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- Original file by zfeet -
- Resynced by Ornlu Wolfjarl -
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...you got through! Did you
pass Chee on the road?
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No. Where are the children?
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Kansas found a shelter for them.
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Get down, everybody!
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JOAN FUREY: My older sister and I one time
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uh, we're watching the movie
So Proudly We Ha il on TV.
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Listen, we still have a few minutes!
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FUREY: That's a story about the nurses
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who were trapped on Bataan and
Corregidor during World War II.
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(explosion)
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It was the first, probably,
time in my life that...
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I, uh...
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I realized that women could do
brave and courageous things.
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It wasn't just something men could do.
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(helicopter blades whirring)
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♪
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NARRATOR: Second Lieutenant Joan Furey
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had wanted to be a nurse ever
since she was a small child.
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She attended nursing school,
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and, when a high school classmate
was killed during Tet,
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joined the Army to do what
she could for the wounded.
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Furey was assigned to the
71st Evacuation Hospital
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at Pleiku, in the heart
of the Central Highlands.
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Nothing had prepared her
for what she saw and did
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over the next 12 months.
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(indistinct chatter)
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(grunts)
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Wounded men were choppered in
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at all times of the day and night.
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So were Viet Cong and NVA soldiers,
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who sometimes spat at the medical personnel
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trying to save their limbs or lives.
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(explosions)
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Whenever the hospital
came under mortar fire,
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Furey stayed with the most
seriously wounded men
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in the ICU.
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(distant explosions)
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We had flak vests and helmets,
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and we crawled around on the floor.
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(explosion, clattering, men shouting)
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I mean, you really,
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you just could not leave them unattended.
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(explosion)
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We just kind of had to
swallow your own fear.
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NARRATOR: A triage officer
made the grim decisions
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as to who might be saved
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and those for whom there was no hope.
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FUREY: One of the things that
initially was so difficult
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was what we called "expected" patients.
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And these were patients
that would be brought in
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from the battlefield and it was determined
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they had no chance to survive.
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But they weren't dead yet.
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They brought in a...
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a young soldier who had a head injury,
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and they said, "He's expected."
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I kind of freaked out, uh,
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and I decided that, no, they were wrong,
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and I was gonna take care of this patient.
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I told the corpsman to get me blood.
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And he's saying, "Well, Lieutenant,
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the patient is expected."
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I said, "Get me blood."
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So, I take off the dressing, and...
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the whole back of his head had been gone.
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When that happened,
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all the blood I had been
giving him came out.
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A friend of mine who came over
just walked me out of there.
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And a few minutes later,
you walk right back in...
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...and you get back to doing it.
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(amplified heartbeat)
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("Dazed and Confused" by
Led Zeppelin playing)
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♪ Been dazed and confused
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♪ For so long, it's not true... ♪
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NARRATOR: Richard Nixon had
taken office as president
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in January of 1969,
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pledged to restore law and order
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and end the war with honor.
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(gunfire) Things were calmer at home,
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but in Vietnam, peace was no closer.
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("Dazed and Confused" continues)
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American soldiers still
died pursuing guerrillas
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who appeared and disappeared like phantoms.
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Americans still died capturing hills
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only to give them up and have
to take them back again.
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00:04:29,073 --> 00:04:33,240
Men and materiel were still
flowing into the south
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despite the controversial
bombing of Cambodia.
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Through it all, Hanoi remained immovable.
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The communists insisted
there could be no peace
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until the Saigon government was replaced
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and the United States
withdrew from Vietnam.
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Meanwhile, the American
public was losing patience.
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♪
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(men shouting)
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(gunfire fades)
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Privately, Nixon knew that
military victory was impossible,
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that things would have to be settled
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at the bargaining table in Paris.
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He had to find a way
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to extricate Americans from Vietnam
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without seeming to surrender.
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Nixon also believed
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his reputation as an
implacable anti-communist
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could work to his advantage with Hanoi.
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"We'll just slip the
word to them," he said,
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"you know, 'Nixon's
obsessed about communism.
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"'We can't restrain him when he's angry,
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00:05:39,575 --> 00:05:42,410
"and he has his hand on
the nuclear button, '
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"and Ho Chi Minh will
be in Paris in two days
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begging for peace."
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But Ho Chi Minh was old and ailing now.
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And Le Duan and the other men
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who had been calling the
shots in Hanoi for years
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had no intention of giving up their goal
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00:06:00,810 --> 00:06:04,477
of uniting their country
under communist control.
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("While My Guitar Gently
Weeps" by the Beatles playing)
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Richard Nixon, having promised
a swift end to the war,
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would, like all the presidents
who came before him,
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end up widening it.
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In the process, he would
re-ignite opposition to the war
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on American campuses
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that threatened to tear
the country apart again.
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♪ I look at you all
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♪ See the love there that's sleeping ♪
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(crowd clamoring)
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♪ While my guitar
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♪ Gently weeps
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♪ I look at the floor...
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00:06:45,112 --> 00:06:47,077
MERRILL McPEAK: The late '60s
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were a kind of confluence
of several rivulets.
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BEATLES: ♪ Still my guitar...
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McPEAK: There was the
antiwar movement itself...
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♪
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...the whole movement
towards racial equality,
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00:07:04,312 --> 00:07:06,778
the environment...
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00:07:06,879 --> 00:07:09,678
the role of women.
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00:07:09,778 --> 00:07:12,178
And the anthems for that counterculture
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were provided by the most
brilliant rock-and-roll music
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that you can imagine.
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BEATLES: ♪ And I notice...
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I don't know how we could
exist today as a country
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without that experience.
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With all of its warts and ups and downs,
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00:07:32,480 --> 00:07:36,146
that produced the America we have today,
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00:07:36,246 --> 00:07:37,813
and we are better for it.
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(gunfire) ♪ Surely be learning...
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McPEAK: And I felt that way in Vietnam.
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♪ Still my guitar...
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McPEAK: I turned the volume
up on all that stuff.
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That represented what I
was trying to defend.
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♪
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(gunfire, artillery fire, shouting)
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(explosion)
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♪ Oh, oh
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(fading): ♪ Ooh, ooh, oh, oh...
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HAL KUSHNER: I never prayed
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the whole time I was in the P.O.W. camp,
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but I had, like, a mantra.
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Every night when I went to sleep,
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after a certain point, I would say,
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"I'll be here when the morning comes."
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And I felt if I could
just live one more day,
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then I could live one more
day, and then one more day.
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NARRATOR: At the peace talks in Paris,
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the Nixon administration had
introduced a new demand...
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U.S. troops would not withdraw
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until all American prisoners had come home
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and Hanoi had provided a strict accounting
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of those missing in action.
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No one knew how many prisoners there were.
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Most were airmen held in or around Hanoi,
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00:09:03,916 --> 00:09:06,617
but a handful of others, like Hal Kushner,
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00:09:06,716 --> 00:09:10,149
were struggling to survive
in makeshift jungle camps
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in South Vietnam.
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Hanoi would not reveal the
names of the men they held,
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because they still insisted
they were not prisoners of war,
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but war criminals.
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00:09:22,950 --> 00:09:26,182
They subjected many to brutal torture,
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extracted "confessions,"
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and refused to permit inspections
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by the International Red Cross.
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The Johnson administration had
generally downplayed the issue,
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hoping quiet diplomacy
might bring the men home.
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The Nixon administration
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00:09:43,717 --> 00:09:46,518
launched a "go public" campaign instead,
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00:09:46,618 --> 00:09:49,217
meant to put the plight
of American prisoners
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00:09:49,317 --> 00:09:51,384
and those missing in action
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at the center of things.
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It also provided a rebuke
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to those in the antiwar movement
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who seemed more sympathetic
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00:10:00,118 --> 00:10:03,250
to North Vietnamese civilians
who had been bombed
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00:10:03,350 --> 00:10:05,018
than they were to U.S. airmen
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00:10:05,118 --> 00:10:08,650
who had been shot down doing that bombing.
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00:10:08,750 --> 00:10:13,251
Sybil Stockdale, whose husband,
Commander James Stockdale,
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00:10:13,351 --> 00:10:16,119
was the highest-ranking prisoner in Hanoi,
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00:10:16,218 --> 00:10:18,519
formed the National League of Families
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00:10:18,619 --> 00:10:22,019
of Prisoners and Missing in Southeast Asia,
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00:10:22,119 --> 00:10:24,751
and led delegations of wives to Paris
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to confront North Vietnamese negotiators.
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Five million Americans began
wearing tin or copper bracelets
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engraved with a missing man's name
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00:10:35,684 --> 00:10:38,085
and date of loss.
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00:10:38,184 --> 00:10:42,352
More than 50 million P.O.W./M.I.A.
bumper stickers
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00:10:42,453 --> 00:10:46,053
would be sold over the next four years.
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00:10:46,152 --> 00:10:48,486
Despite what their jailers had told them,
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the prisoners had not been
forgotten by their country.
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Eventually, one journalist wrote,
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many "people began to speak
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00:10:57,652 --> 00:11:01,719
"as though the North Vietnamese
had kidnapped 400 Americans
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00:11:01,819 --> 00:11:06,252
and the United States had gone
to war to retrieve them."
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00:11:06,352 --> 00:11:10,819
At the same time, the Saigon
government of Nguyen Van Thieu
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00:11:10,920 --> 00:11:14,219
was holding prisoners of its own.
215
00:11:14,319 --> 00:11:16,153
There would eventually be
216
00:11:16,253 --> 00:11:20,021
some 40,000 North Vietnamese
and Viet Cong soldiers
217
00:11:20,121 --> 00:11:22,054
in four crowded camps.
218
00:11:22,153 --> 00:11:26,087
Another 200,000 South Vietnamese civilians
219
00:11:26,186 --> 00:11:30,087
would also be held, many without trial.
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JAMES GILLAM: There are certain
rules to tunnel warfare.
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Don't turn on the light
222
00:12:59,356 --> 00:13:02,424
unless you're really, really,
really sure you're alone.
223
00:13:02,524 --> 00:13:06,124
Use your senses.
224
00:13:06,223 --> 00:13:09,323
Do your first killing
as quietly as you can.
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00:13:09,424 --> 00:13:11,490
That means don't shoot.
226
00:13:12,789 --> 00:13:15,557
I chased somebody into a tunnel,
227
00:13:15,656 --> 00:13:20,924
met them at a bend in the
corner, in the dark.
228
00:13:21,024 --> 00:13:22,524
I thought I was alone
229
00:13:22,624 --> 00:13:25,824
and then I smelled their breath.
230
00:13:25,925 --> 00:13:31,925
And we had a wrestling match in the dark.
231
00:13:32,025 --> 00:13:34,391
And I got the upper hand
232
00:13:34,491 --> 00:13:37,724
and crushed this person's trachea,
233
00:13:37,824 --> 00:13:40,458
held him down while he died...
234
00:13:42,091 --> 00:13:43,991
...and then got out.
235
00:13:46,724 --> 00:13:49,425
I beat and strangled someone to death
236
00:13:49,525 --> 00:13:51,324
in a tunnel
237
00:13:51,425 --> 00:13:53,391
in the dark.
238
00:13:53,491 --> 00:13:55,090
Um...
239
00:13:55,190 --> 00:13:57,626
But that wasn't the only casualty.
240
00:13:57,725 --> 00:14:02,059
The other casualty was the
civilized version of me.
241
00:14:10,892 --> 00:14:13,059
(gunfire)
242
00:14:18,892 --> 00:14:20,658
(gunfire continuing)
243
00:14:20,758 --> 00:14:22,492
(shouting)
244
00:14:22,592 --> 00:14:25,492
NARRATOR: April 1969
245
00:14:25,592 --> 00:14:28,559
marked the high point of
American military commitment
246
00:14:28,658 --> 00:14:30,092
to South Vietnam.
247
00:14:30,192 --> 00:14:37,560
543,482 men and women were now in country,
248
00:14:37,659 --> 00:14:41,692
and tens of thousands more were stationed
249
00:14:41,792 --> 00:14:44,726
at airbases and aboard
ships beyond its borders.
250
00:14:46,027 --> 00:14:50,692
40,794 had died.
251
00:14:50,792 --> 00:14:55,726
And more than $70 billion had been spent.
252
00:14:55,826 --> 00:14:59,326
(explosion in distance)
253
00:14:59,427 --> 00:15:01,826
That spring, a new battle
254
00:15:01,927 --> 00:15:04,028
caught the attention of
the American public,
255
00:15:04,128 --> 00:15:08,827
a struggle to take still
another numbered hill...
256
00:15:08,928 --> 00:15:12,561
Hill 937 on military maps.
257
00:15:12,660 --> 00:15:14,628
CHET HUNTLEY: For nine days,
258
00:15:14,727 --> 00:15:16,670
American and South Vietnamese
troops have been trying
259
00:15:16,694 --> 00:15:18,628
to take a mountain near the Laotian border,
260
00:15:18,727 --> 00:15:21,561
and ten times they have been thrown back.
261
00:15:21,660 --> 00:15:22,928
(booming, shouting)
262
00:15:25,828 --> 00:15:26,893
(gunfire)
263
00:15:36,961 --> 00:15:39,161
(shouting over radio)
264
00:15:46,062 --> 00:15:48,661
The casualties have been so high...
265
00:15:48,762 --> 00:15:52,028
50 Americans and 250 North
Vietnamese killed...
266
00:15:52,129 --> 00:15:54,762
that the mountain has come to
be known as "Hamburger Hill."
267
00:15:54,861 --> 00:15:58,495
Today, another 600 allied troops
were thrown into the battle.
268
00:15:58,594 --> 00:16:01,161
(helicopter blades whirring)
269
00:16:01,262 --> 00:16:03,629
(gunfire)
270
00:16:03,728 --> 00:16:06,429
(explosion, screaming)
271
00:16:10,295 --> 00:16:12,595
NARRATOR: A weary G.I. told a reporter
272
00:16:12,696 --> 00:16:14,795
that his battalion commander
273
00:16:14,895 --> 00:16:19,763
"won't stop until he kills
every damn one of us."
274
00:16:19,862 --> 00:16:21,162
(explosion, gunfire)
275
00:16:26,130 --> 00:16:28,395
After 11 days of fighting,
276
00:16:28,496 --> 00:16:31,196
the Battle for Hamburger Hill ended.
277
00:16:32,662 --> 00:16:35,362
56 Americans died.
278
00:16:35,462 --> 00:16:39,763
420 more were wounded.
279
00:16:39,862 --> 00:16:43,396
A week later, the Americans
abandoned the hill,
280
00:16:43,497 --> 00:16:46,396
just as they had abandoned
so many other hills
281
00:16:46,497 --> 00:16:51,030
they had taken at great cost
over the years in Vietnam.
282
00:16:53,163 --> 00:16:56,064
General, could you explain for
us again the strategy involved
283
00:16:56,163 --> 00:16:59,163
in the decision to withdraw American troops
284
00:16:59,264 --> 00:17:02,463
after they had taken Hill
937, or Hamburger Hill?
285
00:17:04,631 --> 00:17:08,530
No piece of ground, as such,
286
00:17:08,631 --> 00:17:11,030
is important to us.
287
00:17:11,131 --> 00:17:12,863
HUNTLEY: In the United States Senate,
288
00:17:12,963 --> 00:17:14,765
Senator Kennedy of Massachusetts delivered
289
00:17:14,864 --> 00:17:16,664
a brief speech criticizing what he called
290
00:17:16,765 --> 00:17:19,698
a "senseless and
irresponsible military pride
291
00:17:19,797 --> 00:17:22,198
"in which American men
are sent to their deaths
292
00:17:22,297 --> 00:17:25,031
in pointless battles like
this one for Hamburger Hill."
293
00:17:25,132 --> 00:17:27,231
Kennedy called upon President Nixon
294
00:17:27,332 --> 00:17:29,464
to issue new orders to
commanders in Vietnam
295
00:17:29,565 --> 00:17:31,097
to halt such actions
296
00:17:31,198 --> 00:17:32,998
and he charged that they contradict
297
00:17:33,097 --> 00:17:34,432
the president's stated intentions
298
00:17:34,531 --> 00:17:36,231
of seeking a negotiated peace.
299
00:17:39,065 --> 00:17:42,332
NARRATOR: There had been more
deadly weeks during the war,
300
00:17:42,432 --> 00:17:46,798
costlier battles, larger
numbers of casualties.
301
00:17:46,898 --> 00:17:53,098
But more and more Americans
seemed to have had enough.
302
00:17:53,199 --> 00:17:55,566
The following month, Li fe magazine
303
00:17:55,665 --> 00:17:57,699
published the names and photographs
304
00:17:57,798 --> 00:18:00,598
of all 242 Americans
305
00:18:00,699 --> 00:18:04,566
who had died in combat in just one week.
