[Home] [Headlines] [Latest Articles] [Latest Comments] [Post] [Sign-in] [Mail] [Setup] [Help]
Status: Not Logged In; Sign In
Resistance See other Resistance Articles Title: 50 Years Later: What Tet Didn’t Destroy, Deferments Did If Americans are looking for where the 'two Americas' first began to form, Vietnam is a good place to start. Moments after being wounded by enemy fire SFC Howard C. Breedlove (DASPO) receives medical attention from 2Lt. Richard M. Griffith (DASPO) in Gia Dinh, a suburb of Saigon during the Post-Tet Offensive or the May Offensive of 1968. Several days later Lt. Griffith was also wounded. (U.S. Government/public domain) Last week marked the fiftieth anniversary of Americas culminating point in Vietnam, the Tet Offensive. In an uprising that consumed most of the country, the Vietcong and North Vietnamese Army surprised American and South Vietnamese forces by attacking during the Tet holiday, the Vietnamese New Year celebrations. Confronting American firepower in the open, the communists took devastating losses in the months of fighting that followed. However, the massive surprise attack put the lie to the Johnson Administrations predictions of imminent victory. Though communist forces were annihilated on the battlefield, the Tet Offensive crippled American support for the war. There has been no shortage of books and documentaries juxtaposing our tactical victory and strategic defeat at Tet. Last year Ken Burns titled the Tet episode of his Vietnam War series Things Fall Apart. The valor of the men who fought at Khe Sanh and the Saigon embassy is getting a belated surge of recognition. But perhaps we should mark Tets anniversary by looking more closely at who our soldiers were than at what they did. In doing so, we may find the beginning of the cultural, social, and economic fissures that increasingly threaten to split America in half. Americas wars have always had those who did not answer the call, from Thomas Paines sunshine patriots to Hollywood heroes who kept themselves well clear of the real sands of Iwo Jima. Prior to Vietnam though, elites generally did their dutyor at least enough of them did to keep faith with the nation. Politicians and businessmen led regiments on both sides in the Civil War, Teddy Roosevelt charged up San Juan Hill, Wild Bill Donovan earned the Medal of Honor in the trenches. Kennedys and Roosevelts fought and died in World War II. Arthur Hadley went from Groton to the U.S. Army in 1943. Yale could wait. Vietnam was different. Driven by the technocratic concept of channeling the most intelligent Americans into critical non-military occupations, the post-1948 draft provided deferments to university students. The majority of the 15.4 million draft deferments given out during Vietnam were student deferments. This loophole was largely closed to working class Americans by only being available to full-time college students. Employed part-time students, who were invariably from humbler backgrounds, were ineligible for student deferments. Medical exemptions offered other perverse rewards to wealth. An entire cottage industry sprang up to advise young men on how to fake injuries, insanity, ill health, and other conditions that would obviate military service. Self-mutilation was a rare equal opportunity option. Wealthier men who could afford to pay for professional documentation of an ailment (or, in extremis, get braces) had a 90 percent chance of receiving a physical or psychological medical deferment from military physicians who lacked the time and desire to challenge them. For others with connections the reserves and National Guard offered another refuge. With all these avenues for the upper class to avoid combat service, it is small wonder that many elite U.S. universities can count their Vietnam war dead on one or two hands. Journalist James Fallows could only recall two of his 1200 Harvard classmates who served in combat in Vietnam. Marine and future Senator Jim Webb summed it up well in his novel Fields of Fire: Mark went to Canada. Goodrich went to Vietnam. Everybody else went to grad school. The elimination of the graduate school deferment after Tet and the institution of the draft lottery in 1969 did substantially raise the proportion of college graduates sent to Vietnam in the last years of the war. By that point Vietnamization was in full swing and U.S. operations and troop numbers were being reduced. The class and educational profile of the U.S. Army had practical effects in Vietnam. More important was what the elite deferments did to the social fabric of the nation. Fortunate sons (many of whose fathers had served with distinction in World War II or Korea) avoided combat while the middle class and poor went to fight in a losing war. Eighty percent of the men who went to Vietnam had no more than a high school education, at a time when nearly 50 percent of Americans between eighteen and twenty-one had some college education. Even the officer corps was not exempt from the upper classs turn from service. In writing The Long Gray Line, about West Points class of 1966, Rick Atkinson found that before World War I nearly a third of the Corps of Cadets were sons of doctors, lawyers, and other professionals. By the mid-1950s, links to the upper class had been almost severed. West Point increasingly attracted military brats and sons of the working class. Few American 19-year-olds of any social