{"id":315,"date":"2014-11-04T08:40:47","date_gmt":"2014-11-04T13:40:47","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/blogs.montclair.edu\/creativeresearch\/?p=315"},"modified":"2018-11-01T10:41:59","modified_gmt":"2018-11-01T14:41:59","slug":"harry-w-haines-w-d-ehrhart","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.montclair.edu\/creative-research-center\/2014\/11\/04\/harry-w-haines-w-d-ehrhart\/","title":{"rendered":"Harry W. Haines on The Vietnam War Forty Years Later &#8211; W.D. Ehrhart on Today&#8217;s Unlearned Lessons"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><strong>[<em>Harry W. Haines<\/em> is a Professor in the School of Communication &amp; Media at Montclair State University. He was born in Mount Holly, New Jersey and was drafted in 1969, one day after he completed his last requirement for his bachelor\u2019s degree at Southern Illinois University, Carbondale. After his military service, he worked as a reporter and earned his master\u2019s and doctoral degrees in Communication at the University of Utah. For twenty years, he taught a very popular course on the Vietnam War, and he has written critical analyses of films, television series, memorials, art works, etc., that help give meaning to the American experience in Vietnam. He is writing a memoir about his experience as a gay anti-war draftee in Vietnam during 1970-1971.\u00a0 Here, he explains the impetus for the memoir.]<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Two self-disclosures revealed Mitt Romney\u2019s sense of self in the last presidential campaign. The infamous \u201c47%\u201d recording, made by a bartender at a fund raising event, clarified Romney\u2019s sense of social class privilege and his apparent contempt for the American middle-class, struggling under the economic policies imposed on them by his social class since the Reagan Administration. The other self-disclosure failed to get the extensive media play that the surreptitious video received, but it should have. At least, many of my fellow Vietnam vets agree with me that it should have. It was Romney\u2019s bizarre statement that he \u201clonged\u201d to go to Vietnam as a young man but, for some reason, was compelled instead to go to Paris on his Mormon Mission.<\/p>\n<p>As a follow-up, his wife added a few days later that missionary work is very much like military experience, because both assignments offer young men an opportunity to find themselves, to become mature adults. \u201cUnless they get sent home in a body bag,\u201d my Army buddy Thomas Jeffrey Roberts, deceased, would have said. Cue the sniggers of aging vets.<\/p>\n<p>Forty years after the fall of Saigon, it\u2019s still weird being a Vietnam War veteran in this country. To respond to the insulting statements by Romney and his wife, even if a veterans group or, as in my case, a mouthy academic with a chip on his shoulder, could find a media outlet that might regard a response as newsworthy, would have risked the label of whiney old fart, still crazy after all these years. It\u2019s over. Let it go. We have a new cohort of vets to worry about. And a sizable percentage of young Americans now believe that the sacrifices we made in Vietnam were actually worth it, even necessary. \u201cHow many times do we have to say \u2018Welcome Home\u2019 to you guys before you shut up?\u201d<\/p>\n<p>In this postmodern revisionist environment, in which we are often thanked for what we did in Vietnam, the public memory of our actual lived experience begins to lose political currency. I have lost track of the number of times that I have been told, sometimes by well-meaning young vets of the current conflagrations, some of the most righteous men and women I have met in my life, that the Vietnam War was winnable, that we were robbed of victory by craven politicians, that we were betrayed by the same Congress that betrayed the South Vietnamese army, that civilian anti-war activists harassed us at airports and spat upon our uniforms as we returned to The World. And slowly the Vietnam War as a cautionary tale of hubris, corruption, and imperialist aggression begins to evaporate like one of those circular fade-outs in an old silent movie, replaced by myth.<\/p>\n<p>I fear that the public memory of the Vietnam War has been hijacked to rationalize a new phase of aggression that began with our action in Kuwait and was heightened by the invasion of Iraq, the event that destabilized much of the so-called Middle East and determined that another generation (actually, a very small percentage of another generation) would have long-term deployments and redeployments in wars that might easily go on for decades. And, unlike the Vietnam War era, the enemy may actually turn up on our doorstep. Curiously, the people who got us immersed continue to be interviewed on our television receivers as if they retained credibility. We don\u2019t live in times that are simply dangerous; we live in times that are seemingly absurd.