306
00:18:04,665 --> 00:18:08,499
For the first time, in a
national publication,
307
00:18:08,598 --> 00:18:12,465
casualty statistics came with human faces.
308
00:18:15,365 --> 00:18:18,098
The only way they could
measure success in Vietnam
309
00:18:18,199 --> 00:18:20,299
was, was was kill ratios...
310
00:18:20,399 --> 00:18:22,567
how many of them versus how many of us.
311
00:18:22,666 --> 00:18:24,834
Well, the only thing that's important
312
00:18:24,934 --> 00:18:27,233
to the American people is the "us."
313
00:18:27,334 --> 00:18:30,899
You know, if there's three
us dead, that's the number.
314
00:18:31,000 --> 00:18:34,134
Not 30, you know, Vietnamese dead.
315
00:18:34,233 --> 00:18:37,299
And, so, politically, an attrition strategy
316
00:18:37,399 --> 00:18:39,567
just can't last very long.
317
00:18:39,666 --> 00:18:41,099
We don't care what the ratio is,
318
00:18:41,200 --> 00:18:42,442
we just want the absolute number
319
00:18:42,466 --> 00:18:45,099
of how many American kids died.
320
00:18:45,200 --> 00:18:48,466
NARRATOR: A Gallup poll now
found that most Americans
321
00:18:48,567 --> 00:18:52,335
believed Vietnam had been a mistake.
322
00:18:52,435 --> 00:18:55,400
Richard Nixon knew he needed
to signal to the public
323
00:18:55,501 --> 00:18:57,734
that an end was in sight.
324
00:18:59,600 --> 00:19:03,068
The National Security
Council had warned Nixon
325
00:19:03,167 --> 00:19:05,201
that the Joint Chiefs of Staff,
326
00:19:05,300 --> 00:19:07,967
the secretaries of state and defense,
327
00:19:08,068 --> 00:19:13,001
the C.I.A., and the U.S. Embassy in Saigon
328
00:19:13,100 --> 00:19:16,167
all privately agreed that without U.S.
combat troops,
329
00:19:16,268 --> 00:19:17,867
the South Vietnamese
330
00:19:17,967 --> 00:19:22,534
"cannot now, or in the foreseeable future,
331
00:19:22,635 --> 00:19:24,735
"stand up to both Viet Cong
332
00:19:24,836 --> 00:19:28,468
and sizeable North Vietnamese forces."
333
00:19:28,569 --> 00:19:30,502
Nonetheless,
334
00:19:30,601 --> 00:19:33,668
Secretary of Defense Melvin Laird said,
335
00:19:33,769 --> 00:19:37,202
the war was now to be "Vietnamized."
336
00:19:37,301 --> 00:19:40,936
Saigon's troops would gradually
take over responsibility
337
00:19:41,035 --> 00:19:43,569
for engaging the enemy.
338
00:19:43,668 --> 00:19:46,769
It would be General Creighton Abrams' task
339
00:19:46,868 --> 00:19:49,136
to ready the ARVN for that role,
340
00:19:49,235 --> 00:19:51,936
and to make sure that American casualties
341
00:19:52,035 --> 00:19:54,168
were held down in the interim.
342
00:19:54,269 --> 00:19:57,637
("The Letter" by The Box
Tops starts playing)
343
00:19:57,736 --> 00:20:02,937
Meanwhile, American troops
would start to go home.
344
00:20:03,036 --> 00:20:05,869
♪ Gimme a ticket for an aeroplane ♪
345
00:20:05,969 --> 00:20:08,236
♪ Ain't got time to take a fast train ♪
346
00:20:08,337 --> 00:20:09,977
DUONG VAN MAI ELLIOTT: When Nixon came in
347
00:20:10,003 --> 00:20:13,837
and he announced the phase withdrawal,
348
00:20:13,937 --> 00:20:16,369
turning over the fighting
to the Vietnamese,
349
00:20:16,469 --> 00:20:18,902
which was something the
French had tried before.
350
00:20:19,003 --> 00:20:20,770
They call itjaunissement...
351
00:20:20,869 --> 00:20:24,137
yellowizing the war.
352
00:20:24,236 --> 00:20:30,271
We knew that the Vietnamese Army
was not up to fighting this war.
353
00:20:30,370 --> 00:20:32,838
If they couldn't do it with the Americans,
354
00:20:32,938 --> 00:20:36,004
how were they going to do
it without the Americans?
355
00:20:36,103 --> 00:20:39,170
♪ Lonely days are gone
356
00:20:39,271 --> 00:20:42,103
NARRATOR: Although Washington
planned to vastly increase
357
00:20:42,204 --> 00:20:45,071
military support of the
South Vietnamese Army,
358
00:20:45,170 --> 00:20:48,370
General Abrams knew that
Vietnamization alone
359
00:20:48,470 --> 00:20:50,771
could never defeat the enemy.
360
00:20:50,870 --> 00:20:53,303
But he had his orders.
361
00:20:53,403 --> 00:20:56,071
McPEAK: The reason I was ordered home early
362
00:20:56,170 --> 00:20:58,004
was because Nixon... President Nixon
363
00:20:58,103 --> 00:21:01,471
announced the policy of Vietnamization.
364
00:21:01,572 --> 00:21:05,671
Now, Vietnamization was a lie,
365
00:21:05,772 --> 00:21:09,639
but it had an element of truth in it.
366
00:21:09,738 --> 00:21:12,005
We were leaving, okay?
367
00:21:12,104 --> 00:21:14,005
And that sealed the South's fate.
368
00:21:14,104 --> 00:21:15,505
I knew it.
369
00:21:15,604 --> 00:21:18,538
And I think anybody who was conscious
370
00:21:18,639 --> 00:21:20,371
and could see what was going on
371
00:21:20,471 --> 00:21:21,671
knew it.
372
00:21:21,772 --> 00:21:24,272
NARRATOR: Nixon then flew to Midway Island
373
00:21:24,371 --> 00:21:27,939
to meet with South Vietnamese
President Nguyen Van Thieu.
374
00:21:28,038 --> 00:21:31,139
He had not dared invite Thieu to Washington
375
00:21:31,238 --> 00:21:34,140
for fear of sparking mass demonstrations.
376
00:21:34,239 --> 00:21:35,605
♪ Lonely days are gone
377
00:21:35,706 --> 00:21:37,805
President Thieu informed me
378
00:21:37,905 --> 00:21:41,706
that the progress of the training program
379
00:21:41,805 --> 00:21:43,405
and the equipping program
380
00:21:43,506 --> 00:21:45,706
for South Vietnamese forces
381
00:21:45,805 --> 00:21:50,840
had been so successful, uh,
that he could now recommend
382
00:21:50,940 --> 00:21:54,239
that the United States begin to replace
383
00:21:54,340 --> 00:21:58,640
U.S. combat forces with Vietnamese forces.
384
00:21:58,739 --> 00:22:01,372
(speaking Vietnamese)
385
00:22:03,940 --> 00:22:06,340
NARRATOR: Thieu had said no such thing
386
00:22:06,441 --> 00:22:08,973
but felt he had to go along.
387
00:22:09,074 --> 00:22:11,774
"There is nothing I can
do," he told a friend.
388
00:22:11,873 --> 00:22:14,274
"Just as we could do nothing about it
389
00:22:14,373 --> 00:22:16,973
"when Eisenhower, Kennedy, and Johnson
390
00:22:17,074 --> 00:22:20,040
decided to come in."
391
00:22:20,141 --> 00:22:23,106
"We were clearly on the
way out of Vietnam,"
392
00:22:23,207 --> 00:22:26,341
National Security Advisor
Henry Kissinger remembered,
393
00:22:26,441 --> 00:22:29,173
"by negotiation if possible,
394
00:22:29,274 --> 00:22:33,074
by unilateral withdrawal if necessary."
395
00:22:33,173 --> 00:22:36,106
He and the president were redefining
396
00:22:36,207 --> 00:22:39,075
what victory would look like.
397
00:22:39,174 --> 00:22:42,107
TOM VALLELY: Nixon and Kissinger...
398
00:22:42,208 --> 00:22:44,174
They...
399
00:22:44,275 --> 00:22:46,541
Their job is to clean up.
400
00:22:46,642 --> 00:22:48,241
They're, they're...
401
00:22:48,342 --> 00:22:50,275
The war's over, okay?
402
00:22:50,374 --> 00:22:53,842
When Nixon and Kissinger,
when they come, they're...
403
00:22:53,942 --> 00:22:55,307
they're not gonna win the war.
404
00:22:55,407 --> 00:22:57,741
("Taps" playing) So they develop
405
00:22:57,842 --> 00:22:59,508
a secret strategy.
406
00:22:59,607 --> 00:23:03,541
They surrender without
saying they surrendered.
407
00:23:06,008 --> 00:23:09,208
This is not a bad strategy,
this is the only strategy.
408
00:23:09,307 --> 00:23:13,143
("Circle for a Landing" by Three
Dog Night starts playing)
409
00:23:13,242 --> 00:23:15,709
(indistinct announcement over P.A.)
410
00:23:17,542 --> 00:23:21,076
NARRATOR: As American soldiers
began leaving South Vietnam,
411
00:23:21,175 --> 00:23:24,375
American weaponry and materiel poured in.
412
00:23:25,943 --> 00:23:28,042
♪ Circle for a landing
413
00:23:28,143 --> 00:23:30,343
♪ Get your feet back on the ground ♪
414
00:23:30,443 --> 00:23:33,443
More than a million M16 rifles,
415
00:23:33,542 --> 00:23:39,475
40,000 grenade launchers,
thousands of wheeled vehicles...
416
00:23:39,576 --> 00:23:41,209
so many, one congressman complained,
417
00:23:41,308 --> 00:23:44,409
that it seemed as if the
United States taxpayer
418
00:23:44,510 --> 00:23:48,710
was being asked to "put every
South Vietnamese soldier
419
00:23:48,809 --> 00:23:51,210
behind the wheel."
420
00:23:51,309 --> 00:23:53,476
NEIL SHEEHAN: It didn't
make any sense, of course,
421
00:23:53,577 --> 00:23:56,476
because we tried that in 1962 and '63.
422
00:23:56,577 --> 00:23:58,376
The people hadn't changed.
423
00:23:58,476 --> 00:24:00,176
They were just giving 'em more furniture.
424
00:24:02,376 --> 00:24:05,376
NGUYEN THOI BUNG:
425
00:24:23,244 --> 00:24:27,078
NARRATOR: South Vietnamese
armed forces were expanded
426
00:24:27,177 --> 00:24:31,445
from 850,000 men to over a million.
427
00:24:31,544 --> 00:24:33,477
But nothing could alter the fact
428
00:24:33,578 --> 00:24:35,044
that rampant corruption
429
00:24:35,145 --> 00:24:38,578
continually eroded their effectiveness.
430
00:24:38,677 --> 00:24:40,778
DON WEBSTER: The way it works is this:
431
00:24:40,877 --> 00:24:43,244
a man makes a deal with
his commanding officer,
432
00:24:43,345 --> 00:24:45,977
perhaps to pay the officer his full salary.
433
00:24:46,078 --> 00:24:49,044
In exchange, you never
have to show up for duty,
434
00:24:49,145 --> 00:24:51,611
except perhaps once a week at the ceremony.
435
00:24:51,712 --> 00:24:53,745
So while you're theoretically in the Army,
436
00:24:53,846 --> 00:24:56,245
you can hold a full-time civilian job.
437
00:24:57,512 --> 00:25:00,446
LAM QUANG THI:
438
00:25:13,279 --> 00:25:16,346
(gunfire)
439
00:25:16,446 --> 00:25:20,045
NARRATOR: Many ARVN units did fight well.
440
00:25:23,112 --> 00:25:25,147
They had borne the brunt of the fighting
441
00:25:25,246 --> 00:25:26,679
during the Tet Offensive,
442
00:25:26,780 --> 00:25:29,612
and, by the middle of 1969,
443
00:25:29,713 --> 00:25:34,312
90,000 of them had been killed in combat.
444
00:25:34,412 --> 00:25:39,812
Their bravery was often
overlooked by Americans.
445
00:25:39,912 --> 00:25:43,479
VALLELY: We were disdainful of them.
446
00:25:43,580 --> 00:25:46,546
We overstated their incompetence
447
00:25:46,647 --> 00:25:50,379
because we wanted to
overstate our importance.
448
00:25:50,479 --> 00:25:52,312
(booming in distance)
449
00:25:52,412 --> 00:25:55,547
(men shouting, gunfire)
450
00:26:02,413 --> 00:26:07,581
Part of going to war in
Vietnam I, I enjoyed.
451
00:26:07,680 --> 00:26:12,448
If you survive it, it's,
it's quite thrilling.
452
00:26:12,547 --> 00:26:15,514
It's the history of the world.
453
00:26:16,980 --> 00:26:18,380
It's hard to survive.
454
00:26:18,480 --> 00:26:20,413
I mean, in, where I was,
survival is an issue.
455
00:26:20,514 --> 00:26:24,613
I would have loved to have
been in the National Guard.
456
00:26:26,813 --> 00:26:28,114
Period.
457
00:26:28,215 --> 00:26:29,724
("Bad Moon Rising" by Creedence
Clearwater Revival playing)
458
00:26:29,748 --> 00:26:32,548
I knew the core issue
459
00:26:32,649 --> 00:26:35,481
of what was acceptable
in war and what wasn't.
460
00:26:35,582 --> 00:26:36,881
I knew that.
461
00:26:36,981 --> 00:26:39,748
I didn't need to get that
from the Marine Corps.
462
00:26:39,849 --> 00:26:43,215
I got that from Sunday school.
463
00:26:43,314 --> 00:26:46,215
NARRATOR: Thomas John
Vallely was born in Boston,
464
00:26:46,314 --> 00:26:47,681
the son of a judge,
465
00:26:47,782 --> 00:26:50,649
and brought up in the suburb of Newton.
466
00:26:50,748 --> 00:26:56,149
Undiagnosed dyslexia kept him
from doing well in school.
467
00:26:56,248 --> 00:26:58,282
By 1969,
468
00:26:58,381 --> 00:27:02,049
Vallely was a radio operator
in the Marine Corps,
469
00:27:02,150 --> 00:27:05,182
part of a massive
search-and-destroy mission
470
00:27:05,283 --> 00:27:09,450
in Quang Nam Province in the
northern part of South Vietnam.
471
00:27:09,549 --> 00:27:11,150
(men shouting, gunfire)
472
00:27:11,249 --> 00:27:12,882
On August 13,
473
00:27:12,982 --> 00:27:14,749
his company was ambushed
474
00:27:14,850 --> 00:27:18,350
and came under heavy machine gun fire.
475
00:27:18,450 --> 00:27:19,850
(gunfire)
476
00:27:25,749 --> 00:27:29,882
VALLELY: It was a "grab 'em by
the belt" type of situation.
477
00:27:29,982 --> 00:27:32,883
And we lost a lot of people.
478
00:27:34,416 --> 00:27:35,750
So did they.
479
00:27:37,584 --> 00:27:39,651
Lot of people laying around.
480
00:27:39,750 --> 00:27:42,183
(gunfire, explosion)
481
00:27:42,284 --> 00:27:44,550
NARRATOR: Vallely radioed
for reinforcements.
482
00:27:44,651 --> 00:27:48,183
Then he picked up a rifle and ammunition
483
00:27:48,284 --> 00:27:50,683
from a wounded Marine,
484
00:27:50,784 --> 00:27:52,816
and, firing as he went, took up a position
485
00:27:52,916 --> 00:27:55,750
just ten feet from an enemy machine gun.
486
00:27:55,851 --> 00:28:01,351
He hurled a smoke grenade
to mark their position.
487
00:28:01,451 --> 00:28:05,352
And then, as enemy fire
swept back and forth
488
00:28:05,452 --> 00:28:07,617
across the field,
489
00:28:07,718 --> 00:28:09,285
he moved from Marine to Marine,
490
00:28:09,384 --> 00:28:11,018
pointing out targets among the trees
491
00:28:11,117 --> 00:28:13,884
and encouraging his comrades.
492
00:28:19,884 --> 00:28:22,785
For his conspicuous gallantry,
493
00:28:22,884 --> 00:28:26,652
Tom Vallely was awarded the Silver Star.
494
00:28:26,751 --> 00:28:28,984
VALLELY: You want to
tell your grandchildren
495
00:28:29,085 --> 00:28:32,218
it has a lot to do with courage,
496
00:28:32,317 --> 00:28:35,817
uh, but it, it's really quite reactive.
497
00:28:35,917 --> 00:28:38,219
It's survival.
498
00:28:38,318 --> 00:28:40,418
Either you're...
499
00:28:40,519 --> 00:28:43,019
It's, it's...
500
00:28:43,118 --> 00:28:45,453
There's no choice here.
501
00:28:45,552 --> 00:28:49,586
You react or you're not
gonna have grandchildren.
