honorably to the nation's call, in too many cases have become
the derelicts of American society. And yet, it is those "derelicts" of every
war (none of which were lily-white) before, during and after Vietnam who,
though fearful for their own safety, underwrote the nation's existence with
their lives and sacred honor. They made it possible to foster an environment
in which the nation could flourish; and they protected it so that the
benefits of "life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness" could be enjoyed by
such lesser souls as Davis, Schieffer, Fonda, Clinton and other ignominious
persons.

The millions who served honorably during the Vietnam War do not know or want
to know all of the unworthy "Davises," "Fondas," "Clintons" and "Schieffers"
in this country, but they know who they are, and they have to live with it.
And though Schieffer's words were eloquently spoken during the Larry King
interview, no amount of deodorant can cover the rotten stench of that
generations' unsavory behavior, nor can this belated surge in their
patriotism grant respectability to those who, by their actions of draft
evasion or contrived avoidance of military service irreparably marred their
honor and betrayed their fellow countrymen.

The blood of the heroic "lambs" who served and died in their place covers
their otherwise unbearable stench, and only that freshens the air for the
rest of us.

Semper Fidelis

Robert L. Pappas,
Col. USMC (RET)


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