<\/p>\n<p>When the Iraq invasion began, I was teaching at a fine liberal arts institution that attracted some of the brightest students in the country, many of them from families that would not have been offended by Romney\u2019s \u201c47%\u201d gaff. In an attempt to silence what was then a very large anti-war movement, the slogan \u201cSupport Our Troops\u201d was employed by supporters of the invasion, inferring that opposition to the invasion equaled denigration of our soldiers, harkening back to the supposed and utterly mythological belief that Vietnam vets were spat upon as we disembarked from the Freedom Birds. I happened to get caught up in an exchange of letters in the campus newspaper with a few male students, all of them hawks. Some of them visited me in my office. I suggested to a couple of them that they might support the troops by actually joining them. \u201cNo, sir,\u201d one told me, \u201cWe can\u2019t do that. We\u2019re down for law school next year.\u201d I immediately thought of this exchange when I first read that Mitt Romney had \u201clonged\u201d to join us in Vietnam and that other commitments prevented him from making the flight.<\/p>\n<p>And so, admittedly, my decision to embark upon the writing of a Vietnam War memoir originates in the big chip that still rests on my shoulder, increased in weight by the current set of dangerous circumstances, brought about by privileged members of my generation who may have \u201clonged\u201d to join in our great adventure in Southeast Asia, but who were noticeably absent from the roll call. I have no delusions that my little tale will turn the tide against the revisionist onslaught against the actual experience and the lived politics of the Vietnam War, but I am certain that it will help shed some light on two aspects of the war that belong in the record.<\/p>\n<p>First, the gay American soldier\u2019s experience in Vietnam is practically absent from the war literature. I happily discovered that U.S. forces were simply loaded with gay guys, so my own story is hardly definitive. But it<em>\u00a0is<\/em>\u00a0a gay story, let me tell you! During the \u201cDon\u2019t Ask, Don\u2019t Tell\u201d era, I provided friends with amusing anecdotes about escapades from Nha Trang to Saigon. Quite honestly, I came out of the closet while a young man in a combat zone. In fact, I insisted on declaring my sexual orientation in Vietnam, because the Army had made me an honorary heterosexual just in order to draft me. At my induction physical, I checked off \u201chomosexual tendencies\u201d only because \u201chomosexual orientation\u201d wasn\u2019t on the questionnaire. Warm bodies were needed in 1969, and I was drafted on the spot. And, to my delight, sexuality merged with politics in the war zone.<\/p>\n<p>Second, by the time I arrived in Vietnam in 1970, command had broken down in several areas, not only where we REMFs* were located, but out in the field, where it really counted. For us, the breakdown meant the refusal of orders and the development of gangs in uncounted units, often along the lines that Oliver Stone accurately portrayed in\u00a0<em>Platoon.\u00a0<\/em>Recall the hooch where Wilhem Defoe teaches Charlie Sheen how to smoke dope using a rifle, the quintessential cinematic portrayal of a \u201cshotgun hit.\u201d That hooch was my address in Vietnam. There were other addresses, many of them quite unfriendly and potentially dangerous. I feared many of my fellow soldiers more than I feared the Vietnamese, even though we had much to fear from the locals as the war cascaded to victory for Hanoi.<\/p>\n<p>The breakdown in command accompanied an amorphous anti-war movement among the troops that threatened battle-readiness not just in Vietnam, but throughout the world, including West Germany. The evidence is clear that Nixon\u2019s decision to start pulling out U.S. troops was based, in part, on the conclusion that we could no longer be relied upon to follow orders. This is a major aspect of our country\u2019s history in the Vietnam War, and it formed the context of my lived experience there. I want to give insight into this collective, oppositional consciousness that helped determine the outcome of the war.\u00a0 At the age of 70, I want to bear witness to it.<\/p>\n<p>[*The acronym REMF stands for \u201cRear Echelon Mother Fucker,\u201d the term used derisively, and quite understandably, by combat soldiers to label the fortunate sons, including Haines, posted to relatively safe non-combat medical and support units.]