502
00:28:52,418 --> 00:28:53,728
COUNTRY JOE McDONALD: Give me an "F"!
503
00:28:53,752 --> 00:28:54,653
CROWD: "F"!
504
00:28:54,752 --> 00:28:55,985
McDONALD: Give me a "U"!
505
00:28:56,086 --> 00:28:56,985
CROWD: "U"!
506
00:28:57,086 --> 00:28:58,185
McDONALD: Give me a "C"!
507
00:28:58,286 --> 00:29:00,153
"C"! Give me a "K"!
508
00:29:00,252 --> 00:29:01,153
"K"!
509
00:29:01,252 --> 00:29:02,485
What's that spell?!
510
00:29:02,586 --> 00:29:04,485
NARRATOR: Two days after the battle
511
00:29:04,586 --> 00:29:06,752
in which Tom Vallely distinguished himself,
512
00:29:06,853 --> 00:29:08,552
and while half a million Americans
513
00:29:08,653 --> 00:29:10,954
were still in Vietnam,
514
00:29:11,053 --> 00:29:12,954
half a million Americans gathered
515
00:29:13,053 --> 00:29:15,919
on a dairy farm in upstate New York
516
00:29:16,020 --> 00:29:19,220
for a music festival: Woodstock.
517
00:29:19,319 --> 00:29:21,654
♪ Way down yonder in Vietnam
518
00:29:21,753 --> 00:29:23,854
♪ Put down your books
and pick up a gun ♪
519
00:29:23,954 --> 00:29:25,196
♪ We're gonna have a whole lot of fun ♪
520
00:29:25,220 --> 00:29:29,720
♪ And it's one, two, three,
what are we fighting for? ♪
521
00:29:29,819 --> 00:29:32,154
♪ Don't ask me, I don't give a damn ♪
522
00:29:32,253 --> 00:29:34,619
♪ The next stop is Vietnam
523
00:29:34,720 --> 00:29:36,886
♪ And it's five, six, seven
524
00:29:36,986 --> 00:29:39,119
♪ Open up the pearly gates
525
00:29:39,220 --> 00:29:42,287
♪ Well, there ain't no time
to wonder why, whoopee ♪
526
00:29:42,386 --> 00:29:44,387
♪ We're all gonna die
527
00:29:44,487 --> 00:29:47,620
("Soul Sacrifice" by Santana playing)
528
00:30:10,155 --> 00:30:11,487
♪
529
00:30:37,456 --> 00:30:38,688
(song ends, crowd cheering)
530
00:30:38,789 --> 00:30:43,022
MAN: Ladies and gentlemen, Santana!
531
00:30:43,121 --> 00:30:45,856
You've been told once,
you've been told twice.
532
00:30:45,956 --> 00:30:47,522
That's all... spread it out!
533
00:30:47,621 --> 00:30:49,523
("Time of the Season"
by the Zombies playing)
534
00:30:49,622 --> 00:30:50,922
♪ What's your name?
535
00:30:51,023 --> 00:30:53,090
GILLAM: This guy from Arkansas
536
00:30:53,189 --> 00:30:57,489
told me he would not
carry the radio for me.
537
00:30:57,590 --> 00:31:02,556
He said, "I will not follow you
like Cheetah follows Tarzan.
538
00:31:02,657 --> 00:31:04,790
It's not gonna happen, Sarge."
539
00:31:04,889 --> 00:31:09,622
And I thought, "Oh, this is
gonna be a really long year."
540
00:31:09,723 --> 00:31:11,790
I've got people down there sweeping,
541
00:31:11,889 --> 00:31:13,189
so get 'em down there.
542
00:31:13,290 --> 00:31:14,957
♪ It's the time
543
00:31:15,056 --> 00:31:18,223
GILLAM: He evolved a little bit.
544
00:31:18,322 --> 00:31:21,024
You know, he, he kind of got the idea
545
00:31:21,123 --> 00:31:24,190
that the enemy's bullets are colorblind.
546
00:31:24,291 --> 00:31:27,591
They would shoot anybody, not just me.
547
00:31:30,158 --> 00:31:33,890
NARRATOR: African-Americans had
served in every American war
548
00:31:33,990 --> 00:31:36,390
since the revolution.
549
00:31:36,490 --> 00:31:38,858
In the early years of the Vietnam War,
550
00:31:38,958 --> 00:31:41,323
they suffered a disproportionate number
551
00:31:41,423 --> 00:31:43,323
of combat deaths.
552
00:31:43,423 --> 00:31:46,591
When civil rights leaders complained,
553
00:31:46,690 --> 00:31:49,524
the Defense Department
made a concerted effort
554
00:31:49,623 --> 00:31:51,690
to right that balance,
555
00:31:51,791 --> 00:31:55,292
and by 1969, it had succeeded.
556
00:31:55,391 --> 00:31:57,292
But behind the lines,
557
00:31:57,391 --> 00:32:01,025
African-American soldiers were
still treated differently
558
00:32:01,124 --> 00:32:03,391
from their white counterparts.
559
00:32:03,491 --> 00:32:05,391
("Respect" by Otis Redding playing)
560
00:32:14,225 --> 00:32:16,467
SOLDIER: And here there's all,
all these beast motherfuckers
561
00:32:16,491 --> 00:32:17,701
walking around here with their hair
562
00:32:17,725 --> 00:32:20,191
looking like goddamn girls,
563
00:32:20,292 --> 00:32:21,524
and we can't wear our hair
564
00:32:21,625 --> 00:32:23,259
motherfucking three inches long.
565
00:32:23,359 --> 00:32:25,626
The motherfucking
regulation is three inches.
566
00:32:25,726 --> 00:32:28,392
And most of the brothers can wear a afro,
567
00:32:28,492 --> 00:32:30,325
the hair gonna be motherfucking two inches.
568
00:32:30,425 --> 00:32:32,059
And why we got to get our hair cut?
569
00:32:32,159 --> 00:32:33,559
That's what I want to know.
570
00:32:33,659 --> 00:32:35,559
♪ Yeah, man, ooh, yeah
571
00:32:35,659 --> 00:32:38,525
WAYNE SMITH: Vietnam was a microcosm.
572
00:32:38,626 --> 00:32:40,392
Everything that was happening in America
573
00:32:40,492 --> 00:32:42,260
was happening in Vietnam, really,
574
00:32:42,360 --> 00:32:44,425
in one way, shape, or form.
575
00:32:44,525 --> 00:32:46,360
In the rear,
576
00:32:46,460 --> 00:32:49,960
there were Confederate flags flying.
577
00:32:50,059 --> 00:32:53,126
SOLDIER 2: I mean, of all
things to have over here, man,
578
00:32:53,226 --> 00:32:55,460
why a Confederate flag?
579
00:32:55,559 --> 00:32:57,726
As a matter of fact, I
think there ought to be
580
00:32:57,825 --> 00:33:01,794
some goddamn law to fucking
outlaw them goddamn flags, man.
581
00:33:01,893 --> 00:33:06,026
The fucking Confederacy is gone, man.
582
00:33:06,127 --> 00:33:08,526
SMITH: When one is in an environment
583
00:33:08,627 --> 00:33:13,261
where everyone has a gun, automatic weapon,
584
00:33:13,361 --> 00:33:16,060
I'll be goddamned if someone's
gonna call me a nigger
585
00:33:16,160 --> 00:33:18,127
or give me a bullshit order.
586
00:33:18,227 --> 00:33:22,127
I mean, that was the attitude,
to risk my life for what?
587
00:33:22,227 --> 00:33:23,660
REDDING: ♪ Sweeter than honey
588
00:33:23,761 --> 00:33:26,660
ROGER HARRIS: There was all
kind of craziness happening,
589
00:33:26,761 --> 00:33:29,993
because white people were still
calling, you know, us niggers,
590
00:33:30,093 --> 00:33:32,994
and then there were some black
people calling us Uncle Toms.
591
00:33:33,094 --> 00:33:34,527
There were the antiwar folks
592
00:33:34,628 --> 00:33:36,862
who were calling us baby killers, say...
593
00:33:36,962 --> 00:33:38,938
You know, you can say what
you want, but you can say it
594
00:33:38,962 --> 00:33:40,671
from over there because
if you get in range,
595
00:33:40,695 --> 00:33:44,494
you're gonna get serious
damage done to you.
596
00:33:44,594 --> 00:33:46,161
Say what you want from a distance,
597
00:33:46,262 --> 00:33:48,403
but if you get close to me, I'm
gonna rip your throat out.
598
00:33:48,427 --> 00:33:49,994
You know?
599
00:33:50,094 --> 00:33:53,661
JUAN RAMIREZ: But when we
walked outside that wire,
600
00:33:53,762 --> 00:33:56,695
we went out into the bush, we were tight.
601
00:33:56,795 --> 00:33:59,027
Even with our differences.
602
00:33:59,128 --> 00:34:01,195
Maybe we had threatened each other,
603
00:34:01,295 --> 00:34:04,363
we'd had a fight back in the base,
604
00:34:04,463 --> 00:34:07,129
but when we were out there, you know,
605
00:34:07,229 --> 00:34:10,796
we, we were a, a fighting unit.
606
00:34:12,263 --> 00:34:16,162
And it's almost like an identity crisis.
607
00:34:16,263 --> 00:34:20,263
I was born here, and my
parents were born here.
608
00:34:20,363 --> 00:34:22,595
I felt, in a way,
609
00:34:22,696 --> 00:34:25,763
more American than Mexican.
610
00:34:25,863 --> 00:34:27,428
MAN: ...hand and repeat after me...
611
00:34:27,528 --> 00:34:31,828
NARRATOR: The U.S. military did
not officially count Hispanics,
612
00:34:31,928 --> 00:34:36,563
but an estimated 170,000
would serve in Vietnam
613
00:34:36,663 --> 00:34:40,697
and more than 3,000 lost their lives.
614
00:34:40,797 --> 00:34:43,364
Like their fathers and grandfathers,
615
00:34:43,464 --> 00:34:47,496
many saw military service
as both a patriotic duty
616
00:34:47,596 --> 00:34:50,364
and an opportunity to
advance their standing
617
00:34:50,464 --> 00:34:52,964
in the United States.
618
00:34:53,063 --> 00:34:56,163
But as casualties mounted
619
00:34:56,264 --> 00:34:58,297
and with a burgeoning
Chicano identity movement
620
00:34:58,396 --> 00:35:00,829
among farm workers and college students,
621
00:35:00,929 --> 00:35:05,596
anti-war sentiment in
Hispanic communities grew.
622
00:35:05,697 --> 00:35:09,330
We're protesting against the
discriminatory draft laws
623
00:35:09,430 --> 00:35:11,497
that give deferments
624
00:35:11,597 --> 00:35:14,830
to all the Anglo middle-class
people of this country
625
00:35:14,930 --> 00:35:17,930
and make the heaviest burdens of the war
626
00:35:18,030 --> 00:35:21,097
fall on the poor, fall on theMexicano.
627
00:35:21,198 --> 00:35:23,465
RAMIREZ: I had learned
628
00:35:23,564 --> 00:35:27,465
about my sister and my
mother's antiwar activities
629
00:35:27,564 --> 00:35:29,465
while I was still in Vietnam.
630
00:35:29,564 --> 00:35:31,731
In fact, my sister wrote and said,
631
00:35:31,830 --> 00:35:34,265
"I hope you're okay with this."
632
00:35:34,365 --> 00:35:35,997
And she was honest with me.
633
00:35:36,097 --> 00:35:37,997
She told me what they were doing.
634
00:35:38,097 --> 00:35:41,232
She says, "I'm doing it for you,
'cause I want you to come home."
635
00:35:41,331 --> 00:35:43,165
(indistinct chanting)
636
00:35:48,398 --> 00:35:49,466
(TV clicks on)
637
00:35:49,565 --> 00:35:52,799
In line with our policy of taking a stand
638
00:35:52,898 --> 00:35:54,632
on the pressing issues of the day,
639
00:35:54,732 --> 00:35:57,632
we now present another in our
continuing series of editorials.
640
00:35:57,732 --> 00:35:58,598
The subject:
641
00:35:58,699 --> 00:36:01,598
are our draft laws unfair?
642
00:36:01,699 --> 00:36:03,766
Here again, speaking for our program,
643
00:36:03,866 --> 00:36:06,431
is Mr. Patrick Paulsen, vice president.
644
00:36:06,531 --> 00:36:08,165
(applause)
645
00:36:08,266 --> 00:36:10,565
Now, we don't claim the draft is perfect,
646
00:36:10,665 --> 00:36:12,732
and we do have a constructive proposal
647
00:36:12,831 --> 00:36:14,932
for a workable alternative.
648
00:36:15,032 --> 00:36:17,066
We propose a draft lottery
649
00:36:17,166 --> 00:36:19,532
in which the names of all eligible males
650
00:36:19,633 --> 00:36:21,200
will be put into a hat,
651
00:36:21,300 --> 00:36:24,867
and the men will be drafted
according to their head sizes.
652
00:36:24,967 --> 00:36:28,499
The tiny heads will go
into the military service
653
00:36:28,599 --> 00:36:32,932
and the fat heads will go into government.
654
00:36:33,032 --> 00:36:34,932
SOLDIER (on radio):
Roger, 3-1 is on his way.
655
00:36:35,032 --> 00:36:37,666
SOLDIER (over radio): 5-8-1.
656
00:36:37,767 --> 00:36:41,800
VINCENT OKAMOTO: A 19-year-old
high school dropout says,
657
00:36:41,899 --> 00:36:44,666
"Why are we here?"
658
00:36:44,767 --> 00:36:46,533
And the, the standard response,
659
00:36:46,634 --> 00:36:48,567
at least on an official level, was,
660
00:36:48,667 --> 00:36:51,533
to prevent international communism
661
00:36:51,634 --> 00:36:54,533
from conquering the world.
662
00:36:54,634 --> 00:36:58,433
The men say, "Hey, that, that's bullshit."
663
00:37:00,734 --> 00:37:02,268
So the other reason put forth,
664
00:37:02,368 --> 00:37:04,400
at least in the latter days of the war,
665
00:37:04,500 --> 00:37:06,868
was to maintain America's
international credibility
666
00:37:06,968 --> 00:37:09,533
with our allies, and our enemies.
667
00:37:09,634 --> 00:37:13,768
Uh, no 19, 20-year-old kid
wants to die to maintain
668
00:37:13,868 --> 00:37:17,067
the credibility of Lyndon
Johnson or Richard Nixon.
669
00:37:17,167 --> 00:37:20,568
And so, within a relatively short time,
670
00:37:20,668 --> 00:37:22,802
the guys were saying,
671
00:37:22,901 --> 00:37:25,668
"Look, we shouldn't be here, but we are.
672
00:37:25,769 --> 00:37:27,668
"So my only function in life
673
00:37:27,769 --> 00:37:30,934
"is to try and keep you alive, buddy,
674
00:37:31,034 --> 00:37:34,101
"and to keep my precious
ass from being killed.
675
00:37:34,202 --> 00:37:37,869
And then to go home and forget about this."
676
00:37:40,302 --> 00:37:42,901
SOLDIER: The grunts, uh,
677
00:37:43,001 --> 00:37:46,135
don't always do what the
captain says, you know.
678
00:37:46,235 --> 00:37:49,702
We got, uh... the captain will stay back,
679
00:37:49,802 --> 00:37:51,703
he'll tell the platoon or something
680
00:37:51,803 --> 00:37:54,502
to go out so many hundred meters, you know.
681
00:37:54,602 --> 00:37:56,335
We don't do it.
682
00:37:56,435 --> 00:37:58,236
We only go as far as we get out of sight,
683
00:37:58,335 --> 00:37:59,770
sit down, and come back in.
684
00:37:59,870 --> 00:38:01,779
JOHN PILGER: What happens
to an unpopular officer
685
00:38:01,803 --> 00:38:03,835
out in the field?
686
00:38:03,935 --> 00:38:06,870
Mostly unpopular officers,
from what I've heard,
687
00:38:06,970 --> 00:38:09,602
if they, if they mess
with a grunt too much,
688
00:38:09,703 --> 00:38:12,569
they get shot at.
689
00:38:12,669 --> 00:38:16,069
NARRATOR: It had always been a part of war.
690
00:38:16,169 --> 00:38:19,203
In Vietnam, it was called "fragging,"
691
00:38:19,303 --> 00:38:23,535
after the fragmentation
grenades most often used.
692
00:38:23,636 --> 00:38:28,704
Beginning in the summer of 1969,
693
00:38:28,804 --> 00:38:32,670
as thousands of American
troops began going home,
694
00:38:32,771 --> 00:38:36,336
the number of reports of the
murder or attempted murder
695
00:38:36,436 --> 00:38:38,471
by enlisted men of their superiors
696
00:38:38,570 --> 00:38:41,603
increased alarmingly.
