Category Archives: Viet Nam

American Patriot

Retired Air Force Colonel George E. "Bud" Day, with his black-or-white views, wouldn’t survive an old media profile, but then I’m sure the eighty-three-year-old Vietnam combat veteran wouldn’t want one. He’s famous enough among his peers without the MSM’s ministrations, and their interleavened hymns to liberal politics and political correctness.

This 2007 biography, warts and all, is much better, anyhow, and worth the read just to find out how this fighter-pilot leader of the Vietnam War’s surviving "hard-ass resister" POWs–with the help of one honest journalist–helped defeat John Kerry for president. Of course the liberals, who can’t stand Day, like to lump him with Kerry’s Swift Boat critics. But Day’s group was altogether different: the 1973-returning Nam POWs, who consider Kerry not merely a phony hero, as the Swifties do, but a traitor who made their captive lives worse after his 1971 congressional testimony slandering all Vietnam combat veterans as murderers.

But there’s lots more to the Heartland, Iowa-raised Day in Robert Corum’s fine book, including his service in World War II and his years of flying before his 1966 shootdown over North Vietnam, and, of course, his command of the famous Misty FACs. You’ll also see why Day and John McCain are very close despite differences on some issues–and why you’ll undoubtedly see Day campaigning for Mac.

Operation Smile

Cindy McCain and daughter Meghan recently traveled to Nha Trang, Viet Nam on behalf of a charity Mrs. McCain supports, Operation Smile, which offers free plastic surgery to children born with cleft lips and palates–routine deformities worldwide commonly found about once in every hundred births. OS surgeons out of Austin do their volunteer work in Central America. I can’t figure out why there’s no permalink to the McCain photo tour, but hunt (if you have to) for the June 19, 2008 post.

Swiftboating Baby Barry

Baby Barry will not be Swiftboated, the Dem daily trumpets this morning, because he will fight back. As if the Dem’s ersatz war hero John Kerry didn’t try to outargue his Vietnam veteran attackers. He may have slacked off a bit since he had the MSM in the tank for him. They were refusing to take seriously the blasts from his detractors, who were almost his entire old chain of command in the war. But that fact alone, plus their ability to circulate on the Internet their story and attack ads which the old media had rejected, proved to be enough. Kerry, meanwhile, still refuses to release his service records. Some hero. This time the ersatz racial healer likewise has a daisy chain of ignominy to hang around his neck, from his loudmouth racist pastor of twenty years to his crooked housing financier and his unrepentent terrorist buddies, to mention just three. Nevermind his stated aims to ban handguns, etc. So fire all the torpedoes you like, Dems, the swift boats are coming to get you. Again.

Why Mac missed Woodstock

McCainWithSquadron.jpg

"Visiting in Inez, Kentucky, Senator [and presumptive Republican nominee for president] John McCain [lower right] was asked…why he missed the Woodstock ‘musical and pharmacalogical’ event in 1969.  The Senator, in his sometimes humorous and understated way, said, ‘I was tied up at the time.’"

MACV advisors KIA

Usually I reserve Memorial Day for remembrance of the seven classmates and cadre of OC504-68 who perished in Viet Nam. (Eleven others have since died of various causes at home, including AIDS.) But this year I also want to nod to the one hundred twenty-six MACV advisors who died in pursuit of counterinsurgency (the strategy being pursued in Iraq and Afghanistan), at least according to the Virtual Wall, which may not be complete as to MACV. And, especially, MAJ Roger Lee Graham, of my own Advisory Team 15.

UPDATE: I got an email, apparently from Major Graham’s sister, wanting any details I had about him. I have none other than what’s at the link. I never met him. He apparently was on Team 15 before I arrived in Viet Nam.

Surviving a tornado

Tom Higdon, an old Army buddy in Newtonia, MO, finally checks in with our email group to say that his family survived the tornadoes that killed twenty-one people in Southwest Missouri and Oklahoma on the night of May 10:

"WE are okay for the most part. Lost a garage, but the house pulled through. Newtonia is a war zone for sure. No injuries, but unbelievable destruction all over….No phone service since last Saturday until today…The tornado destroyed about 15 homes in the other end of town and damaged all others. We were very lucky on this one. We lost about 15 trees and everything not tied down in the yard. Yard and field are a mess." 

As always in these kinds of natural disasters, if you want to help, you should donate to the Red Cross (Missouri address here) or the Salvation Army nearest you. 

Vietnam Inc.

Phillip Jones Griffiths, the Welsh photographer/author of Vietnam Inc.–an amazingly one-sided harangue on the Americans and Vietnamese unfortunate enough to have come under his lens–has died. He was 72. I have an old review copy of the 1971 book, which I acquired somewhere. It’s the sort of thing Noam Chomsky would love. Did love, in fact, because as the BBC says, it "became crucial in challenging attitudes to the war" No kidding. It’s also a good lesson in how photos can be made to seem more (or less) than they really are–for instance by the act of moving a headless doll into the foreground for enhanced pathos. The camera does lie. Even without photoshopping. Jones Griffiths proved it.