American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON – The Defense
Department’s most senior leaders today honored Vietnam War veterans, including
their own friends and mentors, in a commemoration at the Vietnam Veterans
Memorial wall here they said was long overdue.
Defense Secretary Leon E. Panetta, Army
Gen. Martin E. Dempsey, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and actor
Tom Selleck all mentioned friends and mentors whose names are among the 58,282
etched into the black granite panels. They joined President Barack Obama in a
ceremony marking the beginning of the 50th anniversary of the war.
The Vietnam War ended in April 1975 when
North Vietnamese troops took the South Vietnamese capital of Saigon. While the
end date is a certainty, it is a mirror of the war and the divisions it caused
that Americans still disagree on when U.S. involvement in the country began.
American advisors were dying with their
South Vietnamese soldiers in the mid-1950s. But historians – and the Defense
Department – are commemorating the 50th anniversary of U.S. involvement in
Vietnam now.
“At this hour, and at this hallowed
memorial, we mark the 50th anniversary of the Vietnam War – a war that occupies
a central place in the American story,” Panetta said. “Millions of Americans
were sent across the Pacific to a little known place to fight in the service of
the country they loved.”
Participating in the service was
especially moving to Panetta, he said, because he went through ROTC and served
in the Army with some of those killed in Vietnam. “No memorial better reflects
the pain of the sacrifices that were made (than this one),” he said.
Millions of American served in Vietnam
and, at one point, well over 500,000 U.S. service members were deployed there.
They returned, Panetta said, to a country that “failed to fully acknowledge
their service, their sacrifice and failed to give them the honor they so justly
deserved.”
The Vietnam generation “is graying now,”
Panetta said. But it is not too late for the commemoration of Vietnam to right
the wrongs of the past, he said.
The secretary spoke of his recent
participation in a ceremony presenting the Medal of Honor to the widow of Army
Spec. 4 Les Sabo. Sabo, a member of the famed 101st Airborne Division, died
saving his platoon in 1970. The award recommendation was lost for years before
another Screaming Eagle found it and revived the process.
“The story of Les, in many ways, is the
story of the Vietnam War: We forgot and now we finally remember,” Panetta said.
Dempsey noted that some people called
the war – and the wall – a scar. “But history’s temperance allows us to see
success where some only saw failure, to see hope where some only saw loss, and
to see valor where some simply refused to look,” he said.
The war’s 50th anniversary gives
Americans the opportunity to look, the chairman said.
Dempsey recalled being a 16-year-old in
upstate New York and watching Army Capt. John Graham come back from the war,
motivating him to want to be a soldier himself. “I remember the day in 1971
when Captain John Graham was buried at West Point,” Dempsey said. “He died
during his second tour advising the South Vietnamese Army. His son is now on
West Point’s faculty.”
The chairman also spoke of Army Warrant
Officer Roy Thomas, a gunship pilot with the 25th Infantry Division. “He died
in battle when his son was four months old,” the chairman said. “His son is an
Air Force officer on my staff.”
Those men are just two examples that
echo thousands more who share a martial bond with their forbearers, Dempsey
said.
“Whether they served in Vietnam or Iraq
or Afghanistan, whether they returned home or we still await their homecoming,
there is no difference in their courage and sense of duty,” he said. “There is
no difference when it comes to fear and suffering, on the front line and on the
home front. There is no difference in the love and longing of their families.
“And, there is no difference in the
wounds that remain both seen and unseen.”
Their example calls for Americans to resolve
to “never again allow our veterans and their families to be left alone, left to
feel outside, left to fend for themselves,” Dempsey said. “And let us resolve
today to not just say ‘welcome home,’ but to truly welcome our troops home with
the respect and care that they and their families have earned.”
No comments:
Post a Comment