697
00:38:41,704 --> 00:38:46,737
The Army would investigate
nearly 800 cases.
698
00:38:46,836 --> 00:38:48,804
Most took place far from the fighting,
699
00:38:48,903 --> 00:38:51,603
usually the violent outcome
of arguments over race
700
00:38:51,704 --> 00:38:53,871
or women or drugs
701
00:38:53,971 --> 00:38:56,972
rather than the war itself.
702
00:38:57,071 --> 00:38:59,638
But there were exceptions.
703
00:38:59,738 --> 00:39:01,705
OKAMOTO: It's a totally different army
704
00:39:01,805 --> 00:39:05,638
than what we sent to Vietnam in 1965.
705
00:39:05,738 --> 00:39:09,772
And the new lieutenant comes in,
all gung-ho for body count.
706
00:39:09,872 --> 00:39:13,404
He wants contact, he goes crazy, and says,
707
00:39:13,504 --> 00:39:15,805
"I want a volunteer for this."
708
00:39:15,904 --> 00:39:18,504
(rapid gunfire)
709
00:39:18,604 --> 00:39:24,337
That new gung-ho officer was
a clear and present danger
710
00:39:24,437 --> 00:39:28,138
to the life and limb of the grunts.
711
00:39:28,238 --> 00:39:30,806
They'd have subtle hints,
like a little note saying,
712
00:39:30,905 --> 00:39:33,538
"We're gonna kill your ass
if you keep this up."
713
00:39:33,639 --> 00:39:36,605
Or instead of a fragmentation grenade,
714
00:39:36,706 --> 00:39:40,438
they may throw a smoke grenade
in an officer's hooch or bunker.
715
00:39:40,538 --> 00:39:44,505
And if they didn't correct
their behavior and outlook,
716
00:39:44,605 --> 00:39:48,005
yeah, they would frag them.
717
00:39:48,105 --> 00:39:51,773
I saw it happen in a very, uh, strange way.
718
00:39:51,873 --> 00:39:59,873
We were in a base and a Marine
started running towards me.
719
00:40:00,072 --> 00:40:02,140
I didn't realize that what he...
720
00:40:02,240 --> 00:40:04,374
what he was doing back
in the dark over there
721
00:40:04,474 --> 00:40:06,640
was actually throw a hand grenade
722
00:40:06,740 --> 00:40:10,207
underneath the space that
is underneath a hooch.
723
00:40:10,307 --> 00:40:11,606
(explosion)
724
00:40:11,707 --> 00:40:14,073
And when it exploded, I went, "Holy shit."
725
00:40:14,173 --> 00:40:17,506
And I knew right away what he had done.
726
00:40:17,606 --> 00:40:20,874
And he was an African-American Marine.
727
00:40:20,974 --> 00:40:22,874
African-Americans were treated
728
00:40:22,974 --> 00:40:25,339
with disrespect by their superiors.
729
00:40:25,439 --> 00:40:29,274
This was not uncommon.
730
00:40:29,374 --> 00:40:34,275
So in a ways, as bad as this sounds,
731
00:40:34,375 --> 00:40:36,775
maybe that guy had it coming to him.
732
00:40:36,875 --> 00:40:38,340
I don't know.
733
00:40:41,574 --> 00:40:44,340
In Paris, the 29th session
of the so-called peace talks
734
00:40:44,440 --> 00:40:45,340
took place.
735
00:40:45,440 --> 00:40:47,241
There was no progress.
736
00:40:47,340 --> 00:40:50,674
In Vietnam, it was announced
that 139 Americans
737
00:40:50,775 --> 00:40:52,275
lost their lives last week,
738
00:40:52,375 --> 00:40:54,975
bringing total deaths in our longest war...
739
00:40:55,074 --> 00:40:57,975
NARRATOR: The four-way peace talks in Paris
740
00:40:58,074 --> 00:41:00,641
continued to go nowhere.
741
00:41:00,741 --> 00:41:04,375
To break the logjam, Nixon
directed Henry Kissinger
742
00:41:04,475 --> 00:41:07,142
to begin secret talks,
743
00:41:07,242 --> 00:41:09,876
the first in a series
of clandestine meetings
744
00:41:09,976 --> 00:41:12,742
with the North Vietnamese alone.
745
00:41:12,841 --> 00:41:15,142
They first met in an apartment building
746
00:41:15,242 --> 00:41:17,276
on the Rue de Rivoli.
747
00:41:17,376 --> 00:41:20,309
The Viet Cong and the South
Vietnamese government
748
00:41:20,408 --> 00:41:23,108
were not included.
749
00:41:23,209 --> 00:41:26,142
Hanoi remained immovable.
750
00:41:26,242 --> 00:41:30,008
They would not even admit they
had troops in South Vietnam,
751
00:41:30,108 --> 00:41:34,008
let alone discuss withdrawing them.
752
00:41:34,108 --> 00:41:35,876
Now Kissinger warned
753
00:41:35,976 --> 00:41:39,175
that if there were no change in
their position by November 1,
754
00:41:39,276 --> 00:41:41,210
the one-year anniversary
755
00:41:41,310 --> 00:41:43,643
of President Johnson's bombing halt,
756
00:41:43,743 --> 00:41:45,377
President Nixon
757
00:41:45,477 --> 00:41:48,377
would "consider steps
of grave consequence."
758
00:42:00,977 --> 00:42:04,477
September 2, 1969,
759
00:42:04,576 --> 00:42:06,810
was the 24th anniversary
760
00:42:06,909 --> 00:42:10,710
of Ho Chi Minh's declaration
of Vietnamese independence
761
00:42:10,810 --> 00:42:13,244
in Hanoi's Ba Dinh Square.
762
00:42:15,244 --> 00:42:20,043
At 9:45 that morning, Ho died.
763
00:42:20,144 --> 00:42:24,778
He was said to be 79, but
like so much about him,
764
00:42:24,878 --> 00:42:30,177
the precise date of his birth
was shrouded in mystery.
765
00:42:30,278 --> 00:42:32,878
He had been "Uncle Ho" for decades,
766
00:42:32,978 --> 00:42:36,278
the living embodiment of the
struggle against the Japanese,
767
00:42:36,378 --> 00:42:39,278
the French, the Saigon government,
768
00:42:39,378 --> 00:42:42,211
and then the Americans.
769
00:42:42,311 --> 00:42:44,244
♪
770
00:42:44,343 --> 00:42:47,111
In a speech to the National Assembly,
771
00:42:47,212 --> 00:42:51,645
Le Duan, the First Secretary
of the Communist Party,
772
00:42:51,745 --> 00:42:53,044
who had been the architect
773
00:42:53,145 --> 00:42:55,712
of North Vietnamese military policy
774
00:42:55,812 --> 00:42:57,078
for a decade,
775
00:42:57,178 --> 00:43:01,245
promised to fulfill what
he said was Ho's vision:
776
00:43:01,344 --> 00:43:07,212
the reunification of the
country on communist terms.
777
00:43:08,779 --> 00:43:11,444
Nothing had changed.
778
00:43:11,544 --> 00:43:13,387
ROBERT FRISHMAN: Hanoi has
given the false impression
779
00:43:13,411 --> 00:43:16,712
that all is wine and roses and it isn't so.
780
00:43:16,812 --> 00:43:19,179
NARRATOR: The same day Ho Chi Minh died,
781
00:43:19,280 --> 00:43:21,845
an unusual press conference was held
782
00:43:21,945 --> 00:43:24,845
at the Bethesda Naval Medical Center.
783
00:43:24,945 --> 00:43:27,612
Two ailing prisoners of war,
784
00:43:27,713 --> 00:43:31,179
Robert Frishman and Douglas Hegdahl,
785
00:43:31,280 --> 00:43:33,545
who had recently been released
by the North Vietnamese,
786
00:43:33,646 --> 00:43:35,780
spoke in public for the first time
787
00:43:35,880 --> 00:43:37,679
about the severe treatment
788
00:43:37,780 --> 00:43:41,146
they and their fellow
prisoners had received.
789
00:43:41,246 --> 00:43:43,713
I don't think solitary confinement,
790
00:43:43,813 --> 00:43:47,512
forced statements, living
in a cage for three years,
791
00:43:47,612 --> 00:43:51,446
being put in straps, not being
allowed to sleep or eat,
792
00:43:51,546 --> 00:43:55,013
removal of fingernails,
being hung from a ceiling,
793
00:43:55,113 --> 00:43:57,381
having an infected arm
which was almost lost,
794
00:43:57,481 --> 00:43:59,714
not receiving medical care,
795
00:43:59,814 --> 00:44:02,046
being dragged along the
ground with a broken leg,
796
00:44:02,147 --> 00:44:05,080
or not allowing exchange of
mail to prisoners of war
797
00:44:05,180 --> 00:44:06,513
are humane.
798
00:44:06,613 --> 00:44:10,814
NARRATOR: Douglas Hegdahl
was quiet, self-effacing,
799
00:44:10,913 --> 00:44:13,546
and so apparently clueless,
800
00:44:13,647 --> 00:44:15,714
his North Vietnamese guards
801
00:44:15,814 --> 00:44:18,546
had called him the "stupid one."
802
00:44:18,647 --> 00:44:20,113
But once released,
803
00:44:20,214 --> 00:44:23,382
he was a gold mine of information.
804
00:44:23,482 --> 00:44:27,382
He had memorized the names
of more than 200 prisoners
805
00:44:27,482 --> 00:44:31,114
to the tune of "Old McDonald Had a Farm."
806
00:44:31,215 --> 00:44:34,047
Thanks to him, scores of American families
807
00:44:34,148 --> 00:44:36,248
would find out for the first time
808
00:44:36,347 --> 00:44:41,514
that their sons and husbands
and fathers were still alive.
809
00:44:41,614 --> 00:44:45,047
Within a few days of the press conference,
810
00:44:45,148 --> 00:44:48,914
Hanoi's treatment of the
prisoners began to improve.
811
00:44:49,014 --> 00:44:52,882
"A lot less brutality,"
one captive remembered,
812
00:44:52,982 --> 00:44:55,515
"and larger bowls of rice."
813
00:44:58,115 --> 00:45:00,283
(explosion)
814
00:45:00,383 --> 00:45:01,948
(men yelling)
815
00:45:02,048 --> 00:45:03,948
(rapid gunfire)
816
00:45:10,316 --> 00:45:11,725
DEVALLIER: All right, who's wounded?
817
00:45:11,749 --> 00:45:14,448
All right, give me some cover!
818
00:45:14,548 --> 00:45:17,216
RICHARD THRELKELD: Devallier is
the lone medic in the platoon.
819
00:45:17,316 --> 00:45:18,483
He's scared,
820
00:45:18,582 --> 00:45:20,915
scared from the moment he
gets out of the chopper
821
00:45:21,015 --> 00:45:22,448
to the moment it picks him up.
822
00:45:22,548 --> 00:45:25,448
Scared that someday he's
going to get killed
823
00:45:25,548 --> 00:45:28,516
picking up a wounded buddy.
824
00:45:28,616 --> 00:45:30,516
(rapid gunfire, men yelling)
825
00:45:32,250 --> 00:45:34,449
WAYNE SMITH: I was the replacement
826
00:45:34,549 --> 00:45:38,150
for a medic who had been killed.
827
00:45:38,250 --> 00:45:41,817
First time out, we were
assigned to do a patrol.
828
00:45:41,916 --> 00:45:45,250
MAN: Remember to stop the bleeding!
829
00:45:45,349 --> 00:45:50,949
SMITH: And we stumbled
actually into an ambush.
830
00:45:51,049 --> 00:45:53,683
(explosion)
831
00:45:53,784 --> 00:45:57,150
And it was incredibly terrifying.
832
00:45:57,250 --> 00:45:59,549
Guys were screaming and yelling.
833
00:45:59,650 --> 00:46:01,950
There was shooting everywhere.
834
00:46:02,050 --> 00:46:06,017
That first firefight, I
remember praying to God,
835
00:46:06,117 --> 00:46:12,251
if He got me through this that
I would make a difference.
836
00:46:12,350 --> 00:46:16,718
That I really would make a difference.
837
00:46:16,818 --> 00:46:19,885
MEDIC: Sometimes their lives
depend on you, I mean;
838
00:46:19,985 --> 00:46:22,917
you hold it in your hands, as a medic.
839
00:46:23,017 --> 00:46:25,885
It's just hard to say but right then,
840
00:46:25,985 --> 00:46:28,218
you hold life and death in your hand.
841
00:46:28,318 --> 00:46:32,017
NARRATOR: In Vietnam,
medics and navy corpsmen
842
00:46:32,117 --> 00:46:34,551
accompanied infantry units on patrols,
843
00:46:34,652 --> 00:46:36,518
search and destroy missions,
844
00:46:36,618 --> 00:46:40,118
and large-scale combat operations.
845
00:46:40,219 --> 00:46:43,986
Nearly 2,000 would lose their lives.
846
00:46:44,085 --> 00:46:45,918
(helicopter whirring)
847
00:46:47,685 --> 00:46:50,252
Unlike in previous wars,
848
00:46:50,351 --> 00:46:53,652
many medics in Vietnam
chose to carry weapons,
849
00:46:53,752 --> 00:46:56,152
and when the shooting started,
850
00:46:56,252 --> 00:46:58,951
were willing to use them
to protect themselves
851
00:46:59,051 --> 00:47:01,986
and their wounded comrades.
852
00:47:02,085 --> 00:47:05,487
SMITH: I carried an M16,
853
00:47:05,586 --> 00:47:08,619
but I did not know if I could kill.
854
00:47:08,720 --> 00:47:12,320
Part of being a medic was to save lives.
855
00:47:12,419 --> 00:47:18,720
I wondered, if the scenario
presented itself, would I?
856
00:47:18,820 --> 00:47:23,452
I did participate in shooting at the enemy.
857
00:47:23,552 --> 00:47:25,987
We killed a lot of people.
858
00:47:26,086 --> 00:47:29,352
I feel that responsibility.
859
00:47:30,787 --> 00:47:33,653
I feel blood on my hands.
860
00:47:39,020 --> 00:47:43,620
When you kill someone for your country,
861
00:47:43,721 --> 00:47:46,587
all things change.
862
00:47:48,221 --> 00:47:49,587
("Come Ye" by Nina Simone playing)
863
00:47:49,687 --> 00:47:52,120
♪ Come ye
864
00:47:54,520 --> 00:47:57,920
♪ Ye who would have peace...
865
00:47:58,020 --> 00:47:59,460
SAM BROWN: We believed it's possible
866
00:47:59,520 --> 00:48:01,654
to create a substantial
majority in this country
867
00:48:01,754 --> 00:48:03,353
for withdrawal from Vietnam,
868
00:48:03,453 --> 00:48:05,221
and that's what we're
about in the long run.
869
00:48:05,321 --> 00:48:07,187
In November, we'll be back again,
870
00:48:07,288 --> 00:48:08,788
in December, we'll be back again.
871
00:48:08,888 --> 00:48:10,755
And we intend to build the movement,
872
00:48:10,854 --> 00:48:13,155
which will make it imperative
873
00:48:13,255 --> 00:48:15,521
that the United States
withdraw from Vietnam.
874
00:48:15,621 --> 00:48:18,489
REPORTER: The organizers of
the moratorium do not aim
875
00:48:18,588 --> 00:48:21,222
at confrontation or
scuffles with the police.
876
00:48:21,322 --> 00:48:24,289
Instead, they want to involve
the most people possible
877
00:48:24,389 --> 00:48:27,322
in some gesture of protest, however modest,
878
00:48:27,421 --> 00:48:30,954
so as to show the administration
that a large bloc of Americans
879
00:48:31,054 --> 00:48:33,554
care not about winning or losing the war,
880
00:48:33,655 --> 00:48:35,854
but only about ending it.
881
00:48:35,954 --> 00:48:39,188
♪ Ye who have no fear
882
00:48:39,289 --> 00:48:40,454
Thank you.
883
00:48:40,554 --> 00:48:42,789
NIXON: Now, I understand
884
00:48:42,889 --> 00:48:45,089
that there has been and continues to be
885
00:48:45,189 --> 00:48:48,022
opposition to the war in
Vietnam on the campuses
886
00:48:48,122 --> 00:48:51,022
and also in the nation.
887
00:48:51,122 --> 00:48:52,156
Uh, we expect it.
888
00:48:52,256 --> 00:48:54,156
However, under no circumstances
889
00:48:54,256 --> 00:48:57,422
will I be affected whatever by it.
890
00:48:57,522 --> 00:49:01,422
NARRATOR: Hoping to undercut
support for the moratorium,
891
00:49:01,522 --> 00:49:03,723
Nixon canceled the draft calls
892
00:49:03,823 --> 00:49:07,589
for the months of November
and December 1969.
