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Vietnam War Essay Research Paper The Vietnam

Vietnam War Essay, Research Paper


The Vietnam War The Vietnam War is truly one of the most unique wars ever fought by the


Unites States of by any country. It was never officially declared a war (Knowll, 3). It had no


official beginning nor an official end. It was fought over 10,000 miles away in a virtually unknown


country. The enemy and the allies looked exactly the alike, and may by day be a friend but by


night become an enemy (Aaseng 113). It matched the tried and true tactics of World War Two


against a hide, run, and shoot technique known as “Guerrilla Warfare.” It matched some of the


best trained soldiers in the world against largely an untrained militia of untrained farmers. The


United States’ soldiers had at least a meal to look forward to unlike the Communist Vietnamese


soldiers who considered a fine cuisine to be cold rice and, if lucky, rat meat. The Vietnam War


matched the most technically advanced country with one of the least advanced, and the lesser


advanced not only beat but humiliated the strongest military in the world (Aaseng, 111). When the


war was finally showing signs of end, the Vietnamese returned to a newly unified communist


country while the United Stated soldiers returned to be called “baby killers”, and were often spat


upon. With the complexities of war already long overdrawn because of the length of the war it is


no wonder the returning solders often left home confused and returned home insane. Through an


examination of the Vietnam War, in particular an event know as the My Lai Massacre, and the


people involved with both, it can be proven that when the threshold for violence of a person is


met or exceeded, the resulting psychological scarring becomes the most prominent reason for war


being hell. Although officially, the Vietnam Conflict had neither a beginning nor an end, for the


purpose of this paper it can be best examined through the decade the United States was involved:


February 6, 1965 – August 30, 1975. During World War Two the French had been a major ally to


the United States in the defeat of Adolph Hitler and the Axis Powers. France occupied and


claimed the small coastline country of Vietnam in Indochina. In this region there had been recent


Communist uprisings funded by the USSR The Vietnamese were willing to accept Communism in


return for what they had been fighting for over 2000 years: self rule. In 1950 the United States,


owing a debt of gratitude towards France, sent several advisors to aid French control in Vietnam.


Over the next decade and a half, the United States would send an entire Army and Navy to aid the


French in maintaining control in South Vietnam, which had separated from the Communist North


Vietnam by treaty in 1954. In early August of 1964 a small Vietcong (term used to identify South


Vietnamese in favor of communism and unification) patrol boat had an encounter with a United


States war ship in the Gulf of Tonkin. Gunfire was exchanged, and, in the end, President Johnson


agreed to allow aggressive retaliation. On February 6, 1965, the United States began the bombing


of North Vietnamese cities, marking the unofficial start of the Vietnam War (Winthrop, 853-861).


In the years of the war to follow, the media began to play a role. Photo-journalists would


accompany platoons on missions and, through the aid of cameras and video equipment, relate the


stories to the American at home. Every night for the length of the war news programs were


saturated with reports of the happenings in Vietnam and death tolls for the day. Grossly eggzrated


enemy casualty numbers were reported, giving the public a false view of happenings of the war.


Suddenly on January 30, 1968 a Vietcong uprising, now commonly known as the Tet Offensive,


took place. Tet is the Vietnamese new year and is commonly accepted as a cease-fire. With a


cease-fire in effect, most major cities’ defensives were less tight. As if all at once, more than one


hundred South Vietnamese cities were being shelled with Vietcong gunfire. Included in the cities


were Saigon, capital of South Vietnam and home to the United States Embassy. At first the Tet


Offensive appeared a failure for North Vietnam. A large portion of Vietcong troops were killed,


and major Vietcong outposts were discovered. Most of the overtaken cities, including Saigon, had


been regained. Unfortunately for the United States the timing of the Tet Offensive couldn’t have


been worse. For the past three years the Americans at home had been promised a swift defeat of


the (so called) nearly destroyed Communists, which, after the retreating of the French, had


become the main goal of the United States. Worst of all, election year was approaching, and the


incumbent Richard Nixon was promising a swift plan of “Vietmenization” in which the war was


supposed to be placed in the hands of the South Vietnamese and allow for the retreat of American


soldiers. Johnson was so unconfident he didn’t run for reelection. Finally, in 1972 the last United


States foot soldiers were removed from Vietnam, and in 1975 the North Vietnamese over took


Saigon, renaming it Ho Chi Mien City after their brilliant military leader. At this time the United


States Embassy was surrendered, marking the end of the war (Winthrop, 861-865). As the


soldiers returned home they had to adapt from a war in which over one million people were killed.


