Published on Friday, March 16, 2018
https://www.commondreams.org/views/2018/03/16/50-years-later-what-can-we-learn-my-lai-massacre
[Photo taken by United States Army
photographer Ronald L. Haeberle on March 16, 1968 in the aftermath of the My
Lai massacre showing mostly women and children dead on a road. (Photo: Ronald
Haeberle/Wikimedia Commons)]
On March 16, 1968, platoons from the
army’s Charlie and Bravo companies began an assault on the village of Son My
and particularly the hamlet of My Lai in South Vietnam. Without
encountering a single act of resistance from Viet Cong guerrillas, the American
soldiers brutally killed roughly 504 Vietnamese civilians, including pregnant
women and 210 children under the age of 13, among them, babies. Women
were brutalized and gang raped and the village was burned to the ground.
Lieutenant William Calley ordered his men to herd village residents into a
ditch and left them with the order, “You know what I want you to do with
them.” Confused, the men failed to act until Calley returned and told
them to “waste them,” opening fire himself. The soldiers obeyed.
The massacre produced heroic actions
by a few American soldiers, most notably Hugh Thompson. From his
reconnaissance helicopter, Thompson and his crew were alarmed by what they saw
happening on the ground. Landing the helicopter, Thompson stood between
American soldiers and a group of villagers they had rounded up. Ordering
his crew to open fire on the Americans if they began shooting the villagers,
Thompson rescued the Vietnamese civilians.
Army brass rebuffed complaints
Thompson filed. The military’s official version of the incident,
published in several American newspapers, was that the Americans had killed 128
enemy soldiers.
However, one helicopter gunner named
Ron Ridenhour began to hear about the massacre back in base camp. After
cautiously gathering information while still in Vietnam, Ridenhour wrote
letters detailing the massacre to 30 government and military officials.
Most were never answered, but Ridenhour’s Congressman, Morris Udall, followed
up by urging a formal military inquiry. The secret investigation of
Lieutenant Calley’s role led to his arrest for premeditated murder.
Tipped off about the investigation
in late October 1969, investigative reporter Seymour Hersh interviewed Calley,
Ridenhour and several soldiers who had been at My Lai. Hersh’s widely
published stories along with army photographer Ron Haeberle’s photos horrified
millions at a time when the antiwar movement was at a peak and a majority of
Americans believed the war to be a mistake. Still, from that point
forward media coverage was dominated by Calley’s trial and eventual conviction
in 1971. Many on the left maintained that Calley was being scapegoated to
protect the military chain of command, while many on the right attacked the
mass media or hailed Calley as a hero and flooded the Nixon White House with
demands for his release. Calley served only three and a half years of his
initial life sentence, most of it in his own quarters.
Military brass quickly distinguished
between the “isolated incident” of “murder” at My Lai and normal conduct of the
war in Vietnam. However, many veterans came forward to acknowledge that
the killing of large numbers of civilians was a routine part of the American
war. As the Vietnam Veterans Against the War put it at their Winter
Soldier Hearings, “My Lai was not an isolated incident,” but “only a minor step
beyond the standard official United States policy in Vietnam.”
Indeed the destruction and poisoning
of the Vietnam countryside and slaughter of the Vietnamese people is the most
appalling feature of the American war. By best estimates, more than 2
million Vietnamese civilians were killed in the war and more than an
additional 2 million were wounded. In addition to ground search and
destroy missions, the United States dropped on Vietnam 1.5 times the tonnage of
bombs the Allies dropped in all of World War II, along with 20 million gallons
of Agent Orange and other poisonous herbicides, and an estimated 400,000 tons
of napalm.
As we know, American ground units in
particular suffered greatly, as well. 58,000 soldiers were killed, about
300,000 were wounded (21,000 permanently disabled) and 830,000 have had to
struggle with Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder, as did many involved in the My
Lai killings.
Vietnam remembers My Lai with the
Son My Vestige Site, a somber museum and green space where photographs,
sculptures, mass grave sites, villagers’ relics, and foundations of 18
destroyed homes are on display.
If the Vietnamese remember My Lai
this way, how might My Lai be relevant to the United States today? While
it is horrifying that American soldiers responded to what they perceived as
orders to “kill everything in the village” by doing just that, what of the morality
of killing or maiming civilians as a routine function of warfare?
Historically, World War II was the
difference maker. About 15% of World War I casualties were civilians;
most of the time soldiers simply slaughtered each other across “no man’s land.”
By the end of World War II, however, with vast “improvements” in weaponry and
air power, 65% of all victims were civilians, according to the landmark 1996
United Nations report; by the 1990s more than 90% of war casualties were
civilians. The carnage of World War II prompted the participants to
establish the Geneva Conventions, protecting civilians from “violence to life
and person, in particular murder of all kinds, mutilation, cruel treatment and
torture,” as well as “outrages upon personal dignity, in particular humiliating
and degrading treatment.”
So what does this mean for American
wars or quasi-covert wars and military strikes in Central America, Iraq,
Afghanistan, Pakistan, Libya, and Yemen which have produced hundreds of
thousands of innocent civilian casualties? Are not these war crimes
according to the Geneva Conventions? And what of the government’s
repeated efforts to hide these casualties from us, and the mass media’s
complicity in this? Not only do American military attacks in the Middle
East help to produce the spreading threat of blowback against Americans,
but American soldiers continue to suffer from profound physical and emotional
damage. A contemporary term for the latter is “moral injury,”
particularly relevant in wars where little distinction can be (or is) made
between enemy fighters and civilians.
Is not this country suffering from
moral injury? Isn’t it time we had a full and open reckoning with this
history?
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