893
00:49:07,689 --> 00:49:10,990
And he instituted a random lottery system
894
00:49:11,089 --> 00:49:13,922
based on the date of a young man's birth,
895
00:49:14,022 --> 00:49:16,923
intended to treat rich and poor alike
896
00:49:17,023 --> 00:49:20,690
and do away with unfair deferments.
897
00:49:20,791 --> 00:49:24,291
It was good policy and a
brilliant political maneuver.
898
00:49:24,391 --> 00:49:25,690
(siren wails)
899
00:49:25,791 --> 00:49:27,157
On the line, brothers and sisters.
900
00:49:27,257 --> 00:49:28,657
On the line now.
901
00:49:28,757 --> 00:49:30,399
("Subterranean Homesick
Blues" by Bob Dylan playing)
902
00:49:30,423 --> 00:49:32,556
NARRATOR: As people across
the country organized
903
00:49:32,657 --> 00:49:34,491
for the peaceful moratorium,
904
00:49:34,590 --> 00:49:36,556
members of a radical faction
905
00:49:36,657 --> 00:49:39,391
of the Students for a Democratic Society...
906
00:49:39,491 --> 00:49:40,690
the "Weathermen"...
907
00:49:40,791 --> 00:49:41,891
took more direct action.
908
00:49:41,991 --> 00:49:43,291
♪ The man in a trench coat
909
00:49:43,391 --> 00:49:45,991
NARRATOR: Less interested in ending the war
910
00:49:46,090 --> 00:49:48,591
than in sparking a violent revolution,
911
00:49:48,691 --> 00:49:53,424
they staged what they called
four "Days of Rage" in Chicago.
912
00:49:53,524 --> 00:49:55,591
DYLAN: ♪ You better duck
down the alleyway ♪
913
00:49:55,691 --> 00:49:58,758
MAN: We no longer simply resist the pigs.
914
00:49:58,857 --> 00:50:00,825
We no longer trap ourselves
915
00:50:00,924 --> 00:50:02,457
so that the only possible motion
916
00:50:02,557 --> 00:50:04,624
is in response to pig attacks.
917
00:50:04,725 --> 00:50:06,957
We have gone on the offensive.
918
00:50:07,057 --> 00:50:08,957
It is we who call the shots now.
919
00:50:09,057 --> 00:50:11,225
NARRATOR: "Kill all the rich people,"
920
00:50:11,325 --> 00:50:12,557
one of their leaders said.
921
00:50:12,658 --> 00:50:15,691
"Break up their cars and apartments.
922
00:50:15,792 --> 00:50:17,924
"Bring the revolution home.
923
00:50:18,024 --> 00:50:19,557
"Kill your parents.
924
00:50:19,658 --> 00:50:22,826
That's really where it's at."
925
00:50:22,925 --> 00:50:24,826
MAN: Weathermen takes its name from a line
926
00:50:24,925 --> 00:50:26,592
in a Bob Dylan song which says,
927
00:50:26,692 --> 00:50:28,425
"You don't need a weatherman
928
00:50:28,525 --> 00:50:29,958
to know the way the wind blows."
929
00:50:30,058 --> 00:50:31,592
DYLAN: ♪ Wash the plain clothes
930
00:50:31,692 --> 00:50:33,092
♪ You don't need a weatherman
931
00:50:33,192 --> 00:50:36,826
♪ To know which way the wind blows ♪
932
00:50:36,925 --> 00:50:39,226
NARRATOR: The Weathermen assumed
933
00:50:39,326 --> 00:50:41,993
thousands would rally to their cause.
934
00:50:42,092 --> 00:50:45,058
Only 600 did.
935
00:50:45,159 --> 00:50:48,659
They blew up a statue
honoring slain policemen,
936
00:50:48,759 --> 00:50:51,993
ran through the streets
wielding chains and pipes,
937
00:50:52,092 --> 00:50:54,227
smashing windows and windshields
938
00:50:54,327 --> 00:50:57,859
and charging police barriers.
939
00:50:57,959 --> 00:50:59,626
Six were shot.
940
00:50:59,727 --> 00:51:02,526
250 were jailed.
941
00:51:02,626 --> 00:51:05,859
75 policemen were injured;
942
00:51:05,959 --> 00:51:09,026
a city attorney was paralyzed for life.
943
00:51:09,126 --> 00:51:11,093
(siren wails)
944
00:51:11,193 --> 00:51:14,660
The Black Panthers denounced the Weathermen
945
00:51:14,760 --> 00:51:17,760
as "anarchistic, opportunistic...
946
00:51:17,859 --> 00:51:21,359
Custeristic."
947
00:51:21,459 --> 00:51:24,526
BILL ZIMMERMAN: Probably 1969 was the year
948
00:51:24,626 --> 00:51:26,795
in which most of us were more alienated
949
00:51:26,895 --> 00:51:30,728
and felt more like revolutionaries.
950
00:51:30,828 --> 00:51:35,495
And it led to a lot of crazy responses.
951
00:51:35,594 --> 00:51:39,460
I wanted the country to undergo
a radical transformation,
952
00:51:39,560 --> 00:51:42,460
a redistribution of wealth and power.
953
00:51:42,560 --> 00:51:44,761
But to try to bring that about
954
00:51:44,860 --> 00:51:47,594
through armed struggle in the United States
955
00:51:47,694 --> 00:51:49,661
was insane.
956
00:51:49,761 --> 00:51:52,127
These were all infantile fantasies
957
00:51:52,228 --> 00:51:55,027
that people came to out of the frustration
958
00:51:55,127 --> 00:51:57,761
of not having a workable strategy
959
00:51:57,860 --> 00:52:01,195
for ending the war.
960
00:52:01,296 --> 00:52:02,872
REPORTER: What do you think
people ought to do, governor,
961
00:52:02,896 --> 00:52:04,729
who are genuinely opposed to the war
962
00:52:04,829 --> 00:52:06,996
but not in favor of the Viet Cong?
963
00:52:07,095 --> 00:52:11,428
Well, I think that we have had...
experiences before
964
00:52:11,528 --> 00:52:14,095
of people who have been opposed to wars,
965
00:52:14,195 --> 00:52:17,061
and I think they deal through
their own representatives,
966
00:52:17,162 --> 00:52:19,561
and it's dealt with in government channels.
967
00:52:19,662 --> 00:52:22,095
But once the killing starts,
968
00:52:22,195 --> 00:52:24,061
the very difficult thing then is,
969
00:52:24,162 --> 00:52:27,996
how do you register these protests
970
00:52:28,095 --> 00:52:30,061
without lending comfort
and aid to the enemy,
971
00:52:30,162 --> 00:52:32,062
without strengthening his resistance
972
00:52:32,163 --> 00:52:33,263
and his will to fight
973
00:52:33,362 --> 00:52:35,897
and thus killing more of our men?
974
00:52:35,997 --> 00:52:40,096
And most Americans in the past
have always respected it.
975
00:52:40,196 --> 00:52:41,730
You see, the people in this country
976
00:52:41,830 --> 00:52:43,797
aren't fighting a Vietnam War.
977
00:52:43,897 --> 00:52:45,297
The government's fighting it.
978
00:52:45,397 --> 00:52:46,517
Well, the government is, uh,
979
00:52:46,596 --> 00:52:48,730
the government is the
people, supposedly, No.
980
00:52:48,830 --> 00:52:51,030
but in this instance, it is not.
Not anymore, it's not.
981
00:52:51,096 --> 00:52:52,529
No, I agree with you, it is not.
982
00:52:52,629 --> 00:52:53,962
Not in this situation, it's not.
983
00:52:54,062 --> 00:52:55,497
Shouldn't I let my government know
984
00:52:55,596 --> 00:52:56,730
that I think they're crazy?
985
00:52:56,830 --> 00:52:58,297
I think they are insane, really.
986
00:52:58,397 --> 00:53:00,429
This is an insane thing we're doing.
987
00:53:00,529 --> 00:53:01,997
As a matter of fact,
988
00:53:02,096 --> 00:53:04,164
Nixon said he will not listen to us
989
00:53:04,264 --> 00:53:05,863
and that he will not be dictated to
990
00:53:05,963 --> 00:53:07,764
from the people in the streets.
991
00:53:07,863 --> 00:53:11,697
The people in the streets are me.
992
00:53:11,798 --> 00:53:14,731
(chanting "peace now")
993
00:53:14,831 --> 00:53:19,097
NARRATOR: The moratorium on October 15,
994
00:53:19,197 --> 00:53:20,697
held all across the country,
995
00:53:20,798 --> 00:53:23,630
was the largest outpouring
of public dissent
996
00:53:23,731 --> 00:53:25,164
in American history.
997
00:53:25,264 --> 00:53:29,130
("Blackbird" by the Beatles playing)
998
00:53:29,231 --> 00:53:33,930
♪ Blackbird singing in
the dead of night ♪
999
00:53:34,030 --> 00:53:39,265
♪ Take these broken wings
and learn to fly ♪
1000
00:53:39,364 --> 00:53:43,198
♪ All your life
1001
00:53:43,299 --> 00:53:47,832
♪ You were only waiting for
this moment to arise ♪
1002
00:53:47,931 --> 00:53:50,665
NARRATOR: It was peaceful, middle-class,
1003
00:53:50,765 --> 00:53:53,765
carefully focused on ending the war.
1004
00:53:53,864 --> 00:53:56,265
"It's nice," one marcher said,
1005
00:53:56,364 --> 00:53:58,098
"to go to a demonstration
1006
00:53:58,198 --> 00:54:03,131
without having to swear
allegiance to Chairman Mao."
1007
00:54:03,232 --> 00:54:04,665
♪ All your life
1008
00:54:04,765 --> 00:54:07,299
FRANK McGEE: Surely this is a
day unique in our history.
1009
00:54:07,399 --> 00:54:10,365
Never have so many of our people publicly
1010
00:54:10,465 --> 00:54:12,800
and collectively manifested opposition
1011
00:54:12,900 --> 00:54:16,032
to this country's involvement in a war.
1012
00:54:16,132 --> 00:54:19,065
It is unlikely we will remain unchanged.
1013
00:54:19,166 --> 00:54:22,000
Hundreds and hundreds of thousands
1014
00:54:22,099 --> 00:54:24,276
in cities from New York, with
its eight million people,
1015
00:54:24,300 --> 00:54:27,599
to Dubois, Wyoming, with its 800 people,
1016
00:54:27,699 --> 00:54:29,932
have sought to impress upon the president
1017
00:54:30,032 --> 00:54:32,099
their opposition to the war.
1018
00:54:32,199 --> 00:54:34,500
(bell rings)
1019
00:54:34,599 --> 00:54:41,400
CAROL CROCKER: The first large protest
march I went to was in Baltimore.
1020
00:54:41,501 --> 00:54:45,001
I'd never been with that
many people at one time.
1021
00:54:45,100 --> 00:54:51,167
Just the energy of the crowd
itself was tremendous.
1022
00:54:51,267 --> 00:54:53,566
I wondered if everybody was in it
1023
00:54:53,667 --> 00:54:55,633
for the right reasons.
1024
00:54:55,734 --> 00:55:00,366
I wasn't there to drink or smoke pot.
1025
00:55:00,466 --> 00:55:02,700
Not in those situations.
1026
00:55:02,801 --> 00:55:06,334
These, to me, were serious business.
1027
00:55:06,433 --> 00:55:09,901
This was the business of living life.
1028
00:55:10,001 --> 00:55:11,334
This was not a party.
1029
00:55:11,433 --> 00:55:14,168
I didn't just want to be with the crowd.
1030
00:55:14,268 --> 00:55:16,268
I didn't just want to make noise.
1031
00:55:16,367 --> 00:55:18,402
I wanted to make a difference.
1032
00:55:18,502 --> 00:55:22,967
And I in no way wanted
to dishonor my brother.
1033
00:55:23,067 --> 00:55:24,601
♪ For this moment to arrive
1034
00:55:24,701 --> 00:55:26,701
QUINN: For most of the government today,
1035
00:55:26,802 --> 00:55:28,235
it was business as usual.
1036
00:55:28,335 --> 00:55:30,067
But at noon on the Capitol steps,
1037
00:55:30,168 --> 00:55:32,567
a thousand young congressional
staff employees
1038
00:55:32,668 --> 00:55:35,302
stood in silence for 45 minutes.
1039
00:55:35,402 --> 00:55:39,967
♪ Blackbird singing in
the dead of night ♪
1040
00:55:40,067 --> 00:55:43,467
NARRATOR: The children of several
of the president's closest aides
1041
00:55:43,567 --> 00:55:44,902
and cabinet members
1042
00:55:45,002 --> 00:55:47,669
took part in the national moratorium.
1043
00:55:47,769 --> 00:55:51,068
Vice President Agnew's 14-year-old daughter
1044
00:55:51,169 --> 00:55:52,803
wanted to march,
1045
00:55:52,903 --> 00:55:54,435
but he wouldn't let her.
1046
00:55:54,535 --> 00:55:56,535
Coretta Scott King,
1047
00:55:56,635 --> 00:55:59,503
the widow of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.,
1048
00:55:59,602 --> 00:56:02,336
led thousands of silent demonstrators
1049
00:56:02,435 --> 00:56:06,202
streaming past the White
House, where Nixon sat alone,
1050
00:56:06,303 --> 00:56:09,635
writing notes to himself on a yellow pad.
1051
00:56:09,736 --> 00:56:11,635
"Don't get rattled. Don't waver.
1052
00:56:11,736 --> 00:56:14,368
Don't react."
1053
00:56:16,968 --> 00:56:18,769
On November 3,
1054
00:56:18,868 --> 00:56:22,237
the president sought to
seize back the initiative.
1055
00:56:22,337 --> 00:56:24,136
Good evening, my fellow Americans.
1056
00:56:24,237 --> 00:56:28,103
NARRATOR: He went on national
television and called for patience
1057
00:56:28,203 --> 00:56:31,436
and asked Americans to rally behind him.
1058
00:56:31,536 --> 00:56:33,369
NIXON: To you,
1059
00:56:33,469 --> 00:56:37,737
the great silent majority
of my fellow Americans,
1060
00:56:37,837 --> 00:56:39,737
I ask for your support.
1061
00:56:39,837 --> 00:56:42,804
I pledged in my campaign for the presidency
1062
00:56:42,904 --> 00:56:44,369
to end the war
1063
00:56:44,469 --> 00:56:47,436
in a way that we could win the peace.
1064
00:56:47,536 --> 00:56:51,203
The more support I can have
from the American people,
1065
00:56:51,304 --> 00:56:53,338
the sooner that pledge can be redeemed;
1066
00:56:53,437 --> 00:56:56,870
for the more divided we are at home,
1067
00:56:56,970 --> 00:57:00,671
the less likely the enemy
is to negotiate at Paris.
1068
00:57:00,771 --> 00:57:02,080
("Okie From Muskogee" by
Merle Haggard playing)
1069
00:57:02,104 --> 00:57:04,470
Let us be united for peace.
1070
00:57:04,570 --> 00:57:08,805
♪ We don't smoke
marijuana in Muskogee ♪
1071
00:57:08,905 --> 00:57:11,037
NARRATOR: The speech was a triumph.
1072
00:57:11,137 --> 00:57:15,104
Nixon's approval rate soared to 68%.
1073
00:57:17,405 --> 00:57:19,771
MAN: All that's in the news
1074
00:57:19,870 --> 00:57:22,005
is the fact that the
moratoriums are meeting,
1075
00:57:22,104 --> 00:57:24,070
that our country's sick...
1076
00:57:24,171 --> 00:57:25,938
sick of this and sick of that.
1077
00:57:26,038 --> 00:57:28,672
It's young people are all the
ones that are standing up.
1078
00:57:28,772 --> 00:57:32,138
And there is a silent majority,
which is no longer silent.
1079
00:57:32,239 --> 00:57:35,471
We're the people who are wanting to show
1080
00:57:35,571 --> 00:57:38,471
that man deserves freedom
no matter where he is.
1081
00:57:38,571 --> 00:57:40,772
♪ A place where even
squares can have a ball ♪
1082
00:57:40,871 --> 00:57:43,406
Many brave men died in this
country to make it free...
1083
00:57:43,506 --> 00:57:45,105
I believe that.
1084
00:57:45,205 --> 00:57:47,406
and let you... and let you have everything.
1085
00:57:47,506 --> 00:57:50,739
SPIRO AGNEW: Senator Fulbright
said some months ago
1086
00:57:50,839 --> 00:57:53,339
that if the Vietnam War
went on much longer,
1087
00:57:53,438 --> 00:57:57,273
the best of our young
people would be in Canada.