class sought to fight in an unpopular and intractable war in Southeast Asia. Had deferments been available to poor and working class men most would have taken them. They were not available though, because of conscious social policy and the moral cowardice of national leaders. So the army that fought in Vietnam, unlike that of Korea and the World Wars, was not an army that looked like the nation it served. The predominantly working class men who fought in Vietnam returned to an America split by a culture war and a long-delayed racial reckoning. They then became working adults and approached middle age in a country that was beginning to split economically, as the stable blue collar occupations of the Baby Boomers receded and median wages stagnated. Only about four percent of men in the peak Vietnam cohort finished college after their service. Vietnam veterans were far less likely to join the managerial class than their countrymen who had not fought. Today there is clearly little to no stigma attached to eligible men who did not serve in Vietnam. Indeed, it is treated as the statistical norm that it is. The presidency and vice presidency have repeatedly been occupied by men who had other priorities in the 1960s. Avoiding Vietnam has been no bar to advancement in Washington, nor has it been an impediment to calling for other Americans to fight and die in other questionable interventions. It is one of historys ironies that Vietnam veterans likely played an important role in electing the three recent presidents who avoided serving in Vietnam by various means. Today, in the midst of what some still insist on calling the Long War, military service is entirely voluntary. Our all volunteer force has maintained high standards for now Robert McNamaras Project 100,000 would be unthinkable in 2018. But our military boasts only a few senators sons. Its officers are far more likely to come from Southern state schools than from the Ivy League. When the sons and daughters of our elites choose Silicon Valley or SoHo over service, we should not be surprised. We should also not be surprised when those who do serve, or at least know those who do, nurse deepening resentments against the sacrifice-free leaders who would send them off to fight dubious wars. As documented by men of both the right and the left, the wealthiest and best educated Americans have less and less of a stake in their nation. The elites increasingly live apart (in what Charles Murray dubbed SuperZips), learn apart (in highly selective private schools and universities), and work apart (in the lucrative cognitive fields of the knowledge economy). Some of our top 0.1 percent go so far as to buy domestic fortresses or foreign estates as insurance in the event that their country collapses on itself. Never before have our elites had so little skin in the game. The widening gulf between American elites and the rest of their countrymen has many causes and few apparent solutions. Economics, technology, government policy, and geography have combined to create a society that is increasingly unequal and increasingly divided. We are becoming, if not two nations, then two cultures. If Americans are searching for the moment when that chasm began to open, we should look anew at Tet and at the men who were fighting in Vietnam fifty years ago. Gil Barndollar served as a Marine infantry officer from 2009 to 2016. His writing has appeared in the Marine Corps Gazette, the Journal of Military Operations, and the Michigan War Studies Review. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 7.
#2. To: Ada (#0)
This forum over the past several years has NOT been devoid of its share of disdain or hatred for anyone that is in the military. Ayn Rands view that the masses are but mere lice, with barely a right to life, has always been in vogue in our society.
The result of an all-volunteer force, i.e., mercenaries. When the military had draftees, things were different.
That is absurd. Draftees and volunteers are one and the same, all have one concern in life...KILL OR BE KILLED... That is what any military does. Sans volunteers now, we would have a draft. For your erudition, check photos on internet of American draftees machine gunning weaponless Germans, lined up against a wall. Look at the photos, read the narrative.
The difference between draftees and volunteers is that the draftees want the war to be over so that they can go home. Volunteers want the promotions and opportunities provided by non-ending war. WWII was short whereas Vietnam, Afghanistan, Iraq and now Syria are mighty long.
#8. To: Ada (#7)
any further discussion would be a waste of my eyesight. Attending a service for a dozen dead friends sears the soul of most men. Wanting the war to go on? There are many words I could use to describe that contention. Now one sees why and how Clinton won the popular vote.
I got email from a woman who was on joint U.S./U.N. mission in Syria. She sent a nice picture of her holding a bull pup rifle. She told me her unit uncovered a hoard of cash and her share was $5 Million and she needed help getting it out of the country. I smelled a scam coming on so I deleted the message. ;)
Only the REMFs and the deep state want forever wars: none of the grunts want them.
Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest |
||
[Home]
[Headlines]
[Latest Articles]
[Latest Comments]
[Post]
[Sign-in]
[Mail]
[Setup]
[Help]
|