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Peace as Quiet Victory
admin
2020-03-27
发布年2020
语种英语
国家美国
领域资源环境
正文(英文)
Posted by I.J. Pérez, AMS Public Affairs in Initiatives
Mar 27, 2020
Army Maj. Zach Rolf poses for a photo with his father and Vietnam War veteran, Lynn Rolf
Army Maj. Zach Rolf poses for a photo with his father and Vietnam War veteran, Lynn Rolf, after the Vietnam Veterans Welcome Home Ceremony at Marshall Army Airfield on Fort Riley, Kan., Nov. 6, 2015. (U.S. Army photo)

Among frontline troops serving in Southeast Asia fifty years ago, peace was a distant thought. They were too busy fighting while diplomats assembled in Paris. U.S. forces were pushing hard against the Vietcong and North Vietnamese Army in provinces along the A Shau Valley, into Cambodia and Laos. The number killed in action reached beyond 6,000 in 1970. War haunts this generation of aging veterans.

The fortunate who survived faced an altered landscape back home. Peace with honor was tough to find. Warriors struggled in an impatient civilian world repulsed by televised graphic images of combat’s grit, sweat and visceral cruelty. Photographs of stoic GIs patrolling villages and lifeless, muddy boots lifted onto helicopters, could not offset victories won in 1945.

America’s service members undeservedly bore our collective angst. The military became a convenient target. Whether volunteer or draftee, few received public waves. They endured rigors of battle and faced ostracism in return. The repercussions of their war was more antipathy and dissention, than gratitude for service and valor.

Army Vietnam veteran Bill Mercurio pets one of the caisson platoon horses from the 3rd U.S. Infantry Regiment
Army Vietnam veteran Bill Mercurio pets one of the caisson platoon horses from the 3rd U.S. Infantry Regiment, known as The Old Guard, during the Trail to Zero ride at Joint Base Myer-Henderson Hall, Va., Sept. 7, 2019. The event sheds light on the problem of veteran suicide. (Department of Defense photo)

Decades later, there is need for continued understanding of men and women scarred by flashbacks and firefights never forgotten. You may have passed them numerous times and not noticed. Vietnam veterans can be opaque and keep to themselves.

As years drift by, newer conflicts take the spotlight and headlines. But our narrative and attitude appear to change. So has our conscience. We reconcile with those still reeling from time spent in rain, heat and humidity of highlands, jungle trails and deltas. By presidential proclamation since March 29, 2017, National Vietnam War Veterans Day is an official holiday in the United States. Welcome Home, long overdue, fits comfortably in our vocabulary.

As they close ranks in remembrance of fallen brothers and sisters, and others whose voices still echo, we reflect solemnly on the sacrifice those veterans and their families endured. May inner peace reflect quiet victory at last.

Christopher Smallwood cries at the Vietnam Veterans Memorial
Christopher Smallwood cries at the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington, D.C., Nov. 11, 2010. His father's name, Eugene F. Smallwood, is etched into the memorial. He died in service in Vietnam, Sept. 8, 1969. (Department of Defense photo)
Category/Topic: Initiatives

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Marc Bernard
Mar 30, 2020

I want to personally thank Ignacio Pe'rez for writing this article to recognize the Vietnam Veterans! He is to be commended for keeping Vietnam Veterans on the leading edge of ALL the employees working with USDA. I salute him for his endeavors reminding the folks how these Veterans were totally neglected when they returned to their families! Thank you Ignacio...Keep em coming!

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来源平台United States Department of Agriculture
文献类型新闻
条目标识符http://119.78.100.173/C666/handle/2XK7JSWQ/270944
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