Letters In Support Of Vietnam Full Disclosure
This year marks the 50th anniversary of the landing of U.S. ground troops in Da Nang, Vietnam. Many consider this to be the beginning of the American War in Vietnam. To mark the fiftieth anniversary of the war the Pentagon is undertaking a ten-year, $65-million campaign to rewrite and whitewash the history of the war in Southeast Asia.
In response, Veterans for Peace has announced the Vietnam War Full Disclosure project to offer a more truthful history of the war. As part of the project, Veterans for Peace is asking all who were affected, directly or indirectly, by the war to write letters addressed to “The Wall” (the Vietnam War Memorial) describing their experiences and sharing their grief over its devastating consequences. The project welcomes letters from both soldiers and civilians.
Letters can be emailed, but snail mail letters in hand-addressed envelopes are encouraged. The letters will be gathered and placed at the Vietnam War Memorial on Memorial Day 2015.
For more information, go to www.vietnamfulldisclosure.org.
To send a letter by email: vncom50@gmail.com.
To send in a hand written envelope: Full Disclosure; Veterans for Peace; 409 Ferguson Rd.; Chapel Hill, NC 27516 by May 1, 2015.
HERE ARE SOME LETTERS WE HAVE RECEIVED SO FAR
TO THOSE WHO CALL FOR FULL DISCLOSURE FROM
THE VIETNAM MEMORIAL WALL
Louis J. Geneseo
Captain
DET A-414 (MOC HOA), A CO, 5TH SF GROUP, USARV
Army of the United States
Harrison, Maine
September 18, 1936 to July 24, 1969
Panel W20, Line 39
DET A-414 (MOC HOA), A CO, 5TH SF GROUP, USARV
Army of the United States
Harrison, Maine
September 18, 1936 to July 24, 1969
Panel W20, Line 39
by
Jerry Genesio
Nothing can be said about the Vietnam War
that will ever fill the empty holes left in the chests of those you
left behind, regardless of their race, color, nationality or religion.
The war you fought was motivated by greed, obsessive power, false
premises, lies, ideological arrogance, religious intolerance and
self-serving propaganda. It was not worth even one of your lives, let
alone the tens of thousands of other American, Korean, Australian, New
Zealand, Thai and Laotian Hmong lives, or the millions of Vietnamese
lives that were mercilessly wasted, the countless limbs torn from
bodies, the eyes permanently closed to the light of the world, the
sanity lost forever, and the tangled, knotted and garbled genetic
instructions of generations of living organisms exposed to Agent Orange
and similar poisons provided by Dow, Monsanto, Bayer and other
corporations whose stockholders profited from the carnage.
The war mongers are now busily engaged in
revising the history of our war in Vietnam, but there was absolutely
nothing gained by this obscenity short of financial profits and
electoral votes. You were all expendable, and they offered your lives
without shame or remorse as others similarly motivated have done since
the dawn of human reason and will go on doing if most good people
continue to do nothing to stop them. Your parents did nothing to stop
them. But can you imagine the magnitude of the rebellion if the
government had taken their televisions instead of their children?
I personally knew only one of you. He was
my brother. And the hole that is left in the middle of my chest can
never be filled. Yet, we who were left behind are the lucky ones. You
lost your lives. Time and every meaningful event that your family has
shared since your death was taken from you. Financial profits and
electoral votes were far more important than the lives you could have
helped to create, cure or save; the amazing inventions you might have
patented; the books, poems or music you might have written; the
buildings or bridges you might have designed or built; the young minds
you would have helped to shape as a role model, parent, or teacher; the
pride in and pleasure of contributing in so many ways to your family,
friends, community, society, profession or team.
I’m sorry I did not raise my voice in
protest sooner, and I’m sorry that when I finally did it was not as loud
as it could and should have been. You all did what is considered the
honorable thing to do. I understand, for I also served, though the price
I paid was insignificant compared to yours. Now it is for those of us
who were spared to persuade the corporate stockholders and politicians
that they too must do what is considered honorable or be held
accountable. That is the least we can do to hopefully one day be able to
attribute some measure of meaning to your sacrifice.
You died to protect your country, though
it has never been established that your country was at risk. You died
for your constitution, though as a member of the military you were
denied many of its rights. You died for the principles of democracy,
though the United States opposed elections in Vietnam when it was
learned that Ho Chi Minh would easily win. You died for personal and
cultural values commonly held by the working and fighting class, though
they are values seldom found in the circles of the ruling class. You
died for me, though every god in the heavens knows I wanted you all to
come home alive and in one piece. But you died nevertheless. And I’m
sorry. I will never forget you. And I will do everything in my power to
remind those who would revise history of the shockingly horrible toll
the Vietnam War took on those who had nothing to gain and everything to
lose. I will do everything in my power to prevent your names from
disappearing beneath the surface of the black granite that will forever
silently hold the truth of your collective sacrifice.
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