The Right Opinion
Welcome Home, Finally
WASHINGTON -- Forty-three years ago this week, the fabled 101st Airborne Division launched Operation Apache Snow -- a major ground offensive against North Vietnamese army invaders in the treacherous A Shau Valley. Though fighting raged over hundreds of square miles of triple-canopied jungle, the focus soon became a single terrain feature, a mountain, with peaks as high as 3,000 feet, the Vietnamese named Dong Ap Bia, or "Mountain of the Crouching Beast." The Americans who fought there called it Hamburger Hill.
By the time the 11-day battle ended, 70 American soldiers were dead, and nearly 400 had been wounded. More than 600 North Vietnamese soldiers perished. The only survivors of this epic battle to receive the thanks of their countrymen for their courage and commitment were the North Vietnamese.
The Americans who walked off that bloody mountain -- and every other soldier, sailor, airman, guardsman and Marine who served in Vietnam -- returned home to a bitterly divided country. The so-called mainstream media, Hollywood and academe depicted those who served in Vietnam as pothead marauders, deranged killers and the "victims" of "Johnson's war" or "Nixon's war."
There were no parades celebrating the bravery and perseverance of the 2.7 million young men and women who donned a uniform and served in some of the most difficult and dangerous conditions on earth. Until the Vietnam Veterans Memorial -- known as the "Vietnam Wall" -- was dedicated in 1982, public accolades were sparse, and ceremonies outside the confines of a military base, an American Legion hall or a Veterans of Foreign Wars post were practically nonexistent.
Now, five decades after their war began -- and 37 years after its disastrous, cataclysmic conclusion -- those who fought in Vietnam are finally being welcomed home. At 1 p.m. EDT on Monday, May 28 -- Memorial Day -- Defense Secretary Leon Panetta will host a ceremony "to thank and honor America's Vietnam veterans on behalf of a grateful nation." Though tens of thousands of Vietnam veterans, Gold Star families and the leaders of our nation will be there, few of the potentates of the press have taken note of this extraordinary event.
Next week's ceremony shouldn't come as a surprise to anyone. In the 2008 National Defense Authorization Act, Congress directed the Department of Defense to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the Vietnam War and "coordinate, support, and facilitate" programs nationwide to recognize those who sacrificed and served in Vietnam.
Appropriately, the Memorial Day ceremony will take place in front of "the wall" that has the names of the 58,282 Americans who were killed or remain missing in action in Southeast Asia -- including that of Spc. Leslie Sabo, who posthumously was awarded the Medal of Honor this week for his heroism May 10, 1970. Also this week, 10 new names were added to the black granite walls, and the status of 12 others was changed from "missing" to "killed." Most of the new names and designation changes are the consequence of work done by the Joint POW/MIA Accounting Command. As the ceremony takes place in Washington, two JPAC teams will be in Laos searching for more Americans unaccounted for in the Vietnam theater of war.
On Nov. 18, 1967, then-U.S. Army Pfc. Sammy Davis was serving on a small fire support base near Cai Lay, Vietnam. In the middle of the night, his artillery battery began taking incoming mortar fire and was attacked by a Viet Cong battalion. He was able to provide suppressing fire with a machine gun and then return artillery fire onto the enemy. Despite being wounded, he navigated an air mattress across the river to save three fellow soldiers. For those actions, Sgt. 1st Class Sammy Davis was awarded the Medal of Honor.
I asked my dear friend Sammy Davis why it is important for Vietnam veterans to gather for this commemoration. He said, "Comrades gather because they long to be with the men who once acted their best, men who suffered and sacrificed, who were stripped raw, right down to their humanity." Of the men he served with, he added: "I did not pick these men. They were delivered by fate. But I know them in a way I know no other men. I have never given anyone such trust. They were willing to guard something more precious than my life. They would have carried my reputation, the memory of me. It was part of the bargain we all made, the reason we were so willing to die for one another."
To all of the soldiers, sailors, airmen, guardsmen and Marines who served during Vietnam, welcome home. I hope to see you this Memorial Day.