There were no banners or celebrations, and as the news of events such as the My Lai Massacre


spread, they were seen as ruthless killers. When these soldiers risked their lives every minute for a


reason they were not told and seemingly was purposeless, and then returned to a country that


despised them for what they did negative effects are emanate(Winthrop, 861-865). During the war


many soldiers realized their maximum threshold for violence. When, as was the case for many


soldiers, this limit was reached and even exceeded, psychological scarring is going to take place.


This, combined with the return to a country that hated you for doing what you were told to do,


leads to a very defective psychological behavior. March 16, 1968 is truly a date remembered for


one of the most horrendous acts ever committed by the United States. On this day, Charlie


Company, 1st Battalion, 20th Infantry, under the leadership of twenty-four year old 2nd Lt.


William L. Calley Jr. became responsible for the execution of over 300 Vietnamese civilians,


mostly old men, women, and children. This atrocity, now known as the My Lai Massacre, opened


the eyes of many to the realities of war. The infantry men of this battalion were ordered to


systematically murder every inhabitant in this small South Vietnamese hamlet for suspicion of the


harboring of Vietcong Soldiers. In this village no signs of Vietcong inhabitants were found.


Neither a single uniform nor a gun was found anywhere (Hersh, 11-44) . This leads one to wonder


about the motives involved. Was the massacre necessarily, or was it simply an outlet for built up


anger and frustration towards the very idea of the Vietnamese (Knowll, 104-110)? It is well


known that the majority of United States troops didn’t want to be in Vietnam. A lesser known


fact is that the majority of South Vietnamese didn’t want United States troops there either.


Infantry men in the army were usually at the lesser end of intelligence scale because more


intelligent soldiers were used more as medics or as officers. In fact, thirteen of the 130 men in


Charlie Company had failed the army’s basic intelligence test, which should have stopped them


from even being in Vietnam (Knowll, 18). This intelligence limit means the soldiers had less


comprehension skill and probably had a lower threshold for violence. Also, by this time soldiers in


Vietnam had became aware of the treatment they would receive when they returned home.


“Doves” (a generic term for anti-war demonstrators) were well known for acts such as waiting for


a solider to return home so they could harass him with questions like “How many babies did you


kill today?” (Winthrop, 861-865). As if the war itself wasn’t traumatic enough, these extra


influences make the event of mental damage very possible. These issues raise the question as to


whether they are simply excuses for the terrible actions such as the one at My Lai, or were the


happenings such of My Lai the result of these influences. Or is it possible that the My Lai


Massacre occurred for a totally different, perhaps from the anger and frustration of one man given


too much power? William L. Calley Jr., born 1944, grew up in Miami Florida. He attended


grammar and high school there, and in 1963 flunked out of college after earning four F’s. He


became very uptight, and began smoking up to four packs of cigarettes a day. After leaving


college, Calley became a switchman for the East Coast Railway. In 1964 he made local headlines


when he was arrested for allowing a forty-seven car freight train to block rush-hour traffic for


thirty minutes.. In 1965, Calley left Florida and eventually enlisted in the Army in 1966. In spite of


poor academic performance, Calley joined Officers’ Training School at Ft. Benning, GA and


graduated without even learning to read a map. In 1967 Calley became the platoon leader for


Charlie Company, 1st Battalion, 20th Infantry Captain Ernest Medina, the company’s


commanding officer, was a large, powerfully built man who was certainly respected, respect that


he earned rather than demanded. Lt. Calley was described as being boyish-looking. He was a mere


five feet-three inches tall, and seemed jealous of the respect the soldiers had for Medina (Hersh,


19). Troops under Calley said “he was always trying to be the big man; always would be the one


to beat them [Vietnamese] up. He didn’t know what was going on half the time.”(Hersh, 20)


Calley, unlike Medina, placed high emphasis on respect towards himself; respect he simply


demanded and wasn’t willing to earn. Then, on March 16, Lt. Calley became fed up with not


receiving the respect the thought the deserved. On a routine investigation of the small village of


My Lai, Calley discovered an outlet for his rage (Hersh, Chpt. 2). Calley ordered for the 300 plus


Vietnamese civilians to be lined up and be systematically excited, one by one while the others


watched. Every civilian found was killed. The following is a portion of a letter from a GI


concerning the incident: …Some of the guys are so careless! Today a buddy of mine called “La