1088
00:57:57,372 --> 00:58:00,240
Indeed, as for these deserters,
1089
00:58:00,340 --> 00:58:04,307
malcontents, radicals, incendiaries,
1090
00:58:04,407 --> 00:58:06,740
the civil and the uncivil disobedience
1091
00:58:06,840 --> 00:58:08,706
among our young,
1092
00:58:08,807 --> 00:58:10,673
SDS, PLP,
1093
00:58:10,773 --> 00:58:11,983
Weatherman one, Weatherman two,
1094
00:58:12,007 --> 00:58:14,206
the Revolutionary Action Movement,
1095
00:58:14,307 --> 00:58:16,407
Panthers, lions, hippies,
1096
00:58:16,507 --> 00:58:19,307
yippies, tigers alike.
1097
00:58:19,407 --> 00:58:21,872
I'd rather swap the whole damn zoo
1098
00:58:21,972 --> 00:58:24,439
for a single platoon of the
kind of young Americans
1099
00:58:24,539 --> 00:58:25,840
I saw in Vietnam.
1100
00:58:25,939 --> 00:58:28,807
(applause)
1101
00:58:28,907 --> 00:58:32,107
NARRATOR: "We've got the liberal
bastards on the run now,"
1102
00:58:32,207 --> 00:58:34,741
Nixon told his aides,
1103
00:58:34,841 --> 00:58:38,973
"and we're going to keep them on the run."
1104
00:58:39,073 --> 00:58:40,841
("My Son" by Jan Howard playing)
1105
00:58:49,140 --> 00:58:53,373
♪ My son, my son
1106
00:58:53,473 --> 00:58:55,440
JAN HOWARD: My doorbell rang,
1107
00:58:55,540 --> 00:58:57,707
and it was this guy standing there,
1108
00:58:57,808 --> 00:59:00,973
and he said, "Ms. Howard,
we're marching in Memphis
1109
00:59:01,073 --> 00:59:03,909
in protest of the Vietnam War."
1110
00:59:04,009 --> 00:59:05,974
I said, "Really?"
1111
00:59:06,074 --> 00:59:09,509
He said, "And we figured in
view of what happened..."
1112
00:59:09,608 --> 00:59:12,775
I said, "Yeah, my son's death."
1113
00:59:12,874 --> 00:59:15,708
He said, "Well, we thought
you'd like to join us."
1114
00:59:15,809 --> 00:59:18,074
I said, "One of the reasons he died
1115
00:59:18,175 --> 00:59:19,574
"was so you have the right.
1116
00:59:19,675 --> 00:59:22,441
"In this country, you have a right.
1117
00:59:22,541 --> 00:59:24,608
"Go right ahead and demonstrate.
1118
00:59:24,708 --> 00:59:26,675
Have at it."
1119
00:59:26,775 --> 00:59:29,141
I said, "But no, I won't be joining you."
1120
00:59:29,242 --> 00:59:30,874
I said, "But I'll tell you what.
1121
00:59:30,974 --> 00:59:32,708
"If you ever ring my doorbell again,
1122
00:59:32,809 --> 00:59:35,810
I will blow your damn head
off with a .357 Magnum."
1123
00:59:46,142 --> 00:59:48,410
TIM O'BRIEN: Well, I was
stationed in Vietnam
1124
00:59:48,510 --> 00:59:51,910
at a province called Quang Ngai.
1125
00:59:52,010 --> 00:59:53,610
Even back during the time of the French,
1126
00:59:53,642 --> 00:59:57,609
it was a very heavily Viet Minh area,
1127
00:59:57,709 --> 01:00:00,176
and, when I arrived, heavily Viet Cong.
1128
01:00:02,843 --> 01:00:06,410
NARRATOR: No province suffered
more during the American war
1129
01:00:06,510 --> 01:00:08,876
than the coastal province of Quang Ngai.
1130
01:00:08,976 --> 01:00:10,943
(artillery fire)
1131
01:00:11,043 --> 01:00:15,844
More than 70% of its villages
had been shelled by Navy ships,
1132
01:00:15,943 --> 01:00:19,777
bombed, bulldozed, or burned to the ground,
1133
01:00:19,876 --> 01:00:22,244
and more than 40% of its people
1134
01:00:22,344 --> 01:00:24,911
had been forced into refugee camps
1135
01:00:25,011 --> 01:00:28,476
before Tim O'Brien from
Worthington, Minnesota,
1136
01:00:28,576 --> 01:00:30,976
got there in 1969.
1137
01:00:33,011 --> 01:00:34,691
O'BRIEN: It was a province that was viewed
1138
01:00:34,777 --> 01:00:37,143
much as I guess many Americans might view,
1139
01:00:37,244 --> 01:00:39,476
you know, sort of redneck America.
1140
01:00:39,576 --> 01:00:42,944
Sort of country bumpkins.
1141
01:00:43,044 --> 01:00:44,420
And they may have been country bumpkins,
1142
01:00:44,444 --> 01:00:46,845
but they were fiercely independent.
1143
01:00:46,944 --> 01:00:50,312
NARRATOR: Private O'Brien
served in Alpha Company,
1144
01:00:50,412 --> 01:00:55,012
3rd Platoon, 5th Battalion,
23rd Americal Division,
1145
01:00:55,111 --> 01:00:58,245
headquartered at a landing
zone called Gator,
1146
01:00:58,345 --> 01:01:01,611
"30 or 40 acres of almost-America,"
1147
01:01:01,711 --> 01:01:03,345
O'Brien remembered,
1148
01:01:03,444 --> 01:01:06,678
with hot showers and cold beer.
1149
01:01:08,377 --> 01:01:10,077
O'BRIEN: There was no sense of mission.
1150
01:01:10,178 --> 01:01:11,711
There was no sense of daily purpose.
1151
01:01:11,812 --> 01:01:13,945
We didn't know why we were in a village
1152
01:01:14,045 --> 01:01:16,179
or what we were supposed to accomplish.
1153
01:01:16,279 --> 01:01:18,445
So we'd kick around jugs of rice
1154
01:01:18,545 --> 01:01:21,413
and search houses and frisk people,
1155
01:01:21,513 --> 01:01:23,846
and not knowing what we were looking for
1156
01:01:23,945 --> 01:01:27,346
and rarely finding anything.
1157
01:01:27,445 --> 01:01:28,679
And somebody might die,
1158
01:01:28,779 --> 01:01:30,578
one of our guys, and somebody might not.
1159
01:01:30,679 --> 01:01:33,045
Then we'd come back to the
same village a week later
1160
01:01:33,145 --> 01:01:35,378
or two weeks later, do it all over again.
1161
01:01:35,478 --> 01:01:38,246
It was like chasing ghosts.
1162
01:01:38,346 --> 01:01:40,645
(helicopter blades whirring)
1163
01:01:42,313 --> 01:01:44,112
NARRATOR: An American APC
1164
01:01:44,212 --> 01:01:47,680
accidentally crushed one man
from O'Brien's company.
1165
01:01:47,780 --> 01:01:51,979
An enemy grenade skittered off
O'Brien's helmet and exploded,
1166
01:01:52,079 --> 01:01:55,479
wounding a G.I. standing a few feet away.
1167
01:01:58,414 --> 01:02:02,414
But mines and booby traps
were the greatest menace.
1168
01:02:08,914 --> 01:02:11,414
O'BRIEN: Somewhere around
80% of our casualties
1169
01:02:11,514 --> 01:02:13,979
came from land mines of all sorts.
1170
01:02:15,680 --> 01:02:18,614
In Vietnam, for me, just
to get up in the morning
1171
01:02:18,714 --> 01:02:21,915
and look out at the land and think,
1172
01:02:22,015 --> 01:02:24,815
"In a few minutes I'll
be walking out there,
1173
01:02:24,915 --> 01:02:27,781
"and will my corpse be there or there?
1174
01:02:27,880 --> 01:02:31,080
Will I lose a leg out there?"
1175
01:02:31,181 --> 01:02:35,415
I'd always thought of courage
as charging enemy bunkers
1176
01:02:35,515 --> 01:02:37,781
or standing up under fire.
1177
01:02:37,880 --> 01:02:41,214
But just to walk through Quang Ngai,
1178
01:02:41,315 --> 01:02:43,580
day after day, from village to village,
1179
01:02:43,681 --> 01:02:47,947
and through the paddies and
up into the mountains,
1180
01:02:48,047 --> 01:02:51,581
just to make your legs
move was an act of courage
1181
01:02:51,682 --> 01:02:54,349
that if, say, you were
living in Sioux City,
1182
01:02:54,448 --> 01:02:56,081
it wouldn't be courageous
1183
01:02:56,182 --> 01:02:58,682
to walk to the grocery
store or down Main Street,
1184
01:02:58,782 --> 01:03:01,381
you know, just to have your
legs go back and forth.
1185
01:03:01,481 --> 01:03:03,115
But in Vietnam, for me,
1186
01:03:03,215 --> 01:03:05,316
just to walk felt incredibly brave.
1187
01:03:05,416 --> 01:03:07,881
I would sometimes look
at my legs as I walked,
1188
01:03:07,981 --> 01:03:09,948
thinking, "How am I doing this?"
1189
01:03:42,283 --> 01:03:44,517
NARRATOR: Bao Ninh was 17
1190
01:03:44,616 --> 01:03:47,417
when he was drafted into
the North Vietnamese Army
1191
01:03:47,517 --> 01:03:48,616
to fight the Americans,
1192
01:03:48,716 --> 01:03:51,982
just as his father had fought the French.
1193
01:03:52,082 --> 01:03:55,317
His war would take place
in the Central Highlands
1194
01:03:55,418 --> 01:03:57,550
of South Vietnam.
1195
01:03:57,650 --> 01:03:59,751
It was American firepower
1196
01:03:59,851 --> 01:04:04,450
that Bao Ninh and his fellow
soldiers feared the most.
1197
01:04:04,550 --> 01:04:05,217
(explosion)
1198
01:05:32,652 --> 01:05:34,021
(explosion)
1199
01:06:23,822 --> 01:06:26,221
(birds chirping, squawking)
1200
01:06:29,854 --> 01:06:31,921
NARRATOR: Back in the spring,
1201
01:06:32,022 --> 01:06:35,454
Tim O'Brien's outfit had been
sent into an area of operations
1202
01:06:35,555 --> 01:06:38,323
the Americans called "Pinkville,"
1203
01:06:38,422 --> 01:06:40,256
clusters of villages
1204
01:06:40,355 --> 01:06:43,722
that included a hamlet they called My Lai.
1205
01:06:45,588 --> 01:06:47,722
O'BRIEN: We hated going there.
1206
01:06:47,823 --> 01:06:50,588
When we'd get the word, "You're
headed for Pinkville,"
1207
01:06:50,689 --> 01:06:52,698
one guy would say to another,
"Somebody's gonna die,"
1208
01:06:52,722 --> 01:06:54,082
or, "Somebody's gonna lose a leg."
1209
01:06:54,155 --> 01:06:56,155
We were terrified of the place.
1210
01:06:56,256 --> 01:06:59,689
It was littered with land mines.
1211
01:06:59,788 --> 01:07:01,689
The villagers were...
1212
01:07:01,788 --> 01:07:03,588
The expressions on their faces,
1213
01:07:03,689 --> 01:07:07,989
including the children of,
say, six or five years old,
1214
01:07:08,088 --> 01:07:13,257
had a mixture of hostility and terror.
1215
01:07:15,557 --> 01:07:17,024
I can't say many of the villagers
1216
01:07:17,124 --> 01:07:19,156
came with open arms to us,
1217
01:07:19,257 --> 01:07:21,289
but this place was special.
1218
01:07:21,389 --> 01:07:23,389
And I remember talking to fellow soldiers,
1219
01:07:23,490 --> 01:07:25,757
thinking, "What is it with this place?"
1220
01:07:27,124 --> 01:07:29,156
And then about three-quarters of the way
1221
01:07:29,257 --> 01:07:30,889
through my tour in Vietnam,
1222
01:07:30,990 --> 01:07:34,190
the story of the My Lai
Massacre broke in the States.
1223
01:07:35,490 --> 01:07:38,490
NARRATOR: On November 12, 1969,
1224
01:07:38,589 --> 01:07:41,124
the Dispatch News Service in Washington
1225
01:07:41,223 --> 01:07:45,258
moved a story by investigative
journalist Seymour Hersh.
1226
01:07:46,558 --> 01:07:48,790
It was soon followed by the publication
1227
01:07:48,890 --> 01:07:53,857
of graphic photos taken by Army
photographer Ronald Haeberle.
1228
01:07:55,325 --> 01:07:59,157
The story and the pictures
stunned the country.
1229
01:07:59,258 --> 01:08:00,890
HUNTLEY: Charges have been made
1230
01:08:00,991 --> 01:08:03,724
that troops of the Americal Division
1231
01:08:03,825 --> 01:08:07,258
killed as many as 567 South
Vietnamese civilians
1232
01:08:07,357 --> 01:08:10,525
during a sweep in March 1968.
1233
01:08:11,790 --> 01:08:13,758
NARRATOR: 20 months earlier,
1234
01:08:13,857 --> 01:08:17,326
on the morning of March 16, 1968,
1235
01:08:17,425 --> 01:08:20,026
105 men from a rifle company
1236
01:08:20,126 --> 01:08:22,291
belonging to the Americal Division,
1237
01:08:22,391 --> 01:08:24,492
and led by Captain Ernest Medina
1238
01:08:24,591 --> 01:08:26,725
and Lieutenant William Calley,
1239
01:08:26,826 --> 01:08:30,925
had been ordered to helicopter
into the village of My Lai 4.
1240
01:08:32,259 --> 01:08:35,492
Since arriving in Vietnam,
they had lost 28 men
1241
01:08:35,591 --> 01:08:40,458
to mines and booby traps
and unseen snipers.
1242
01:08:40,559 --> 01:08:45,358
Two days earlier, a popular
squad leader had been killed.
1243
01:08:45,458 --> 01:08:49,127
They had been told a unit
of main-force Viet Cong
1244
01:08:49,226 --> 01:08:50,892
was waiting for them,
1245
01:08:50,993 --> 01:08:53,760
and they were eager for revenge.
1246
01:08:55,027 --> 01:08:57,527
But they received no hostile fire,
1247
01:08:57,627 --> 01:09:02,493
encountered no enemy soldiers.
1248
01:09:03,959 --> 01:09:07,260
Instead, over the next four hours,
1249
01:09:07,359 --> 01:09:10,193
Medina, Calley, and their men murdered
1250
01:09:10,292 --> 01:09:18,027
407 defenseless old men,
women, children, and infants.
1251
01:09:27,994 --> 01:09:30,660
Many of the women and girls were raped
1252
01:09:30,761 --> 01:09:33,061
before they were shot.
1253
01:09:36,128 --> 01:09:38,427
There would have been still more slaughter
1254
01:09:38,528 --> 01:09:42,694
had a helicopter pilot named
Hugh Thompson, Jr., not landed
1255
01:09:42,793 --> 01:09:46,194
between the men and some
of their intended targets
1256
01:09:46,293 --> 01:09:49,927
and ordered his crew to open
fire on their fellow Americans
1257
01:09:50,028 --> 01:09:53,293
if they did not stop shooting civilians.
1258
01:09:56,529 --> 01:10:00,062
At the same time, just a mile or so away,
1259
01:10:00,161 --> 01:10:04,861
another company murdered 97 more villagers.
1260
01:10:06,861 --> 01:10:09,894
O'BRIEN: And suddenly it was
like a window shade going up,
1261
01:10:09,995 --> 01:10:11,428
and then there's light,
1262
01:10:11,529 --> 01:10:13,594
and we understood what had engendered
1263
01:10:13,695 --> 01:10:17,029
this horror in these kids' faces
1264
01:10:17,129 --> 01:10:19,861
and fear and the... and the hatred.
1265
01:10:19,961 --> 01:10:23,495
Hundred and some American
soldiers in four hours or so
1266
01:10:23,594 --> 01:10:26,262
butchering innocent people,
1267
01:10:26,361 --> 01:10:28,429
in all kinds of ways...
machine-gunning them
1268
01:10:28,530 --> 01:10:30,830
and throwing them in
wells and scalping them
1269
01:10:30,929 --> 01:10:32,795
and killing them in ditches
1270
01:10:32,895 --> 01:10:35,496
and taking a lunch break and
then doing it some more.
1271
01:10:36,630 --> 01:10:38,763
Systematic homicide.
1272
01:10:38,862 --> 01:10:40,395
MIKE WALLACE: What kind of people?
1273
01:10:40,496 --> 01:10:41,496
Men, women, children?
1274
01:10:41,595 --> 01:10:43,030
PAUL MEADLO: Men, women, children.
1275
01:10:43,130 --> 01:10:44,830
WALLACE: Babies? MEADLO: Babies.
1276
01:10:44,929 --> 01:10:46,763
Uh, Lieutenant Calley came over and said,
1277
01:10:46,862 --> 01:10:48,763
"You know what to do with them, don't you?"
