Be
skeptical of Ken Burns’ documentary: The Vietnam War
by Terry Garlock
Some months ago
I and a dozen other local veterans attended a screening at the Woodruff Arts
Center in Atlanta - preview of a new documentary on The Vietnam War by Ken
Burns and Lynn Novick. The screening was a one hour summation of this 10-part
documentary, 18 hours long.
The series
began showing on PBS Sunday Sep 17, and with Burns’ renowned talent mixing
photos, video clips and compelling mood music in documentary form, the series
promises to be compelling to watch. That doesn’t mean it tells the truth.
For many years
I have been presenting to high school classes a 90 minute session titled The
Myths and Truths of the Vietnam War. One of my opening comments is, “The truth
about Vietnam is bad enough without twisting it all out of shape with myths,
half-truths and outright lies from the anti-war left.” The overall message to
students is advising them to learn to think for themselves, be informed by
reading one newspaper that leans left, one that leans right, and be skeptical
of TV news.
Part of my
presentation is showing them four iconic photos from Vietnam, aired publicly
around the world countless times to portray America’s evil involvement in
Vietnam. I tell the students “the rest of the story” excluded by the news media
about each photo, then ask, “Wouldn’t you want the whole story before you decide
for yourself what to think?”
One of those
photos is the summary execution of a Viet Cong soldier in Saigon, capital city
of South Vietnam, during the battles of the Tet Offensive in 1968. Our
dishonorable enemy negotiated a cease-fire for that holiday then on that
holiday attacked in about 100 places all over the country. Here’s what I tell
students about the execution in the photo.
[Photo omitted]
Enemy execution
by South Vietnam’s Chief of National Police, 1968
“Before you
decide what to think, here’s what the news media never told us. This enemy
soldier had just been caught after he murdered a Saigon police officer, the
officer’s wife, and the officer’s six children. The man pulling the trigger was
Nguyen Ngoc Loan, South Vietnam’s Chief of National Police. His actions were
supported by South Vietnamese law, and by the Geneva Convention since he was an
un-uniformed illegal combatant. Now, you might still be disgusted by the
summary execution, but wouldn’t you want all the facts before you decide what
to think?”
The other
one-sided stories about iconic photos I use are a nine year old girl named Kim
Phuc, running down a road after her clothes were burned off by a napalm bomb, a
lady kneeling by the body of a student at Kent State University, and a
helicopter on top of a building with too many evacuees trying to climb aboard.
Each one had only the half of the story told by news media during the war, the
half that supported the anti-war narrative.
Our group of
vets left the Ken Burns documentary screening . . . disappointed. As one
example, all four of the photos I use were shown, with only the anti-war
narrative. Will the whole truth be told in the full 18 hours? I have my doubts
but we’ll see.
On the drive
home with Mike King, Bob Grove and Terry Ernst, Ernst asked the other three of
us who had been in Vietnam, “How does it make you feel seeing those photos and
videos?” I answered, “I just wish for once they would get it right.”
Will the full
documentary show John Kerry’s covert meeting in Paris with the leadership of
the Viet Cong while he was still an officer in the US Naval Reserve and a
leader in the anti-war movement? Will it show how Watergate crippled the
Republicans and swept Democrats into Congress in 1974, and their rapid
defunding of South Vietnamese promised support after Americans had been gone
from Vietnam two years? Will it show Congress violating America’s pledge to
defend South Vietnam if the North Vietnamese ever broke their pledge to never
attack the south? Will it portray America’s shame in letting our ally fall, the
tens of thousands executed for working with Americans, the hundreds of
thousands who perished fleeing in overpacked, rickety boats, the million or so
sent to brutal re-education camps? Will it show the North Vietnamese victors
bringing an influx from the north to take over South Vietnam’s businesses, the
best jobs, farms, all the good housing, or committing the culturally ruthless
sin of bulldozing grave monuments of the South Vietnamese?
