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My puter hiccupped before I had finished making my comments in response to Ed
and sent it off for posting as if I had intended it that way. This was what I intended to be my total response to his posting. George Z. George Z. Bush wrote: Ed Rasimus wrote: On Mon, 14 Jun 2004 17:28:34 -0400, "George Z. Bush" wrote: Ed Rasimus wrote: On Mon, 14 Jun 2004 11:07:19 -0400, "George Z. Bush" wrote: At any rate, agreement was reached in January '73 and by the end of March, all US combat troops were out of there. The negotiation in Paris ran from '68 to '72. You are right that bombing the N. ended in January '73, but way off on "by the end of March, all US combat troops were out of there." I flew combat until the end of my one year tour in July of '73 with missions in SVN, Laos and Cambodia. US Marines were still in ground combat as well as US Army. Small numbers, yes. But definitely not "all US combat troops." The sieges of An Loc, Hue and Khe Sanh were still ongoing. Your memory is little better than mine, apparently. I took the trouble to read up a little bit about the siege of An Loc and learned that the NV launched an all-out attack on An Loc in mid-April 1972. Take a look at this and please try to refrain from quibbling about what constitutes "all US combat troops": While the siege of An Loc started in April of '72 as did Linebacker, "all US combat troops" weren't out. I was flying "An Loc trip turns" in March and April of '73. One sortie out of Korat, drop at An Loc, recover to Bien Hoa. Reload and drop on An Loc, return to Bien Hoa. Reload, drop on An Loc and RTB to Korat. One Marine A-4 squadron still at Bien Hoa, lots of USAF ground personnel and a brigade of US Army still on station. Deployed A-1 Sandy unit from Nakhon Phanom for possible SAR use. Up at Khe Sanh, Marines were still on the ground and we were still pounding the surrounding hillsides. At Danang, we had move the AF flying units out, but were still turning fighter sorties for CAS missions in MR I and II. Did your reading mention that? Yep. It seems to boil down to a difference of opinion as to what constitutes "US combat troops". The sources I used referred to the remaining US ground components as advisors to the S. Vietnamese forces, not as forces involved in combat as units with unique assigned missions. If you don't want to accept that definition, and it looks like you don't, go argue with them. I merely reported what they said. Neither of us were there on the ground, so we're each entitled to our own opinions. I didn't bother doing any further research since I'd satisfied myself that the information I was able to find was at least as reliable as yours, if not better. I'm glad you didn't read any further. I've found that history is a lot like a man with two watches. If you've got one watch, you know what time it is. If you've got two, you're never sure. Stop reading while you're ahead. Quick with a quip, as always, even when it doesn't prove anything. Personally, withdrawal is withdrawal, whether as a result of enemy fire or negotiations.....it still signifies defeat. Withdrawal of US troops started almost immediately after Nixon took office in Jan of '69. His Vietnamization policy was designed to be an orderly transition of defensive responsibilities to the Vietnamese. By April of '72, the drawdown was very close to complete with in-country numbers down from more than 500,000 at the peak in '68 to around 100,000. From what I've been able to learn, the withdrawal by mid-1972 was so complete that what we had left there constituted only advisors to the SVA and little else. That leads me to wonder why you took issue with my previous statement to that effect. Three squadrons of F-4s from Seymour Johnson returned to SEA in August of '72. A squadron of F-111s arrived at Takhli in Sept or Oct. A full wing of A-7Ds from Myrtle Beach arrived at Korat in October of '72. Additional F-105Gs from the States arrived in September as well as the F-4C Weasels from Kadena and the 35th TFS from Korea. And, that's just some of the additional forces arriving while you contend there was no one left. Please don't change my words. What I said was that the sources I used identified the remaining US ground forces as advisors. Unless the squadrons you reported on were committed to ground combat at the siege location, they weren't part of the conversation and there was no reason to add them to the mix. I have no reason to question but that they arrived as you reported and that they may have provided the combat air support you alluded to. I had never even mentioned the aerial component of the siege and don't understand why you even brought it up, since it was never questioned or mentioned. I was talking about grunts. Key to the failure of the policy was the lack of cultural understanding of the Vietnamese. We never quite "got it." A good book on the cultural issues is "Fire in the Lake" by Frances Fitzgerald. By your definition of "withdrawal, whether a result of enemy fire or negotiations = defeat", we must have lost WW I, WW II as well. We did withdraw our forces both times after negotiations. You can't be serious!!! On both occasions, we withdrew our troops AFTER our enemy had been vanquished, AFTER they had surrendered, and AFTER they had ceased fighting. There is NO parallel between our withdrawal from VN