One Answer to Vance’s 'Supporting the Troops'
by
James Glaser
by James Glaser
DIGG THIS
Laurence
M. Vance wrote a column in which he heaps a lot of the blame
for the horrors of war on our troops.
It is the troops that are occupying a foreign country. It is
the troops that are dropping the bombs. It is the troops that
are throwing the grenades. It is the troops that are launching
the missiles. It is the troops that are firing the mortars. It
is the troops that are shooting the bullets. It is the troops
that are destroying homes and infrastructure. It is the troops
that are injuring, maiming, and killing people, including thousands
of civilians.
Those are hard charges, and if it were 1969 and I were just getting
off the plane from my tour in Vietnam, I would be red-faced and
swearing after reading Vance’s column. But that was then, and this
is now. I have worked with veterans for many years now, and I have
met many men who are living with the guilt of being that trooper
who killed the civilian, who threw the grenade that blew away the
child, who dropped the bomb or fired the mortar that destroyed the
village, and those troopers suffer a lifetime of guilt.
Even when I was in the thick of things in Vietnam, something inside
of me was telling me that what we were doing was wrong. Yes, we
had pep talks by our officers telling us we were bringing freedom
and democracy to the poor people of South Vietnam, but the next
day you might see the wounded child holding on to the dead body
of its mother, and all the words in the world couldn’t make that
scene seem all right.
People keep telling me it took a lot of guts for me to defend America
over in the Nam, but I don’t remember it like that. I joined the
Marines, they sent me over there, and that was that. Some how I
think it takes a lot more guts for someone in uniform to say, "this
isn’t right," and file for conscientious objector status, than
to follow orders like I did, all the while trying to stuff those
thoughts of doing wrong into the back burner of my mind.
For sure it took a lot of guts for Laurence Vance to write his
column saying, "I don’t support the troops, I don’t support
the troops in this war, and I won’t support them in the next one
with Iran or any other country."
There it is, Vance lays it right out there for all to see, and
his thoughts are just as clear as they can be. Laurence M. Vance
is anti-war in the truest sense. I have been anti-war for over twenty
years now, and I have met thousands of combat vets who feel the
same way, but it is hard to lay warfare at the feet of the enlisted
man. It much easier and way more popular to blame President Bush
or some mysterious group of neocons that we think is really running
the show. Somehow it doesn’t seem right to blame the troops, after
all they were just doing their job. When you are one of those troops,
and years after the battles are over you are still fighting to keep
down the guilt you feel for things you did, you know in your heart
that you should have stood up and said, "NO! I won’t do that."
When it comes right down to it, no matter what George Bush says,
he cannot have a war without the consent of the troops. If the young
men and women in uniform stand up and say "No," it is
all over. I know those troops we have in Iraq today have that little
voice in the back of their heads saying what they are doing is wrong.
It doesn’t matter how many people thank them for what they are doing,
because way deep down inside, they know it’s wrong, and years from
now they will pay the price for not doing the right thing.
At the end of Vance’s column he says another thing that I and all
veterans can get behind.
And
when they are all home – from Iraq and everywhere else in the
world – I support using the troops to actually patrol our coasts
and guard our borders. I support the troops so much that I don’t
want them sent to fight any more foreign wars.
October
4, 2006
Jim
Glaser [send him mail],
a Marine Corps Vietnam War veteran and Commander of American Legion
Post 499, works to educate the American public on the consequences
of war. His personal website is James-Glaser.com.
Copyright
© 2006 LewRockwell.com
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