HEROIC ALLIES
By Harry F. Noyes III
They
were small, talked in sing-song squeaks, put a smelly fish sauce on their food,
and often held hands with each other.
It is not surprising that American troops sent to Southeast Asia -- mostly
young, indifferently educated, and molded by a society with too much
self-esteem and too little understanding of other cultures -- found it hard to
empathize with
Still, it is a pity that many veterans of the Vietnam War have joined radical
agitators, draft dodgers and smoke-screen politicians to besmirch the honor of
an army that can no longer defend itself. To slander
an army that died in battle because
Perhaps some find my assertion incredible. How can I possibly defend the armed
forces of
No, it is not. This article will outline some of the more compelling evidence
against this scurrilous mythology and also examine why such a mythology arose
to begin with.
Of course, the South Vietnamese forces were imperfect. They had their share of
bad leaders, cowardly troops, and incidents of panic, blundering and brutality.
So did the American forces in
In some respects -- organization, logistics, staff work and leadership --
In fact, many of the weaknesses exhibited by the South Vietnamese forces were
identical to the ones displayed by the U.S. armed forces during the American
War of Independence, even though late 18th-century America had several
advantages: the whole scale of the Revolutionary War was smaller and easier to
manage; America's colonial experience, unlike Vietnam's, had fostered local
self-government and permitted the country to develop some truly outstanding
leaders; the British were less persistent than the North Vietnamese; and the
French allies did not abandon young America the way the U.S. government
abandoned South Vietnam.
But in any case, organization, logistics, staff work and even leadership are
not the qualities at issue in the slandering of the South Vietnamese forces.
Two questions touch on the real issue. Were South Vietnamese fighting men so
lacking in character, courage, toughness and patriotism that Americans are
justified in slandering them and assigning them all blame for the defeat of
freedom in
The objective "big-picture" evidence is clear. The Tet Offensive of 1968 was supposed to crack
In the 1972 Easter tide Offensive, isolated South Vietnamese troops at An Loc
held out against overwhelming enemy forces and artillery/rocket fire for days,
defeating repeated tank assaults. I later met a
As further evidence, consider
Once I saw a television documentary about an Australian cameraman who had
covered the war. Unlike
However, the most important evidence of South Vietnamese soldiers' willingness
to fight comes from two simple, undeniable, "big-picture" facts --
facts that are often ignored or disguised to cover up American failure in
Fact One: The war began some seven years before major American combat forces
arrived and continued for some five years after the
Fact Two: The South Vietnamese armed forces lost about a quarter-million dead.
In proportion to population, that was equivalent to some 2 million American
dead (double the actual
How, then, did the South Vietnamese get their bad reputation?
Certainly there were occasional displays of incompetence and panic by South
Vietnamese forces. The same can be said of
That incident does not mean the whole U.S. Army was cowardly, and occasional
breakdowns among
The truth of the matter was best stated nearly two centuries ago when a British
woman asked the Duke of Wellington if British soldiers were ever known to run
in battle. "Madam," replied the Iron Duke, "All soldiers run in
battle."
Even a cursory study of military history confirms this. Civil War battles
reveal a continuous ebb and flow of bravery and fear, as Confederate and
Author S.L.A. Marshall describes how one American rifle company in World War II
fled in panic from a screaming Japanese banzai charge: a second unit fought on,
quickly killing every Japanese soldier involved (about 10), and discovered that
most of them were not even armed.
If the same thing had happened to a South Vietnamese unit, it undoubtedly would
have been cited repeatedly by self-appointed pundits as incontrovertible proof
of the cowardice of all South Vietnamese troops.
Why? We've already hinted at the answer. It all depends on the color and native
tongue of the troops involved. The ugly truth is that the South Vietnamese
forces' false reputation is rooted in American racism and cultural chauvinism.
I can personally attest to the pervading, massive and truth-distorting reality
of the phenomenon. When I arrived in
White troops, black troops, and civilian Americans such as journalists -- all
were equally afflicted. This passionate hatred of
I knew an American captain with a graduate degree from a prestigious university
in cinematography (presumably a specialty that improves visual perceptiveness).
He once returned from temporary duty in
"They send their kids to school," he said, contrasting them with the
South Vietnamese. He was surprised, but not repentant,
when I pointed out that there was a Vietnamese school right next door to our
compound! Hundreds of little kids in bright blue-and-white school uniforms
could be seen there daily -- by anyone whose eyes were open. But this filmmaker
apparently could not see them.
It is ironic that the Vietnamese -- who by reputation honor learning more than
Americans do and who raised South Vietnam's literacy rate from about 20 percent
to 80 percent even as war raged around them (and despite the enemy's habit of
murdering teachers) -- were accused by the filmmaker of having no schools.