Will Burns show
how the North Vietnamese took the city of Hue during the 1968 Tet Offensive,
bringing lists of names of political leaders, business owners, doctors, nurses,
teachers and other “enemies of the people,” and how they went from street to
street, dragging people out of their homes, and that in the aftermath of the
Battle of Hue, only when thousands of people were missing and the search began
did they find the mass graves where they had been tied together and buried
alive?
Will Burns show
how America, after finally withdrawing from Vietnam and shamefully standing by
while our ally was brutalized, did nothing while next door in Cambodia the
Communists murdered two million of their own people as they tried to mimic
Mao’s “worker paradise” in China?
Will Burns show
how American troops conducted themselves with honor, skill and courage, never
lost a major battle, and helped the South Vietnamese people in many ways like
building roads and schools, digging wells, teaching improved farming methods
and bringing medical care where it had never been seen before? Will he show
that American war crimes, exaggerated by the left, were even more rare in
Vietnam than in WWII? Will he show how a naĂŻve young Jane Fonda betrayed her
country with multiple radio broadcasts from North Vietnam, pleading with
American troops to refuse their orders to fight, and calling American pilots
and our President war criminals?
Color me
doubtful about these and many other questions.
Being in a war
doesn’t make anyone an expert on the geopolitical issues, it’s a bit like
seeing history through a straw with your limited view. But my perspective has
come from many years of reflection and absorbing a multitude of facts and
opinions, because I was interested. My belief is that America’s involvement in
Vietnam was a noble cause trying to stop the spread of Communism in Southeast
Asia, while it had spread its miserable oppression in Eastern Europe and was
gaining traction in Central America, Africa and other places around the world.
This noble cause was, indeed, screwed up to a fare-thee-well by the Pentagon
and White House, which multiplied American casualties.
The tone of the
screening was altogether different, that our part in the war was a sad mistake.
It seemed like Burns and Novick took photos, video clips, artifacts and
interviews from involved Americans, South Vietnamese, North Vietnamese, Viet
Cong, civilians from south and north, reporters and others, threw it all in a
blender to puree into a new form of moral equivalence. Good for spreading a
thin layer of blame and innocence, not so good for finding the truth.
John
M. Del Vecchio, author of The 13th Valley, a book considered by many
Vietnam vets to be the literary touchstone of how they served and suffered in
the jungles of Vietnam, has this to say about Burns’ documentary. “Pretending to honor
those who served while subtly and falsely subverting the reasons and
justifications for that service is a con man’s game . . . From a
cinematic perspective it will be exceptional. Burns knows how to make great
scenes. But through the lens of history it appears to reinforce a highly skewed
narrative and to be an attempt to ossify false cultural memory. The lies and
fallacies will be by omission, not by overt falsehoods.”
I
expect to see American virtue minimized, American missteps emphasized, to fit
the left-leaning narrative about the Vietnam War that, to this day, prevents
our country from learning the real lessons from that war.
When
we came home from Vietnam, we thought the country had lost its mind. Wearing
the uniform was for fools too dimwitted to escape service. Burning draft cards,
protesting the war in ways that insulted our own troops was cool, as was
fleeing to Canada.
America’s
current turmoil reminds me of those days, since so many of American traditional
values are being turned upside down. Even saying words defending free speech on
a university campus feels completely absurd, but here we are.
So
Ken Burns’ new documentary on the Vietnam War promises to solidify him as the
documentary king, breathes new life into the anti-war message, and fits
perfectly into the current practice of revising history to make us feel good.
Perhaps
you will prove me wrong. Watch carefully, but I would advise a heavy dose of
skepticism.
-----------------------------------------
Terry
Garlock lives in Peachtree City, GA. He was a Cobra helicopter gunship pilot in
the Vietnam War.
2 comments:
Cooolll postt !!!
Good afternoon Mr. Holzer.
You've been on my mind lately & I do hope everything is going good for you & yours.
Keep up the good work.
Take care & God bless you.
Marilyn M.
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