1278
01:10:48,862 --> 01:10:50,362
And, uh, I said, "Yes."
1279
01:10:50,462 --> 01:10:54,462
So l took it for granted that he
just wanted us to watch them.
1280
01:10:54,563 --> 01:10:56,330
And he left and came back
1281
01:10:56,429 --> 01:10:58,997
about ten or... ten or 15 minutes later,
1282
01:10:59,096 --> 01:11:03,331
and said, "How come you
ain't, uh, killed them yet?"
1283
01:11:03,430 --> 01:11:04,997
You killed how many at that time?
1284
01:11:05,096 --> 01:11:07,596
Well, I fired my automatic, so, uh...
1285
01:11:07,697 --> 01:11:10,331
you can't, uh... you just
spray the area on them,
1286
01:11:10,430 --> 01:11:12,796
so you really can't know
how many you killed
1287
01:11:12,896 --> 01:11:15,697
because it comes out so doggone fast.
1288
01:11:15,796 --> 01:11:20,031
So I, I might've killed
about, uh, ten or 15 of them.
1289
01:11:21,163 --> 01:11:22,663
Men, women, and children?
1290
01:11:22,764 --> 01:11:24,331
Men, women, and children.
1291
01:11:24,430 --> 01:11:26,497
And babies? And babies.
1292
01:11:27,963 --> 01:11:29,863
Why did I do it?
1293
01:11:29,963 --> 01:11:32,765
Because I felt like I was ordered to do it.
1294
01:11:32,864 --> 01:11:35,431
And it seemed like, uh...
1295
01:11:38,132 --> 01:11:42,065
Well, at the time, I felt like
I was doing the right thing.
1296
01:11:42,164 --> 01:11:44,065
I really did.
1297
01:11:44,164 --> 01:11:47,231
Because, uh, like I said, I lost buddies,
1298
01:11:47,332 --> 01:11:49,231
I lost... I lost a good...
1299
01:11:49,332 --> 01:11:53,698
damn good buddy... Bobby Wilson...
1300
01:11:53,797 --> 01:11:57,464
and it was on my conscience,
and it was on...
1301
01:11:57,565 --> 01:11:59,532
So after I done it, I felt good.
1302
01:11:59,632 --> 01:12:03,864
But later on that day,
it was getting to me.
1303
01:12:03,964 --> 01:12:07,033
It's so hard, I think, for
a good many Americans
1304
01:12:07,133 --> 01:12:10,165
to understand that young, capable,
1305
01:12:10,266 --> 01:12:13,533
brave American boys
1306
01:12:13,633 --> 01:12:16,566
could line up
1307
01:12:16,665 --> 01:12:21,266
old men, women, children, and babies
1308
01:12:21,365 --> 01:12:24,098
and shoot them down in cold blood.
1309
01:12:28,833 --> 01:12:31,066
How do you explain that?
1310
01:12:31,165 --> 01:12:33,098
I wouldn't know.
1311
01:12:39,034 --> 01:12:40,933
(low, distant chatter)
1312
01:12:43,200 --> 01:12:47,267
NARRATOR: The killing of civilians
has happened in every war.
1313
01:12:47,366 --> 01:12:51,666
In Vietnam, it was not policy or routine,
1314
01:12:51,767 --> 01:12:54,399
but it was not an aberration, either.
1315
01:12:55,966 --> 01:13:00,866
Still, the scale and
deliberateness and intimacy
1316
01:13:00,966 --> 01:13:03,099
of what happened at My Lai
1317
01:13:03,200 --> 01:13:04,500
was different.
1318
01:13:04,599 --> 01:13:06,233
SHEEHAN: It was different
1319
01:13:06,334 --> 01:13:09,067
because they were killing
Vietnamese point-blank
1320
01:13:09,166 --> 01:13:10,535
with rifles and grenades.
1321
01:13:10,635 --> 01:13:12,967
They were murdering them directly.
1322
01:13:13,068 --> 01:13:15,335
They weren't doing it
with bombs and artillery.
1323
01:13:15,434 --> 01:13:16,943
If they'd been doing it
with bombs and artillery,
1324
01:13:16,967 --> 01:13:18,111
nobody would have said a word,
1325
01:13:18,135 --> 01:13:19,615
because it was going on all the time.
1326
01:13:20,568 --> 01:13:21,867
NARRATOR: Not every soldier
1327
01:13:21,967 --> 01:13:23,701
participated in the killings that day.
1328
01:13:23,800 --> 01:13:27,335
Some led villagers away to safety.
1329
01:13:27,434 --> 01:13:30,201
But a failure of military leadership
1330
01:13:30,300 --> 01:13:33,400
at nearly every level had
created the conditions
1331
01:13:33,501 --> 01:13:36,900
that made the massacre possible.
1332
01:13:37,001 --> 01:13:41,234
The My Lai story might have
shocked the American public,
1333
01:13:41,335 --> 01:13:43,536
but it was not news to the Army.
1334
01:13:43,636 --> 01:13:46,735
It had occurred almost two years before,
1335
01:13:46,836 --> 01:13:49,901
just after the Tet Offensive.
1336
01:13:50,002 --> 01:13:52,368
Hugh Thompson, the helicopter pilot
1337
01:13:52,468 --> 01:13:54,536
who had tried to stop the massacre,
1338
01:13:54,636 --> 01:13:57,468
reported what he had seen,
1339
01:13:57,569 --> 01:13:59,468
but no one in the chain of command
1340
01:13:59,569 --> 01:14:00,801
was willing to act.
1341
01:14:00,901 --> 01:14:04,536
The slaughter was covered up.
1342
01:14:04,636 --> 01:14:08,401
Later, an ex-corporal
named Ronald Ridenhour,
1343
01:14:08,502 --> 01:14:10,168
who had heard about what had happened
1344
01:14:10,269 --> 01:14:12,202
from several men who had been there,
1345
01:14:12,301 --> 01:14:15,770
wrote letters to the president
of the United States,
1346
01:14:15,869 --> 01:14:17,669
the secretary of defense,
1347
01:14:17,770 --> 01:14:21,669
and more than two dozen other
high-ranking officials.
1348
01:14:21,770 --> 01:14:24,936
STAN ATKINSON: Personally,
what decision-making process
1349
01:14:25,037 --> 01:14:27,837
did you go through before you
decided to take your action?
1350
01:14:27,936 --> 01:14:31,602
I guess I just wrestled
with my own conscience
1351
01:14:31,703 --> 01:14:33,969
to try to decide what action to take.
1352
01:14:34,070 --> 01:14:36,102
I felt that I had to take some action.
1353
01:14:36,203 --> 01:14:37,570
I had to do something.
1354
01:14:37,669 --> 01:14:38,902
I couldn't just...
1355
01:14:39,003 --> 01:14:41,537
just rest with this knowledge
for the rest of my life
1356
01:14:41,637 --> 01:14:44,469
that I couldn't... I couldn't
live with myself if I did.
1357
01:14:44,570 --> 01:14:47,470
NARRATOR: President Nixon's first reaction
1358
01:14:47,571 --> 01:14:51,704
was to investigate those who
reported the slaughter.
1359
01:14:51,803 --> 01:14:54,504
"It's those dirty rotten Jews from New York
1360
01:14:54,603 --> 01:14:55,870
who are behind it,"
1361
01:14:55,970 --> 01:14:57,403
he told an aide.
1362
01:14:57,504 --> 01:15:01,838
Eventually, Lieutenant
General William R. Peers,
1363
01:15:01,937 --> 01:15:05,771
a veteran of 30 months as a
troop commander in Vietnam,
1364
01:15:05,870 --> 01:15:07,571
was assigned to head a panel
1365
01:15:07,670 --> 01:15:10,470
to look into what had really happened.
1366
01:15:10,571 --> 01:15:13,704
Peers found that 30 persons,
1367
01:15:13,803 --> 01:15:16,138
including the division commander,
1368
01:15:16,237 --> 01:15:18,470
General Samuel W. Koster,
1369
01:15:18,571 --> 01:15:20,871
had either committed atrocities
1370
01:15:20,971 --> 01:15:24,938
or had conspired to cover them up.
1371
01:15:28,938 --> 01:15:32,671
Peers had wanted to call
My Lai a "massacre."
1372
01:15:32,772 --> 01:15:36,039
His superiors made him use the phrase,
1373
01:15:36,139 --> 01:15:40,171
"a tragedy of major proportions."
1374
01:15:40,272 --> 01:15:45,705
In the end, the Army indicted
25 officers and men,
1375
01:15:45,804 --> 01:15:50,971
including the platoon leader,
Lieutenant William Calley.
1376
01:15:53,540 --> 01:15:55,540
VALLELY: Calley's a killer.
1377
01:15:55,640 --> 01:15:57,573
Calley's a murderer
1378
01:15:57,672 --> 01:15:59,939
and a... a sick person.
1379
01:16:02,040 --> 01:16:05,073
I'm not gonna be in any, you know, uh,
1380
01:16:05,172 --> 01:16:07,605
propaganda movie for the
United States Marine Corps,
1381
01:16:07,706 --> 01:16:09,640
but we didn't have that guy.
1382
01:16:11,905 --> 01:16:14,405
We had individuals who, who...
1383
01:16:14,506 --> 01:16:16,472
who committed war crimes, of course.
1384
01:16:16,573 --> 01:16:20,540
And, um, you know, I wanted to kill them.
1385
01:16:20,640 --> 01:16:23,140
I sometimes wish I did kill 'em.
1386
01:16:25,973 --> 01:16:29,740
But... I was afraid to kill 'em.
1387
01:16:32,141 --> 01:16:34,074
♪ Two, one, two, three, four
1388
01:16:34,173 --> 01:16:36,873
("Give Peace a Chance" by
The Plastic Ono Band plays)
1389
01:16:36,973 --> 01:16:39,473
(loud crowd chatter)
1390
01:16:39,574 --> 01:16:41,106
♪ Everybody's talking about...
1391
01:16:41,207 --> 01:16:44,341
ZIMMERMAN: I never considered
the Vietnamese our enemy.
1392
01:16:44,440 --> 01:16:46,041
They had never done anything
1393
01:16:46,141 --> 01:16:48,707
to threaten the security
of the United States.
1394
01:16:48,806 --> 01:16:51,541
They were off 10,000 miles away,
1395
01:16:51,641 --> 01:16:53,373
minding their own business,
1396
01:16:53,473 --> 01:16:55,841
and we went there to their country,
1397
01:16:55,940 --> 01:16:57,407
told them what kind of government
1398
01:16:57,508 --> 01:16:59,775
we wanted them to have.
1399
01:16:59,874 --> 01:17:04,075
JAMES WILLBANKS: Well, when
I see the war protesters,
1400
01:17:04,174 --> 01:17:05,941
I react on a couple of levels.
1401
01:17:06,042 --> 01:17:08,575
Intellectually, I certainly
understand their right
1402
01:17:08,674 --> 01:17:10,374
to the freedom of speech.
1403
01:17:10,474 --> 01:17:11,874
But I will tell you
1404
01:17:11,974 --> 01:17:14,941
that when I see them waving NLF flags,
1405
01:17:15,042 --> 01:17:18,275
the enemy that I and my
friends had to fight,
1406
01:17:18,374 --> 01:17:21,575
and some of my friends had to die fighting,
1407
01:17:21,674 --> 01:17:23,307
that doesn't sit very well with me.
1408
01:17:23,407 --> 01:17:26,542
♪ All we are saying...
1409
01:17:26,642 --> 01:17:29,575
NARRATOR: On November 15, 1969,
1410
01:17:29,674 --> 01:17:31,908
half a million citizens turned out
1411
01:17:32,009 --> 01:17:34,543
against the war in Washington, again.
1412
01:17:34,643 --> 01:17:36,942
♪ Everybody's talking
about revolution... ♪
1413
01:17:37,043 --> 01:17:40,276
NARRATOR: This time, buses
provided an impenetrable wall
1414
01:17:40,375 --> 01:17:42,576
around the White House.
1415
01:17:42,675 --> 01:17:45,043
President Nixon claimed he was too busy
1416
01:17:45,143 --> 01:17:47,209
watching football on television
1417
01:17:47,308 --> 01:17:48,543
to pay attention,
1418
01:17:48,643 --> 01:17:53,076
but he did suggest that Army
helicopters might be used
1419
01:17:53,175 --> 01:17:55,076
to blow out the marchers' candles.
1420
01:17:55,175 --> 01:17:57,175
♪ All we are saying...
1421
01:17:57,276 --> 01:17:58,709
(car horns honking)
1422
01:17:58,808 --> 01:18:00,918
NARRATOR: Hundreds of thousands
of others demonstrated
1423
01:18:00,942 --> 01:18:04,443
in San Francisco and New York.
1424
01:18:04,544 --> 01:18:06,176
(indistinct shouting)
1425
01:18:06,277 --> 01:18:09,176
(cheering and whistling,
indistinct shouting)
1426
01:18:11,710 --> 01:18:14,077
The most striking antiwar protest
1427
01:18:14,176 --> 01:18:15,409
of this Thanksgiving Day
1428
01:18:15,510 --> 01:18:17,976
occurred not in this
country, but in Vietnam,
1429
01:18:18,077 --> 01:18:20,476
though its form was uniquely American.
1430
01:18:20,577 --> 01:18:22,676
About 100 American soldiers
1431
01:18:22,777 --> 01:18:25,176
stationed at a hospital in Pleiku
1432
01:18:25,277 --> 01:18:27,844
refused to eat their
traditional turkey dinner.
1433
01:18:27,943 --> 01:18:31,909
They described their fast as a
passive protest against the war.
1434
01:18:33,710 --> 01:18:36,145
("Born Under a Bad Sign" by Booker T.
and the M.G.'s plays)
1435
01:18:40,677 --> 01:18:42,345
The Army did what the Army does.
1436
01:18:42,444 --> 01:18:43,987
Every year, you know, for Thanksgiving,
1437
01:18:44,011 --> 01:18:45,177
they make a big deal.
1438
01:18:45,278 --> 01:18:46,453
They're gonna bring in turkey,
1439
01:18:46,477 --> 01:18:47,920
they're gonna bring in mashed potatoes,
1440
01:18:47,944 --> 01:18:50,278
and apple pie and whatever.
1441
01:18:50,377 --> 01:18:52,278
And by this point, I think,
1442
01:18:52,377 --> 01:18:55,310
a lot of us were very,
very cynical about the war
1443
01:18:55,410 --> 01:18:57,244
and what was going on.
1444
01:18:57,345 --> 01:19:00,810
But we weren't gonna make
a big deal about it.
1445
01:19:00,910 --> 01:19:03,477
We knew there were gonna
be TV people there.
1446
01:19:03,578 --> 01:19:06,711
And a couple of the organizers
were looking for people to talk.
1447
01:19:06,810 --> 01:19:08,445
They came to me, I said, "No."
1448
01:19:08,546 --> 01:19:10,878
I said, "Look, I'm gonna
fast and do my thing."
1449
01:19:10,978 --> 01:19:12,846
I said, "But I, I really don't want
1450
01:19:12,945 --> 01:19:15,346
to be involved with any media thing."
1451
01:19:15,445 --> 01:19:19,846
NARRATOR: That Thanksgiving Day,
Lieutenant Furey was on duty
1452
01:19:19,945 --> 01:19:24,012
when one of her patients took
a sudden turn for the worse.
1453
01:19:24,111 --> 01:19:27,111
FUREY: Some patients, they
just get into your heart.
1454
01:19:27,212 --> 01:19:28,811
And this kid, I think he was 18.
1455
01:19:28,911 --> 01:19:30,346
His name was Timmy.
1456
01:19:30,445 --> 01:19:34,878
It was unlikely he was gonna survive.
1457
01:19:34,978 --> 01:19:38,445
And I just got so angry.
1458
01:19:38,546 --> 01:19:41,979
I just lost it.
1459
01:19:42,080 --> 01:19:44,179
I remember walking out of the O.R.,
1460
01:19:44,280 --> 01:19:46,155
I ripped off the gown, and
I ripped off the mask,
1461
01:19:46,179 --> 01:19:49,446
I walked outside, I said,
"Where are those reporters?"
1462
01:20:02,580 --> 01:20:04,722
I mean, you know, you don't
demonstrate against the war
1463
01:20:04,746 --> 01:20:05,879
in a war zone.
1464
01:20:05,979 --> 01:20:08,879
By that time, of course,
you, you had the attitude,
1465
01:20:08,979 --> 01:20:10,812
"What are they gonna do?
1466
01:20:10,912 --> 01:20:12,879
Send me to Vietnam?"
1467
01:20:16,348 --> 01:20:19,880
(loud, overlapping chatter and shouting)
1468
01:20:19,980 --> 01:20:22,714
(indistinct chanting)
1469
01:20:22,813 --> 01:20:25,747
JOHN MUSGRAVE: Let's just say that
being a Marine combat veteran
1470
01:20:25,848 --> 01:20:29,813
on a college campus in 1969 and 1970...