Dai” (come here) into a hut. An old man came out of the shelter. My buddy told the man to get


away from the hut, and since we have to move quickly on a sweep, just threw a hand grenade into


the shelter. As he pulled the pin the old man got excited and started jabbering and running toward


my buddy and the hut. A GI, not understanding, stopped the old man with a football tackle just as


my buddy threw the grenade… After he threw it, and was running for cover, we all heard a baby


crying from inside the shelter. There was nothing we could do…. After the explosion we found the


mother, two children (ages about six and twelve, boy and girl), and an almost newborn baby. That


is what the old man was trying to tell us!… (Hersh, 12-13) November 17, 1970 Lt. Calley was


tried for, and eventually convicted for, his part in the premeditated murder of 109 “Oriental


human beings”. In a court-martial, murder is punishable by death by hanging. After a long


deliberation, the jury returned a sentence of life imprisonment, of which William Calley served


three years. Calley is now a successful jeweler in Columbus, Georgia (Knappmar, 598-601).


Whether or not Lt. Calley was acting on order, as he claimed, or out of pure rage may never be


known. It is known, however, that without the psychological stresses caused by Vietnam, the My


Lai Massacre may have never happened. The remainder of this paper is an investigation of the


causes and effects of those stresses in attempt to answer “why”, and, ideally, prevent another


atrocity like the My Lai Massacre. In any war, psychological stresses are inevitable. The memory


of risking one’s life will not fade quickly and is reason alone enough to drive one insane. As stated


previously, however, the war in Vietnam provided additional stresses. A major stress was the fact


that neither the citizens of the United States nor of South Vietnam accepted American


interference. A solider was usually uninformed of the intentions of their government. Soldiers are


taught to carry out orders without asking questions. This could lead to a solider developing a


belief that all fighting was being done in vain. Eventually, a solider would lose care in what he was


doing. His self worth would lower, thus lowering his view of worth of others. When he sees all


the death and destruction in what has became his world and realizes he is partly responsible, he


begins to regard himself as a killer, who himself deserves death. It is highly probable that even


with the end of a tour soldiers go home with this “responsible killer” attitude, and is forced back


into an unaccepting society still believing he doesn’t deserve to live, and often questioning why he


still is. Over the years, these repressed feelings grow until they eventually become uncontrollable,


and take control of the person, physically and mentally. There are two major viewpoints on the


psychological effects of events such as My Lai. One of these views is from the commanded


solider. If the happenings of everyday life in Vietnam are enough to drive one insane, the effects


of watching and participating a massacre of over 300 innocent people are truly destructive.


Months after such happenings, the soldiers are expected to return to normal, everyday civilian life.


This in its self is a form of denial. The same pressures on every solider are on those witnesses to


the outrages, only the witness must find a way to deal with both. Common sense leads one to


deduce that if causes are extreme the results should be expected, too, to be extreme. Another


viewpoint is that from the commanding officers. If Lt. Calley really was responsible for the My


Lai happenings, one must wonder why he wanted it to happen. Perhaps the officer was simply fed


up with the war situation. He may have been tires of having responsibility for not only himself, but


for all the soldiers he commanded. Not knowing the enemy from the ally could cause a situation


like the “fish in water” tactic. This method, which was used highly as a rationalization, stated that


one way to be sure to catch a fish would be to eliminate the water, just as a method killing


“Charlie” would be to kill all Vietnamese. It can also be said, however, that the commanding


officer isn’t to blame, but his commanders are. Not being in the war could lead to a sense of


“dehumanization” towards the Vietnamese, so it becomes easier to order a massacre from


Washington than to become part of one in Vietnam. One must also remember, however, that the


highest rank in the army is the President, and the citizens are directly responsible for whom this


may be. Through this research, it has been proven that because of events such the My Lai


massacre in Vietnam there were certainly psychological changes in those involved. Today’s


writers too often get caught up in what the media wants the people to believe. The only way to


aquire pure, unedited information is to speak personally to someone who has experienced events


such as the one mentioned. No matter what their view of the war is, when asked if war will


change a person the most common response will be “Nobody ever returns the same” (Knowll,


127) (Mahan Interview). With the certainty of scarring evident, one must begin to question why


this scarring happens and why people have a threshold for violence. The most obvious and most


correct response is that war wasn’t meant to be. If people were designed with a threshold, it


wasn’t meant to be exceeded. This leads one to deduce that although sometimes seemingly


necessary, war is hell and it is wrong.

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