By Jim Garamone
American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON, May 28, 2012 – President
Barack Obama today called the treatment Vietnam War veterans received after
they returned home “a national shame” and asked that Americans use the 50th
anniversary of the war to set the record straight.
Obama spoke at the Vietnam Veterans
Memorial wall on the National Mall. The black granite is incised with the names
of 58,282 service members killed in the conflict.
“It’s here we feel the depth of your
sacrifice,” the president said. “And here we see a piece of our larger American
story.”
That American story is the generational
pursuit of “a more perfect union,” Obama said. Each generation has a role to
play in that effort – to overcome a painful past, to right a historic wrong, he
said.
“One of the most painful chapters in our
history was Vietnam – most particularly, how we treated our troops who served
there,” Obama said. “You were often blamed for a war you didn’t start, when you
should have been commended for serving your country with valor. You were
sometimes blamed for misdeeds of a few, when the honorable service of the many
should have been praised. You came home and sometimes were denigrated, when you
should have been celebrated.”
The president called the treatment a
national shame and a disgrace that should never have happened. “That’s why,
here today, we resolve that it will not happen again,” he said.
A central part of the 50th anniversary
of the Vietnam War will be “to tell your story as it should have been told all
along,” Obama said. “It’s another chance to set the record straight. That’s one
more way we keep perfecting our union – setting the record straight. And it
starts today.”
History will honor the service of the
Vietnam generation. Their stories will join those of veterans going back to the
founding of the republic, the president said.
“Let us tell the story of a generation
of service members – every color, every creed, rich, poor, officer and enlisted
– who served with just as much patriotism and honor as any before you,” he
said.
Combat in Vietnam was brutal: Battles in
Hue and on Hamburger Hill and the A Shau Valley sparked heroism that often went
unremarked in a nation bitterly divided by the war. And American POWs “wrote
one of the most extraordinary stories of bravery and integrity in the annals of
military history,” Obama said.
“As a nation, we’ve long celebrated the
courage of our forces at Normandy and Iwo Jima, the Pusan Perimeter and
Heartbreak Ridge,” the president said. “So let us also speak of your courage --
at Hue and Khe Sanh, at Tan Son Nhut and Saigon, from Hamburger Hill to Rolling
Thunder. All too often it’s forgotten that you, our troops in Vietnam, won
every major battle you fought in.”
And with the war over, the Vietnam vets
continued to serve. “So let us also tell a story of a generation that came
home, and how – even though some Americans turned their back on you – you never
turned your back on America,” he said. “You became leaders and public servants,
from town halls to Capitol Hill – lifting up our communities, our states, our
nation.”
And they learned from the mistakes of
the past. Those who stayed in uniform used their experience to rebuild the U.S.
military “into the finest force that the world has ever known,” Obama said.
The Vietnam generation looked after each
other, Obama said, by pushing the bureaucracy to provide the benefits they
earned and speaking up for more research money.
“Just as important, you didn’t just take
care of your own, you cared for those that followed,” he continued. “You’ve
made it your mission to make sure today’s troops get the respect and support
that all too often you did not receive.”
Vietnam vets were the moving force
behind the Post-9/11 GI Bill that is helping hundreds of thousands of today’s
veterans go to college and pursue their dreams, Obama said.
“Because you didn’t let us forget, at
our airports, our returning troops get off the airplane and you are there to
shake their hands,” he said. “Because of you, across America, communities have
welcomed home our forces from Iraq. And when our troops return from
Afghanistan, America will give this entire 9/11 generation the welcome home they
deserve.”
This is the legacy of Vietnam, Obama
said -- the story of a generation that did its job.
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