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9 Comments
Son of Liberty
Friday, May 18, 2012 at 8:18 AM
These fellow veterans (I served after Vietnam)displayed sublime courage in the face of daunting odds. They richly deserve the lauds they get. What takes away from it is the coward who sits in the White House now, and what he stands for. A hint here folks ... IT IS NOT WHAT THESE MEN FOUGHT FOR!
wjm
Friday, May 18, 2012 at 10:34 AM
Chairman Obamao will be absent from this service I'm sure, and will probably have the dolt Biden place a wreath. He thinks the military serves him. He is beneath contempt. To all my fellow veterans, I hold you in the highest Honor, and thank you for service to America and the Constitution, not for any allegience to Obamao the traitor.
billy396
Friday, May 18, 2012 at 12:25 PM
Brave, patriotic American soldiers fought and died in Vietnam, and they deserve all of the accolades that they didn't receive upon their homecoming. As you mentioned, the Leftmedia will steadfastly ignore this event, or else they will give it a cursory one-line mention. Our new dictator certainly couldn't be expected to take time off from amassing a fortune in reelection campaign funds to attend. He ignored the ceremony at Arlington that all modern Presidents have attended every Memorial Day. THAT one move, more than anything else, demonstrates his opinion. He's a Communist to the very core of his being, and he's a traitor to this country during a time of war. He has weakened our allies, funded and emboldened our enemies, and made a complete mess of foreign relations, except for making damn sure that aid for his homeland in Kenya has increased every year of his administration. All veterans of any conflict should see the truth regarding this traitor, this fraudulent President who's trying his worst to destroy the liberty and freedom that hundreds of thousands of brave Americans have fought and died for since before the Revolution. I urge ALL veterans and civilians to join the Oathkeepers. This organization may turn out to be the savior of countless American lives, in particular if Oblunder the thief gets reelected. We must insist that he's charged, tried and convicted for his crimes against this country. The booklet that recently surfaced that admits his Kenyan birth wasn't a fact-checking error. Where do you think his "Literary Agency" got their information regarding his background? They certainly didn't pull country names out of a hat. His father was a Muslim, his brother is a Muslim, his sister is a Muslim, he attended a Muslim school in Indonesia. He has stated, while President, that the Muslim call to prayer, recited by the muezzin at prescribed times of the day, is the "most beautiful sound that I've ever heard." He attended a radical, violently racist, anti-American "Christian" church for 20 years. This country doesn't need or want a king, but that's what we have until we get rid of Oblunder and his crooked DOJ, EPA, ATF, HHS, HUD, etc., etc.
Army Officer (Ret)
Friday, May 18, 2012 at 10:25 PM
The seeds of victory in the Gulf were sown in the rice paddies of Vietnam.Welcome home indeed, brothers. You paved the way for those of us who followed.
Mike Schuerger Sr.
Sunday, May 20, 2012 at 12:30 AM
Recommended reading:Stolen Valor : How the Vietnam Generation Was Robbed of Its Heroes and Its Historyby B. G. Burkett + Glenna WhitleyWelcome home guys.
mark
Sunday, May 20, 2012 at 3:42 PM
i want to say thank you vietnam vets. i want to say that these young men didn`t die for nothing.books say we lost the war but from what i have read, seen,and talked with vietnam vets we never lost a major battle.the young men died for one another didn`t matter what race u were or creed you were brothers and sisters betrayed by the government that sent you there.my father was in ww2,kores and retired during vietnam. i served 6 yrs in the airforce. but it`s to you brothers and sisters of vietnam i want to give a special thanks to.not to take away anything from todays heros but the arabs are not the vietnamese they fought the japenese,the chinese,the french and the U.S.A.they were a tough enemy. but one thing you and the gulf veterns have in common are inept government leaders the airforce in the north couldn`t bomb there for most of the war the gulf vets have restrictions just like you did fighting with a hand tied behind their backs. i read an article where a soldior was going to get in trouble because a prisoner had a cut on his face!!!!!!!!!!! when will the government learn and now we have a president that called a navy corpsman a CORPSEMAN.my GOD this idiot must go NOW. again thank you VIETNAM VETS.
India
Sunday, May 20, 2012 at 8:29 PM
Thank you, and "welcome home".
rod
Monday, May 21, 2012 at 9:00 AM
We owe the Vietnam veterans. The title if greatest generation would not apply because the noble vets of Nam suffered the company of fools (hippies, protestors, misguided activists) in their generation. However, the vets if Nam were cut from the same cloth as the greatest generation. Well, except for that loser and traitor John Kerry.Happy Memorial Day to all vets everywhere and especially those of Vietnam.
JLS06
Monday, May 21, 2012 at 8:42 PM
I was fortunate enough to have done my Army active duty before Vietnam got hot (there is some value in age; although staying in the Reserves, I did get called up for Desert Storm!). My point here is that, I had a carereceiver as a Stephen Minister who did his year in Vietnam in 1967 or 1968; returned home to be spat upon and called "baby killer." He turned out to be a relatively successful business man, but has admitted that, to this day, still has nightmares about being "in country" living with fear of death 24/7. It is high time these heroes were recognized for their service and have the stigma of the "Vietnam era" erased from their lives. I pray that he can do just that. God bless America.