<\/p>\n<p><strong><em>W.D. Ehrhart<\/em>\u2019s work is among the most important literature shaped by the American experience of the Vietnam War and the post-war struggles of his generation. He is a Marine combat vet whose early poetry appeared in the legendary collection, <em>Winning Hearts and Minds. <\/em>Although he never intended to be labeled a \u201cVietnam War writer,\u201d critics&#8212;and his fellow veterans&#8212;regard him as a major voice in the ongoing attempt to make sense of what the Vietnamese call the American War. He is the author of several collections of poetry and of three memoirs, titled <em>Vietnam-Perkasie: A Combat Marine Memoir, Passing Time: Memoir of a Vietnam Veteran Against the War, <\/em>and <em>Busted: A Vietnam Veteran in Nixon\u2019s America. <\/em>His many essays focus on contemporary political and social issues. The recently published collection of critical essays, titled <em>The Last Time I Dreamed About the War: Essays on the Life and Writing of W.D. Ehrhart, <\/em>edited by Jean-Jacques Mal, is available from McFarland &amp; Company. Ehrhart teaches English and history at the Haverford School and lives in suburban Philadelphia. His work is widely used throughout the world in university courses about the war\u2019s history and its aftermath. &#8211; H.H.]<\/strong><br \/>\n<strong>Where the Dangers Lie<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>The Islamic State in Iraq and Syria is violent, fanatical, barbaric, brutal, intolerant, and . . . add whatever other adjectives you\u2019d like to throw in.\u00a0 I won\u2019t argue that these characterizations are not true.\u00a0 But over the summer and into the fall, I have watched and listened with increasing dismay to the shifting sands of the US approach to the situation.<\/p>\n<p>Not so many months ago, we were assured that the US would not get drawn into another war in the Middle East.\u00a0 But all through the summer and into the fall came an endless barrage of stories about Yazidis being raped and buried alive by ISIS, and the horrifying videos of Americans and other Europeans being savagely beheaded by ISIS, and the failures of the Iraqi and Kurdish militaries to stem the advance of ISIS.<\/p>\n<p>The drumbeat for US intervention among US policymakers, lawmakers, and pundits began to grow louder and more insistent, and now the US is regularly sending airstrikes and drone attacks against the ISIS forces.\u00a0 Airstrikes, but no more, we were assured.\u00a0 This minimal military involvement, however, does not seem to be working, says counterinsurgency expert John Nagl, who argues that we should put \u201cboots on the ground\u201d by embedding \u201cteams of combat advisers with\u201d Iraqi and Kurdish forces fighting ISIS.<\/p>\n<p>A year ago most Americans had never even heard of ISIS, yet now the US is once again militarily embroiled in a war in the Middle East.\u00a0 What if we send US advisors and they prove to be ineffective, as they have proved to be over and over again ever since 1961\u2014including in Iraq in the past decade?\u00a0 Will we then have no choice but to send in the Marines?<\/p>\n<p>Of course, we\u2019re not doing this alone.\u00a0 Secretary of State John Kerry says that 40 nations have offered to join our coalition, though he adds, &#8220;It&#8217;s not appropriate to start announcing&#8221; which nations will participate and what each will do.\u00a0 One remembers G. W. Bush\u2019s \u201cCoalition of the Willing\u201d that included such nations as Albania, Latvia, the Fiji Islands, and the Dominican Republic, and can only wonder which nations belong to our coalition this time.<\/p>\n<p>Back in 1990, when Saddam Hussein accused the Kuwaitis of slant-drilling and stealing his oil, the US ambassador to Iraq told Saddam that the US \u201cdoes not take sides in Arab-Arab disputes.\u201d\u00a0 What would you make of that if you were Saddam?\u00a0 Only after he acted on what appeared to any reasonable person to be a Green Light from the US did the US decide that putting the Emir of Kuwait back on his gold-plated toilet was a moral imperative.<\/p>\n<p>We were told by a tearful young girl that Iraqi soldiers tore Kuwaiti babies from their incubators and threw the babies to the floor.\u00a0 Only much later did we learn that the \u201ceyewitness\u201d turns out to have been the Kuwaiti ambassador\u2019s daughter, who was coached in her testimony before Congress by the same public relations firm that had handled George H.W. Bush\u2019s 1988 election campaign.\u00a0 Her testimony could not be and has never been corroborated.<\/p>\n<p>Meanwhile, the vaunted Iraqi Republican Guard turned out to be a bunch of rag-tag peasant draftees who were far more eager to run away than to fight Americans.\u00a0 American audiences were never shown The Highway of Death by the American media, but the rest of the world saw it.\u00a0 You want to talk bloodthirsty savagery?\u00a0 Google \u201cHighway of Death\u201d and see what you get.<\/p>\n<p>And a year later, no less a person than George Will\u2014no bleeding-heart liberal\u2014admitted that the Kuwaitis had been doing exactly what Saddam had said they were doing: stealing Iraqi oil.<\/p>\n<p>Before the US started putting boots on the ground in the Middle East in August 1990, Iraq was a stable country.\u00a0 Syria was a stable country.\u00a0 Libya was a stable country.\u00a0 Not happy places, to be sure.\u00a0 But stable.\u00a0 And secular.