and either WWI or WWII. Your statement (still intact above) was "withdrawal whether as a result of enemy fire or negotiation"--it's ridiculous statement on its face. America always withdraws after conflicts end--we aren't a very imperialist country. By your definition, we always lose. Arguing with that kind of stupid logic is beyond me. If you're bound and determined to twist my words into something I can't even recognize as my own, I can't prevent it. All I can do is shake my head in bewildered wonderment as I gain a little more understanding of how we could manage to screw up our own effort by relying on people with your thought processes for its success. I still don't understand why you are so eager to be defeated. You also apparently seek to grasp defeat from modifications to policy as time passes. If losing is so important to you, I'll be happy to declare you a loser and credit NVN as well as Saddam Hussein with victory. I hate to differ with you, but 40 years after cessation of the war with NVN, only an idiot who has become totally delusional or is seriously committed to rewriting the history of that particular war to satisfy his own need to avoid acknowledging reality would claim that we won that war. I didn't claim victory at the end of hostilities. I said I didn't lose. I, for one, say that if you didn't win what you started out after, you lost. You can call it whatever it takes to make you feel better about your part in it, but I'm satisfied that "loser" is a reasonably accurate label all of us who had any part in it earned. I'm neither proud nor happy about that, but there's little point in trying to kid ourselves much less the general public that it ended up amounting to much else. Denial may be your thing, but it's not mine. You can call me whatever you like, but it won't change the reality that we left with the names of 58,000+ of our dead troops on a black wall in Washington, DC, and to this day, there is not a single cemetary in VN that contains any of their remains, while such cemetaries abound in various parts of Europe. When we are winners, we inter many of our fallen where they fell, and we weren't able to do that in VN as we had in Europe for the simple reason that we didn't have anything to say about what went on in VN after we pulled out. Winners can make such arrangements......losers never can. We didn't. It has long been the preference of America to bring as many of our fallen home as possible. Interring where they fell is not the desired option. It was only done when the losses were so great that handling of the casualties was not otherwise practical. When I said that we inter many of our fallen where they fell, I may have inadvertently added to the confusion. I meant by that sttement that we interred them in the nation where they fell, rather than the individual place of death. Sorry about that. Interring large numbers of casualties occurred routinely in temporary US military cemeteries in various European locations. After the war was concluded, bodies were either sent home if the families requested it, or they were re-interred in one of the permanent US military cemeteries in Europe where, if I am informed correctly, they are maintained in perpetuity by the host nation. That practice can't be followed obviously if the host nation, by virtue of it seeing itself as victors in a conflict with us, is disinclined to cooperate. I believe that would explain the reason for the lack of US military cemeteries anywhere in the RVN. Losing isn't important to me any more than it is to you, but it's what happened. Your crediting NVN with a victory is really redundent, since the world has known for years that they achieved precisely that and they hardly needed your declaration in order to make it so. You cite the 58,000 names on the Wall. The NVN lost (depending upon your source) between one and three million. Since you like to only use one source pick whichever one you want. That sort of loss ratio doesn't imply a great victory. As for your throwing Saddam Hussein into the pot, that was a cheap shot.....neither his name nor his country had entered into any part of this discussion and I can only conclude that you did so only to try to change the subject to one that you might do better at. Just take a look at the subject title if you've forgotten what we were talking about. I was refuting your assertion that when America withdraws, we lost. You might want to consider the economy of Vietnam today. You might want to look at their trade and tourism. You might even ask if they are truly the great communist society that Marx envisioned, or if they don't look a bit more like Adam Smith country. I believe that you just made my point for me. All of that happened in spite of our best and unsuccessful efforts to vanquish the communist government of the Republic of (North) Viet Nam. It, like the Soviet Union, eventually collapsed under its own weight so that only the superficial trappings of communism remain today, and all of that would have happened anyway without our loss of 58,000+ young Americans. That being the case, what were we fighting for over there in the first place? What were we supposed to get out of it that justified spending all those young lives for? Wasn't it, then, a war that probably should never even have been fought? George Z. |
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