Because he was fighting in a foreign country and was separated from his family,
this American had built up a hatred for
Imagine the feelings of the undereducated masses of American troops faced with
a strange culture in a high-stress environment! Perhaps one cannot blame the
troops for their ignorance. Heaven knows the
However, that is no excuse for veterans to pretend that they understand what
they saw in
What most
Except for advisers, few Americans worked with any Vietnamese other than
(perhaps) the clerks, laundresses and waitresses employed by
Most important for our purpose, few
Journalists were no better. Consider a biased TV report I heard in which a
reporter denounced South Vietnam's air force because -- despite Vietnamization -- it "let the Americans" fly the
tough missions against North Vietnam.
In fact, it was the
Not wanting the South Vietnamese to have any control over bombing policy, the
The TV reporter in question either was ignorant of that fact or chose to ignore
it in order to do a hatchet job on the American allies. Considering his
blatantly biased words and tone of voice, I concluded that any ignorance he
suffered from was deliberate.
Another example of media bias came during the Khe Sanh siege. If you asked a thousand Americans which units
fought at Khe Sanh, most of
those who had heard of the battle would probably know that U.S. Marines did.
But it would be surprising if more than one out of the thousand knew that a
South Vietnamese Ranger battalion had shared the rigors of the siege with
American Marines. Other South Vietnamese units took part in supporting
operations outside the besieged area. The
All this -- soldier and media bias -- came together clearly during news reports
of the 1972 incursion into
Consider a TV documentary a decade ago. It included film of some American GIs
being interviewed during the Laotian fighting. These guys, themselves safely
inside
The incursion, of course, is the source of the infamous photo of a South
Vietnamese soldier escaping from
In fact, it is a classic example of photography's power to lie. What happened
was this: The South Vietnamese were struck by overwhelming Communist forces.
The U.S.military failed to provide the support that
had been promised because enemy anti-aircraft fire was too strong. There were
reports of
Given that context, consider the way Colonel Robert Molinelli,
an American officer who witnessed the action, described it in the Armed Forces
Journal of April 19, 1971: "A South Vietnamese battalion of 420 men was
surrounded by an enemy regiment of 2,500-3,300 men for three days. The
The unit was down to 253 effectives when it reached another South Vietnamese
perimeter. Some 17 of those men did panic and rode helicopter skids to escape.
The rest did not.
Now, some might consider dangling from a high-flying, fast-moving helicopter
for many miles, subject to anti-aircraft fire, to be a pretty gutsy move. But,
aside from that, how can such an isolated incident -- during a hard-fought
withdrawal-while- in-contact (universally acknowledged to be just about the
toughest maneuver in the military inventory) -- be inflated into condemnation
of an entire army, nation and population?
The answer is racism. The guys hanging from the helicopter skids were funny-looking
foreigners. If they had been Americans, or even British, the reaction
undoubtedly would have been one of compassion for the ordeal they had been
through..
Evidence for this is found in how Americans responded to the British retreats
early in World War II.
There were some disgraceful displays among British forces at
Yet the image of
It is certainly true that South Vietnamese forces gave an undistinguished
performance in the final days, with the exception of the incredibly heroic
defense of Xuan Loc.
Yet there are reasons for that. And there are reasons to believe that, with
more loyal support from the Americans, the South Vietnamese could have turned
in more Xuan Loc-style performances and perhaps even
have saved their country.
The real issue again is not just how the South Vietnamese performed, however;
it is how their performance compared with the way Americans might have
performed under similar circumstances. .
And the truth is that American troops -- if they were abandoned by the
Remember: the
The situation was so bad that even the North Vietnamese commander who conquered
Into this miserable state of affairs the North Vietnamese slashed, with a
well-equipped, well-supplied tank-and-motorized- infantry blitzkrieg..
Yes, the South Vietnamese folded. Yes, they abandoned some equipment (much of
which would not work anyway for lack of spare parts) and some ammunition (which
they had hoarded until it was too late to shoot it or move it, because they
knew they would never get any more). So whose fault was that? Theirs... or
Yes,
For a while the South Vietnamese hoped the American B-52s would return and help
stem the Communist tide. When it became clear they would not, understandable
demoralization set in.
The fighting spirit of the forces was sapped, and many South Vietnamese
soldiers deserted -- not because they were cowards or were not willing to fight
for their country, but because they were unwilling to die for a lost cause when
their families desperately needed them.
Would Americans do any better under the conditions that faced the South
Vietnamese in 1975? Would
Would the South Vietnamese have won in 1975 if the
The answer is unknowable. Certainly they would have had a fighting chance,
something the
Even if the South Vietnamese had been totally defeated, wholehearted
It is too late now for Americans to make good the terrible crime committed in
abandoning the South Vietnamese people to Communism. But it is not too late to
acknowledge the error of American insults to their memory. It is not too late
to begin paying proper honor to their achievements and their heroic attempt to
defend their liberty.