McCain-As-War-Hero
Myth
Nothing
Honorable
About the
Vietnam War
By Ted Rall
17/07/08
"ICH" -- -
NEW YORK —
Every
presidential
candidacy
relies on a
myth. Reagan
was a great
communicator;
Clinton felt
your pain.
Both
storylines
were
ridiculous.
But rarely
are the
constructs
used to
market a
party
nominee as
transparent
or as
fictional as
those we’re
being asked
to swallow
in 2008.
Still more
laughable
than the
notion of
Obama as the
second
coming of
JFK is the
founding
myth of the
McCain
campaign:
(a) he is a
war hero,
and (b) said
heroism
increases
his
credibility
on national
security
issues. “A
Vietnam hero
and national
security
pro,” The
New York
Times calls
him in a
typical
media
blandishment.
John McCain
fought in
Vietnam.
There was
nothing
noble, much
less heroic,
about
fighting in
that war.
Some
Americans
may be
suffering
another of
the periodic
attacks of
national
amnesia that
prevent us
from
honestly
assessing
our place in
the world
and its
history, but
others
recall the
truth about
Vietnam: it
was a
disastrous,
unjustifiable
mess that
anyone with
an ounce of
sense was
against at
the time.
Between one
and two
million
Vietnamese
and 58,000
Americans
were sent to
their deaths
by a
succession
of
presidents
and
Congresses–fed
to the
flames of
greed,
hubris, and
stupidity.
The event
used to
justify
starting the
war–the
Tonkin Gulf
“incident”–never
happened.
The Vietnam
War’s
ideological
foundation,
the mantra
cited to
keep it
going, was
disproved
after we
lost. No
Southeast
Asian
“dominos”
fell to
communism.
To the
contrary,
the effect
of the U.S.
withdrawal
was
increased
stability.
When
genocide
broke out in
neighboring
Cambodia in
the late
1970s, it
was not the
U.S., but a
unified
Vietnamese
army–the
evil
communists–who
stopped it.
Not even
General
Wesley
Clark, shot
four times
in Vietnam,
is allowed
to question
the
McCain-as-war-hero
narrative.
“Well, I
don’t think
riding in a
fighter
plane and
getting shot
down is a
qualification
to be
president,”
he argued.
The Obama
campaign,
which sells
its
surrogates
down the
river with
alarming
regularity,
promptly
hung the
former NATO
commander
out to dry:
“Senator
Obama honors
and respects
Senator
McCain’s
service, and
of course he
rejects
yesterday’s
statement by
General
Clark.”
Even in an
article
criticizing
the media
for
repeatedly
framing
McCain as a
war hero,
the liberal
website
Media
Matters
concedes:
“McCain is,
after all, a
war hero;
everybody
agrees about
that.”
Not
everyone.
I was 12
when the
last U.S.
occupation
troops fled
Saigon. I
remember how
I–and most
Americans–felt
at the time.
We were
relieved.
By the end
of Nixon’s
first term
most people
had turned
against the
war. Gallup
polls taken
in 1971
found that
about 70
percent of
Americans
thought
sending
troops to
Vietnam had
been a
mistake.
Some
believed it
was immoral;
others
considered
it
unwinnable.
Since then,
the
political
center has
shifted
right. We’ve
seen the
Reagan
Revolution,
Clinton’s
Democratic
centrism,
and Bush’s
post-9/11
flirtation
with neo-McCarthyite
fascism.
Nevertheless,
the
overwhelming
majority of
Americans–including
Republicans–still
think we
should never
have fought
the Vietnam
War.
“After the
war’s 1975
conclusion,”
Michael
Tomasky
wrote in The
American
Prospect in
2004,
“Gallup has
asked the
question
(”Did the
U.S. make a
mistake in
sending
troops to
fight in
Vietnam?”)
five times,
in 1985,
1990, 1993,
1995, and
2000. All
five
times…respondents
were
consistent
in calling
the war a
mistake by a
margin of
more than 2
to 1: by 74
percent to
22 percent
in 1990, for
example, and
by 69
percent to
24 percent
in 2000.”
Moreover,
Tomasky
continued,
“vast
majorities
continue to
call the war
‘unjust.’”
Even in
2004, after
9/11, 62
percent
considered
the war
unjust. Only
33 percent
still
thought it
was morally
justified.
Vietnam was
an illegal,
undeclared
war of
aggression.
Can those
who fought
in that
immoral war
really be
heroes? This
question
appeared
settled
after Reagan
visited a
cemetery for
Nazi
soldiers,
including
members of
the SS, at
Bitburg,
West Germany
in 1985.
“Those young
men,”
claimed
Reagan, “are
victims of
Nazism also,
even though
they were
fighting in
the German
uniform,
drafted into
service to
carry out
the hateful
wishes of
the Nazis.
They were
victims,
just as
surely as
the victims
in the
concentration
camps.”
Americans
didn’t buy
it. Reagan’s
poll
numbers,
typically
between 60
and 65
percent at
the time,
plunged to
41 percent
after the
visit. Those
who fight
for an evil
cause
receive no
praise.
So why is
the
McCain-as-war-hero
myth so hard
to unravel?
By most
accounts,
John McCain
demonstrated
courage as a
P.O.W., most
notably by
refusing his
captors’
offer of
early
release. But
that doesn’t
make him a
hero.
Hell, McCain
isn’t even a
victim.
At a time
when more
than a
fourth of
all combat
troops in
Vietnam were
forcibly
drafted (the
actual
victims),
McCain
volunteered
to drop
napalm on
“gooks” (his
term, not
mine). He
could have
waited to
see if his
number came
up in the
draft
lottery.
Like Bush,
he could
have used
family
connections
to weasel
out of it.
Finally, he
could have
joined the
100,000
draft-eligible
males–true
heroes, to a
man–who went
to Canada
rather than
kill people
in a war
that was
plainly
wrong.
When McCain
was shot
down during
his 23rd
bombing
sortie, he
was happily
shooting up
a civilian
neighborhood
in the
middle of a
major city.
Vietnamese
locals beat
him when
they pulled
him out of a
local lake;
yeah, that
must have
sucked. But
I can’t help
think of
what would
have
happened to
Mohammed
Atta had he
somehow
wound up
alive on a
lower
Manhattan
street on
9/11. How
long would
he have
lasted?
Maybe he
would have
made it. I
don’t know.
But I do
know this:
no one would
ever have
considered
him a war
hero.
Ted Rall is
the author
of the book
“Silk Road
to Ruin: Is
Central Asia
the New
Middle
East?,” an
in-depth
prose and
graphic
novel
analysis of
America’s
next big
foreign
policy
challenge.
Visit his
website
www.tedrall.com
© 2008 Ted
Rall
