Pacific Free Press was launched in March 2007 by Dutch-Canadian Richard
Kastelein of V.O.F. Expathos, in the Netherlands along with Chris Cook- CFUV radio journalist and Editor in Chief of Pacific Free Press. Cook is based in , Victoria, British Columbia.
The site is a sister to Atlantic Free Press and Brick Ogden an American Expatriate in Amsterdam has been a key supporter of this project.
The mission of Pacific Free Press is simple: to dig out nuggets of truth from
the slag-heap of lies, ignorance and witless diversion that has buried
public discourse today. Pacific Free Press provides a new venue for
disseminating hard news and insightful, fact-based analysis of the
harsh realities too often ignored or distorted by the mainstream press.
Stealing Veteran's Day from the Militarists
by Mickey Z. In a society where "support the troops" is little more than a euphemism for "support the policy," the concept of setting aside a day to celebrate military veterans has always been touchy for the Left. But here's an idea: what if we instead honored veterans of the anti-war movement?
I mean those-- from Eugene Debs and Helen Keller to the Berrigans, right up to Cindy Sheehan--who put their ass on the line to stop war...not wage it. To add a twist, how about military veterans who have since become veterans of the anti-war movement, e.g. Howard Zinn, Stan Goff, Ward Churchill, and Rosemarie Jackowski?
Even better, if you truly want to acknowledge bravery in the line of fire, why not find more heroes like Hugh Clowers Thompson, Jr.?
Thompson arrived in Vietnam on December 27, 1967 and quickly
earned a reputation as "an exceptional (helicopter) pilot who took
danger in his stride." In their book, "Four Hours at My Lai," Michael
Bilton and Kevin Sim also describe Thompson as a "very moral man. He
was absolutely strict about opening fire only on clearly defined
targets." On the morning of March 16, 1968, Thompson's sense of virtue
would be put to the test.
Flying in his H-23 observation
chopper, the 25-year-old Thompson used green smoke to mark wounded
people on the ground in and around My Lai. Upon returning a short while
later after refueling, he found that the wounded he saw earlier were
now dead. Thompson's gunner, Lawrence Colburn, averted his gaze from
the gruesome sight.
After bringing the chopper down to a
standstill hover, Thompson and his crew came upon a young woman they
had previously marked with smoke. As they watched, a U.S. soldier,
wearing captain's bars, "prodded her with his foot, and then killed
her."
Unbeknownst to Thompson at that point, more than 560
Vietnamese had already been slaughtered by Lt. William Calley's Charlie
Company. All Thompson knew for sure was that the U.S. troops he then
saw pursuing civilians had to be stopped.
Bravely, landing
his helicopter between the charging GIs and the fleeing villagers,
Thompson ordered Colburn to turn his machine gun on the American
soldiers if they tried to shoot the unarmed men, women, and children.
Thompson then stepped out of the chopper into the combat zone and
coaxed the frightened civilians from the bunker they were hiding in.
With tears streaming down his face, he evacuated them to safety.
Officially
termed an "incident" (as a opposed to a "massacre") My Lai has been
widely accepted as an aberration. While the record of U.S. war crimes
in Southeast Asia is far too lengthy to detail here, it's clear that
was not the case. In fact, on the very same day that Lt. Calley entered
into infamy (he later explained: "We weren't there to kill human
beings, really. We were there to kill ideology"), another company
entered My Khe, a sister subhamlet of My Lai. That visit was described
as such: "In this 'other massacre,' members of this separate company
piled up a body count of perhaps a hundred peasants-My Khe was smaller
than My Lai-'flattened the village' by dynamite and fire, and then
threw handfuls of straw on corpses. The next morning, this company
moved on down the Batangan Peninsula by the South China Sea, burning
every hamlet they came to, killing water buffalo, pigs, chickens,
ducks, and destroying crops. As one of the My Khe veterans said later,
'what we were doing was being done all over.' Said another: 'We were
out there having a good time. It was sort of like being in a shooting
gallery.'"
Colonel Oran Henderson, charged with covering-up
the My Lai killings, put it succinctly in 1971. "Every unit of brigade
size has its My Lai hidden someplace." But not every unit had a Hugh
Thompson.
This Veteran's Day, let's hear it for those brave souls who do the fighting...to end the fighting.
Excerpted
in part from Mickey Z.'s new book, "50 American Revolutions You're Not
Supposed to Know: Reclaiming American Patriotism" (Disinformation
Books).