\u00a0 Al Qaida didn\u2019t exist.\u00a0 ISIS didn\u2019t exist.&lt;<\/p>\n<p>Almost a quarter of a century later, with the US 5<sup>th<\/sup> Fleet headquartered in Bahrain, US air bases in Saudi Arabia, and US army bases in Kuwait, how is the Middle East doing?\u00a0 After eight years of US boots on the ground in Iraq, how is Iraq doing?\u00a0 After thirteen years of US boots on the ground in Afghanistan, how is Afghanistan doing?\u00a0 How is Libya doing after being liberated from Muammar Gaddafi with significant help from the US?\u00a0 Have we neutralized al-Qaida?\u00a0 How can ISIS be so effective a fighting force with no air force, no navy, no Pentagon, and no assistance from any major world power while those on whose behalf we want to expend American treasure and American blood can\u2019t defend themselves without our help?<\/p>\n<p>For that matter, where did al-Qaida come from?\u00a0 Isn\u2019t al-Qaida the direct descendant of those Afghan mujahideen the US so gleefully armed and funded against the Soviet Union back in the 1980s?\u00a0 Isn\u2019t ISIS a direct outgrowth of al-Qaida?<\/p>\n<p>Do we never seem to notice the Iron Law of Unintended Consequences playing itself out over and over again?\u00a0 Do we not notice that the United States of America cannot make the world behave as we would wish?<\/p>\n<p>I am not arguing that what is happening in the Middle East is anything other than a disaster for those who are living in the midst of it.\u00a0 I am not arguing that ISIS deserves a seat in the United Nations.\u00a0 But I am asking: how much more damage are we going to do in the process of trying to fix the damage we have already done?\u00a0 How many more enemies will we make trying to kill the ones we\u2019ve already made?\u00a0 Will the Middle East be better off after we have intervened once again?<\/p>\n<p>Finally, which is the greater threat to our national security?\u00a0 Al-Qaida or a crumbling infrastructure of highways, bridges, and tunnels, leaking municipal water systems, and an ancient electrical grid.\u00a0 ISIS or failing public schools, understaffed hospitals, and overcrowded prisons?\u00a0 Afgan Taliban or a national debt of nearly $18,000,000,000,000 and rising every day by $2,450,000,000?\u00a0 Islamist jihadis or a dysfunctional Congress gerrymandered beyond any possibility of compromise?<\/p>\n<p>We cannot bend the world into the shape we desire through military might, or by any other means for that matter, and our attempts to do so have failed time and time again.\u00a0 Yet we seem to remain, as a people, as gullible as ever, once again stampeded into winless war by leaders so besotted by the hammer of American military might that they persist in seeing every problem in the world as a nail.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>[Harry W. Haines is a Professor in the School of Communication &amp; Media at Montclair State University. He was born in Mount Holly, New Jersey and was drafted in 1969, one day after he completed his last requirement for his bachelor\u2019s degree at Southern Illinois University, Carbondale. After his military service, he worked as a [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":23,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"inline_featured_image":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[3],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-315","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-creative-research-center-guest-essay"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.montclair.edu\/creative-research-center\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/315","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.montclair.edu\/creative-research-center\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.montclair.edu\/creative-research-center\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.montclair.edu\/creative-research-center\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/23"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.montclair.edu\/creative-research-center\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=315"}],"version-history":[{"count":3,"href":"https:\/\/www.montclair.edu\/creative-research-center\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/315\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":883,"href":"https:\/\/www.montclair.edu\/creative-research-center\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/315\/revisions\/883"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.montclair.edu\/creative-research-center\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=315"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.montclair.edu\/creative-research-center\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=315"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.montclair.edu\/creative-research-center\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=315"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}