A
faulty retelling of ‘The Vietnam War’
Richard
Nixon kept his promises, Ken Burns did not
Print
October 16, 2017
ANALYSIS/OPINION:
When Richard
Nixon was in the White House, I was in Vietnam and he was my Co! Commander in Chief.
When I was on Ronald Reagan’s National Security Council staff, I had the
opportunity to brief former President Nixon on numerous occasions and came to admire
his analysis of current events, insights on world affairs and compassion for
our troops.. His preparation for any meeting or discussion was exhaustive.. His
thirst for information was unquenchable and his tolerance for fools was
nonexistent.
Mr. Nixon’s prosecution of the war in Southeast
Asia is poorly told by Ken
Burns in his new Public
Broadcasting Service
documentary “The Vietnam War.” That is but one of many reasons Mr. Burns‘ latest work is such a disappointment and
a tragic lost opportunity.
It’s sad, but I’ve come to accept that the
real story of the heroic American GIs in Vietnam may never be told. Like too many others, Ken Burns
portrays the young soldiers, sailors, airmen and Marines of the Vietnam War as
pot-smoking, drug-addicted, hippie marauders.
Those with whom I served were anything
but. They did not commit the atrocities alleged in the unforgivable lies John Kerry described to a Congressional committee so
prominently featured by Mr.
Burns. The troops
my brother and I were blessed to lead were honorable, heroic and tenacious.
They were patriotic, proud of their service, and true to their God and our
country. To depict them otherwise, as Mr.
Burns does, is an egregious
disservice to them, the families of the fallen and to history.. But his
treatment of my fellow Vietnam War veterans is just the start. Some of the most
blatant travesties in the film are reserved for President Nixon.
Because of endless fairy tales
told by Ken Burns and others, many Americans associate Richard Nixon with the totality and the worst events of
Vietnam. It’s hardly evident in the Burns
“documentary,” but important to note: When Richard Nixon was elected president in 1968, he
inherited a nation — and a world — engulfed in discord and teetering on the
brink of widespread chaos. His predecessor, Lyndon Johnson, was forced from
office with a half-million U.S. troops mired in combat and fierce anti-American
government demonstrations across the country and in our nation’s capital.
Ken Burns may not recall — but my family remembers:
It was Lyndon Johnson who sent my brother and me to war. It was Richard Nixon
who brought us home. It is very likely we are alive today because Mr. Nixon kept his word.
That’s not the only opportunity for
accuracy Mr. Burns ignored. He could have credited Mr. Nixon with granting 18-year olds the right to
vote in July 1971 with the 26th Amendment to our Constitution. (Does Ken even
recall the slogan, “Old enough to fight — old enough to vote!” He should. Mr. Burns turned 18 that same month.)
President Nixon pressed on to all but finish the war. As
promised, he brought our combat units home, returned 591 prisoners of war to
their wives and families, ended the draft, leveraged the conflict to open ties
with China and improved relations with the Soviet Union. He pushed both
Communist giants in Beijing and Moscow to force their North Vietnamese puppet
into a negotiated settlement. Yet he is portrayed in the Burns documentary as a
cold-blooded, calculating politician more interested in re-election than the
lives of U.S. troops in combat.
Contrary to the film’s portrayal, Mr. Nixon had a complicated strategy to achieve
“peace with honor.” His goal was to train and equip the South Vietnamese
military to defend their own country in a process he called “Vietnamization,”
and thereby withdraw American troops.
President Nixon succeeded in isolating the North Vietnamese
diplomatically and negotiated a peace agreement that preserved the right of the
people of South Vietnam to determine their own political future. Imperfect as
the Saigon government was, by 1973 the South Vietnamese had many well-trained
troops ! and units that fought well and were proud to be our allies. This
intricate and sophisticated approach took shape over four wartime years but
receives only superficial mention in Mr.
Burns‘ production.
Despite Democrat majorities in both houses of Congress, Mr. Nixon — a deft political powerhouse — attained
consistent support from America’s “Silent Majority.”
If Mr.
Burns read
President Nixon’s memoir or his two successive books in
which the former president recounts his emotional anguish at the war’s toll: No
More Vietnams and In the Arena, there is little evidence in the PBS production. Instead, Mr. Burns cherry-picks from the infamous “Nixon tapes” to brand the president as a
devious manipulator, striving for mass deception; a patently false allegation.
By the time President Nixon resigned office on Aug. 9, 1974, the
Vietnam War was all but won and the South Vietnamese were confident of securing
a permanent victory. But in December 1974 — three months after Mr. Nixon departed the White House — a vengeful, Democrat-dominated Congress
cut off all aid to South Vietnam.
It was a devastating blow for those to
whom Mr. Nixon had promised — not U.S. troops — but
steadfast military, economic and diplomatic support. As chronicled in memoirs
written afterwards in Hanoi, Moscow, and Beijing, the communists celebrated.
The ignominious end came with a full-scale North Vietnamese invasion five
months later.
Despite the war’s end — and the trauma
that continues to afflict our country — there is little in the Burns so-called
documentary about the courage, patriotism, and dedication of the U.S. troops
who fought honorably, bravely and the despicable way in which we were
“welcomed” home.
The PBS “documentary” frequently reminds viewers
of the “gallant nationalist fervor” among the North Vietnamese. But the South
Vietnamese are portrayed as little more than conniving urchins and weak pawns
of the imperialist Americans.
In a technique favored by the “progressive
left,” Mr. Burns uses a small cadre of anti-war U.S.. and
pro-Hanoi Vietnamese “eyewitnesses” to explain the complicated policies of the
U.S. government. Mr.
Burns apparently
refused to interview Henry Kissinger, telling the Portland Press Herald
he doubted “Kissinger’s authority to adequately convey the perspectives of the
U.S. government.” This statement alone disqualifies this “documentary” as a
definitive history on the Vietnam War.
Though Mr. Burns and his collaborators claim otherwise,
the real heroes of “The Vietnam War” were not U.S. protesters, but the troops
my brother and I led. They fought valiantly for our country and the president
who brought us home.
Since meeting President Nixon in the 1980s, I have always remembered
how he understood the incredible sacrifice of American blood in the
battlefields of Vietnam. He was dedicated to ending the war the
right way and committed to sustaining American honor. He kept his promise to
bring us home.
Ken Burns failed to keep his promise to
tell all sides about the long and difficult war in Vietnam. Mr.
Burns, like John Kerry, has committed a grave injustice to those
of us who fought there.
• Oliver North was a Marine platoon leader
in Vietnam,
and recipient of the Silver Star, the Bronze Star for Valor, and two Purple
Hearts.
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“Now Never Telling
Full Truth”
cji
10/30/17
Convincing anyone to
tell truth
gaining both trust
and honors
apparently gone from
history
(ken burns and others
found)
presenting
politically correct
often like a sermon
of today
their philosophy (the
left)
mixed with some truth
(5%)
calling it substance
instead
dishing out lie upon
lie
blended with our
lives/honor
those who’ve served
always
would guess ‘baby
killers’
gains more headlines
oft
our nation again so
soft
wanting more bad
thrillers
staging pc leftist
plays
of lies now the spawner
condemning all that
did die
forcing incorrectness
fed
mixed with some truth
(5%)
ever widening the
cleft
embracing what
traitors say
without worry of
being checked
(ken burns and others
bound)
changing/rewriting)
history
minions of so-called
fawners
now never telling
full truth!
Copyright
© 2017 – cji
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