1471
01:20:29,913 --> 01:20:31,680
it wasn't a real good thing to be
1472
01:20:31,781 --> 01:20:33,848
if you wanted to get dates and be popular.
1473
01:20:36,613 --> 01:20:40,081
When I came home, it seemed like
1474
01:20:40,180 --> 01:20:43,514
I didn't have anything
to give to anybody else.
1475
01:20:46,881 --> 01:20:50,914
NARRATOR: Marine Corporal John
Musgrave had very nearly died
1476
01:20:51,015 --> 01:20:55,649
in combat below the DMZ
in the autumn of 1967.
1477
01:20:55,748 --> 01:20:58,549
Wounded in the jaw and shoulder,
1478
01:20:58,649 --> 01:21:02,414
his ribs shattered, lung
pierced, nerves cut,
1479
01:21:02,515 --> 01:21:06,849
he had spent 17 months in Navy hospitals.
1480
01:21:06,948 --> 01:21:09,981
He was now studying at Baker University
1481
01:21:10,082 --> 01:21:12,849
in Baldwin City, Kansas.
1482
01:21:12,948 --> 01:21:15,248
(indistinct chanting and shouting)
1483
01:21:15,349 --> 01:21:19,749
But wherever he went, the
war was never far away.
1484
01:21:21,982 --> 01:21:26,315
MUSGRAVE: And the peace movement,
for a while, got real nasty,
1485
01:21:26,415 --> 01:21:28,415
calling veterans baby killers.
1486
01:21:30,482 --> 01:21:32,315
It did more than piss us off.
1487
01:21:32,415 --> 01:21:34,249
It broke our hearts.
1488
01:21:34,350 --> 01:21:36,615
What were they thinking?
1489
01:21:36,716 --> 01:21:41,982
You don't turn your backs on your warriors.
1490
01:21:42,083 --> 01:21:44,615
I didn't trust anybody anymore.
1491
01:21:46,083 --> 01:21:48,315
Just my family.
1492
01:21:48,415 --> 01:21:50,883
NARRATOR: Musgrave was so hurt
1493
01:21:50,983 --> 01:21:52,983
by the way some people treated him
1494
01:21:53,084 --> 01:21:56,416
that he volunteered to return to Vietnam.
1495
01:21:56,517 --> 01:22:00,151
Because of his injuries, the
Marines turned him down,
1496
01:22:00,250 --> 01:22:04,183
and asked him to help recruit men instead.
1497
01:22:04,284 --> 01:22:06,217
He did for a time,
1498
01:22:06,316 --> 01:22:09,316
but when students asked him
questions about the war
1499
01:22:09,416 --> 01:22:11,183
he couldn't answer,
1500
01:22:11,284 --> 01:22:12,383
he also began to read
1501
01:22:12,483 --> 01:22:16,816
about how and why it was being fought.
1502
01:22:16,916 --> 01:22:20,584
MUSGRAVE: I had friends in
country on a second tour,
1503
01:22:20,683 --> 01:22:23,785
and, you know, I, I was still...
considered myself a Marine.
1504
01:22:23,884 --> 01:22:26,684
and... and the more I read,
1505
01:22:26,785 --> 01:22:32,018
the less I found to be able
to defend our presence there.
1506
01:22:32,117 --> 01:22:36,152
So then, I, I just stopped
talking to everybody.
1507
01:22:36,251 --> 01:22:38,285
(dog barking)
1508
01:22:38,384 --> 01:22:42,352
NARRATOR: Musgrave gradually felt
as if he were being torn in two.
1509
01:22:42,451 --> 01:22:46,285
And he was still haunted by
the memory of those Marines
1510
01:22:46,384 --> 01:22:50,951
who had died while he had lived.
1511
01:22:51,052 --> 01:22:54,184
MUSGRAVE: I was dating my .45
in those years, you know.
1512
01:22:54,285 --> 01:22:56,985
Coming home at night after drinking,
1513
01:22:57,086 --> 01:22:59,118
and pressing it up against my temple,
1514
01:22:59,219 --> 01:23:02,118
or putting it under my chin,
1515
01:23:02,219 --> 01:23:04,519
wondering if this was gonna be the night
1516
01:23:04,618 --> 01:23:06,618
I was gonna have the guts to do it.
1517
01:23:08,353 --> 01:23:10,495
I'd had a round chambered, and
I'd taken the safety off.
1518
01:23:10,519 --> 01:23:12,818
Same kind of pistol I carried in Vietnam.
1519
01:23:15,418 --> 01:23:18,752
And I thought, "I'm really
gonna do it tonight."
1520
01:23:18,853 --> 01:23:22,653
You know, like, "Whew, I'm
really gonna do it," you know.
1521
01:23:22,752 --> 01:23:24,685
And my dogs... I'd let my dogs out.
1522
01:23:24,786 --> 01:23:26,318
I had two dogs.
1523
01:23:26,418 --> 01:23:27,952
And they jumped on the front door
1524
01:23:28,053 --> 01:23:29,354
and scratched on the front door.
1525
01:23:29,453 --> 01:23:31,220
They wanted in.
1526
01:23:31,319 --> 01:23:32,496
And I put the safety back on the pistol
1527
01:23:32,520 --> 01:23:34,287
and set it down and went and let 'em in.
1528
01:23:36,119 --> 01:23:38,787
And they were so open in their love for me
1529
01:23:38,886 --> 01:23:40,554
that I literally said out loud,
1530
01:23:40,654 --> 01:23:45,819
"Whoa, if I really want to do
this, I can do this tomorrow."
1531
01:23:45,919 --> 01:23:47,220
And I went back in the room,
1532
01:23:47,319 --> 01:23:49,186
and I put the pistol in the drawer, and...
1533
01:23:49,287 --> 01:23:52,220
and I... I think that
was the closest I came.
1534
01:23:52,319 --> 01:23:53,953
I think maybe I would have killed...
1535
01:23:54,054 --> 01:23:56,287
k-k-killed myself that night.
1536
01:23:56,386 --> 01:23:57,753
But something as simple
1537
01:23:57,854 --> 01:24:00,354
as my dogs wanting back in...
1538
01:24:00,453 --> 01:24:03,721
stopped that thought, you know.
1539
01:24:06,454 --> 01:24:09,454
I'm really glad that it didn't happen.
1540
01:24:09,555 --> 01:24:12,788
But at the time, it just
made so much sense.
1541
01:24:17,655 --> 01:24:19,588
NARRATOR: Richard Nixon's troop withdrawals
1542
01:24:19,687 --> 01:24:22,887
finally turned Musgrave against the war.
1543
01:24:22,987 --> 01:24:25,721
"If it ain't worth winning," he said,
1544
01:24:25,820 --> 01:24:28,120
"it ain't worth dying for."
1545
01:24:28,221 --> 01:24:30,820
His loyalty to the Marines
1546
01:24:30,920 --> 01:24:33,789
would not yet let him openly say that,
1547
01:24:33,888 --> 01:24:36,356
but he told a campus antiwar meeting
1548
01:24:36,455 --> 01:24:39,289
that they should stop acting
as if they didn't give a damn
1549
01:24:39,388 --> 01:24:42,188
about the men who had been asked to fight,
1550
01:24:42,289 --> 01:24:44,621
and received a standing ovation.
1551
01:24:48,856 --> 01:24:51,188
JACK TODD: The turning
point for me, I think,
1552
01:24:51,289 --> 01:24:54,289
was one evening I spent with
my friend Sonny Walter,
1553
01:24:54,388 --> 01:24:56,921
who had been, uh... just been
discharged from the Army,
1554
01:24:57,022 --> 01:24:59,589
and had come home and spent an evening
1555
01:24:59,688 --> 01:25:02,289
before I went in pleading
with me not to go.
1556
01:25:02,388 --> 01:25:04,955
He even offered to drive me to Canada.
1557
01:25:05,056 --> 01:25:07,622
He was showing me some
horrible pictures of Vietnam
1558
01:25:07,723 --> 01:25:09,456
from his own service there.
1559
01:25:11,357 --> 01:25:13,357
I think everything that happened after it
1560
01:25:13,456 --> 01:25:14,989
had its seeds in that evening.
1561
01:25:15,090 --> 01:25:17,090
("The Thrill is Gone" by B.B. King playing)
1562
01:25:17,189 --> 01:25:20,489
NARRATOR: While attending
the University of Nebraska,
1563
01:25:20,590 --> 01:25:24,389
Jack Todd had undergone
Marine officer training,
1564
01:25:24,489 --> 01:25:27,889
but bad knees had forced him to drop out
1565
01:25:27,989 --> 01:25:30,057
and he believed that exempted him
1566
01:25:30,157 --> 01:25:32,723
from having to take part in a war
1567
01:25:32,822 --> 01:25:35,389
he had come to see as immoral.
1568
01:25:35,489 --> 01:25:39,558
He began work as a reporter
onThe Miami Herald.
1569
01:25:39,658 --> 01:25:44,291
But in the autumn of 1969
he received a draft notice
1570
01:25:44,390 --> 01:25:46,658
from the Army anyway.
1571
01:25:46,757 --> 01:25:48,123
KING: ♪ The thrill is gone
1572
01:25:48,224 --> 01:25:49,591
TODD: So I went into my physical
1573
01:25:49,690 --> 01:25:51,770
and I showed them my discharge
from the Marine Corps
1574
01:25:51,823 --> 01:25:53,524
and I actually remember a sergeant,
1575
01:25:53,623 --> 01:25:55,034
or whoever I was talking to, saying,
1576
01:25:55,058 --> 01:25:57,224
"But, uh, you were discharged
from an officer program.
1577
01:25:57,323 --> 01:25:58,791
We're drafting you as a private."
1578
01:25:58,890 --> 01:26:00,957
(electric buzzing)
1579
01:26:01,058 --> 01:26:03,490
NARRATOR: In late November 1969,
1580
01:26:03,591 --> 01:26:07,923
Todd reported for basic training
at Fort Lewis, Washington.
1581
01:26:08,024 --> 01:26:09,957
KING: ♪ You know you done me wrong
1582
01:26:10,058 --> 01:26:12,025
TODD: Morale just could
not have been worse.
1583
01:26:12,124 --> 01:26:13,991
And-and it seemed to include
1584
01:26:14,092 --> 01:26:16,924
even the sergeants and the officers.
1585
01:26:17,025 --> 01:26:20,924
Nobody wanted to go. Nobody wanted to go.
1586
01:26:21,025 --> 01:26:24,359
America just seemed to have
shifted from the Woodstock high
1587
01:26:24,458 --> 01:26:25,559
of the summer to this...
1588
01:26:25,659 --> 01:26:28,824
this sort of bitter Nixonian low.
1589
01:26:28,924 --> 01:26:32,292
NARRATOR: Jack Todd and
another member of his unit
1590
01:26:32,391 --> 01:26:35,359
began to talk at night about what it meant
1591
01:26:35,458 --> 01:26:37,025
to be true to one's conscience.
1592
01:26:37,124 --> 01:26:39,025
("Farewell, Angelina" by Bob Dylan playing)
1593
01:26:41,258 --> 01:26:43,659
Some 170,000 men
1594
01:26:43,758 --> 01:26:46,093
were granted conscientious objector status
1595
01:26:46,192 --> 01:26:48,692
during the Vietnam era.
1596
01:26:48,793 --> 01:26:50,492
But because Jack Todd
1597
01:26:50,593 --> 01:26:52,793
questioned the existence of God,
1598
01:26:52,892 --> 01:26:56,560
that avenue was closed to him.
1599
01:26:56,660 --> 01:26:57,925
There were really two choices.
1600
01:26:58,026 --> 01:26:59,793
It was go to jail or go to Canada.
1601
01:26:59,892 --> 01:27:02,425
And, for me, going to jail was just...
1602
01:27:02,526 --> 01:27:04,425
That one, I couldn't face.
1603
01:27:04,526 --> 01:27:06,425
So I went to Canada.
1604
01:27:06,526 --> 01:27:10,226
DYLAN: ♪ Farewell, Angelina
1605
01:27:10,325 --> 01:27:14,259
♪ The bells of the crown
1606
01:27:14,360 --> 01:27:16,527
TODD: I remember that last beautiful drive,
1607
01:27:16,626 --> 01:27:19,161
from Seattle to Vancouver,
1608
01:27:19,260 --> 01:27:23,794
all the towering Douglas
firs along the road.
1609
01:27:23,893 --> 01:27:26,094
And I remember, after
we crossed the border...
1610
01:27:26,193 --> 01:27:28,693
it was a breeze, they just
sort of waved us through...
1611
01:27:28,794 --> 01:27:30,926
and just looking in the
rearview mirror, thinking,
1612
01:27:31,027 --> 01:27:32,294
"Man, there goes my country.
1613
01:27:32,393 --> 01:27:35,426
I'll never see it again."
1614
01:27:35,527 --> 01:27:38,626
DYLAN: ♪ But farewell, Angelina
1615
01:27:38,727 --> 01:27:41,960
♪ The night is on fire
1616
01:27:42,061 --> 01:27:43,960
♪ And I must go
1617
01:27:46,361 --> 01:27:48,993
I get called a coward all the time.
1618
01:27:49,095 --> 01:27:52,194
It took me a long time
1619
01:27:52,295 --> 01:27:54,761
not to feel that what I had done
1620
01:27:54,862 --> 01:27:57,461
was-was cowardly, because I still had
1621
01:27:57,562 --> 01:28:01,028
that military ingrained feeling inside.
1622
01:28:02,627 --> 01:28:05,728
That was the bravest thing I ever did.
1623
01:28:05,827 --> 01:28:07,827
It was the bravest thing I ever did.
1624
01:28:10,595 --> 01:28:14,194
NARRATOR: Jack Todd eventually
found work as a reporter,
1625
01:28:14,295 --> 01:28:17,295
which allowed him to gain
"landed immigrant status,"
1626
01:28:17,394 --> 01:28:20,728
a step toward Canadian citizenship.
1627
01:28:20,827 --> 01:28:25,328
Only a quarter of the
estimated 30,000 Americans
1628
01:28:25,428 --> 01:28:28,262
who crossed into Canada managed to do so.
1629
01:28:28,363 --> 01:28:30,596
DYLAN: ♪ The sky is erupting
1630
01:28:30,695 --> 01:28:34,395
♪ And I must go where it is quiet. ♪
1631
01:28:34,495 --> 01:28:37,695
NARRATOR: At the same time,
some 30,000 Canadians
1632
01:28:37,796 --> 01:28:41,262
would volunteer to fight in Vietnam.
1633
01:28:54,763 --> 01:28:56,329
(birds chirping in distance)
1634
01:29:00,097 --> 01:29:03,396
KUSHNER: I thought about...
1635
01:29:03,496 --> 01:29:05,463
my parents and my siblings
1636
01:29:05,564 --> 01:29:09,196
and my wife and my little girl.
1637
01:29:09,297 --> 01:29:12,730
And one of the things that
bothered me, is that I...
1638
01:29:12,829 --> 01:29:17,530
I couldn't really remember what
they looked like after a while.
1639
01:29:17,629 --> 01:29:19,996
I remembered what their
pictures looked like.
1640
01:29:20,097 --> 01:29:24,496
And when I imaged them in my mind's eye
1641
01:29:24,597 --> 01:29:28,065
I would image a picture, a photograph.
1642
01:29:30,731 --> 01:29:32,106
REPORTER: Valerie Kushner arrived on the...
1643
01:29:32,130 --> 01:29:34,231
NARRATOR: Hal Kushner's wife, Valerie,
1644
01:29:34,330 --> 01:29:36,430
had heard virtually nothing of her husband
1645
01:29:36,531 --> 01:29:40,231
since his capture by the Viet Cong in 1967,
1646
01:29:40,330 --> 01:29:42,964
and she had traveled to the Far East
1647
01:29:43,065 --> 01:29:45,430
to try to improve conditions for him.
1648
01:29:45,531 --> 01:29:48,830
I think my period of greatest frustration
1649
01:29:48,930 --> 01:29:51,830
was just before and just
after the birth of our son.
1650
01:29:51,930 --> 01:29:54,497
He was born in April of 1968
1651
01:29:54,598 --> 01:29:58,464
and my husband was captured
in November of 1967.
1652
01:29:58,565 --> 01:30:02,398
So my husband does not
yet know of his birth.
1653
01:30:02,498 --> 01:30:04,738
DON FARMER: With their father
gone, the Kushner children
1654
01:30:04,765 --> 01:30:07,866
rely heavily on their mother
and their grandparents.
1655
01:30:07,965 --> 01:30:09,445
Young Mike has never seen his father,
1656
01:30:09,532 --> 01:30:11,866
but six-year-old Toni-Jean remembers.
1657
01:30:11,965 --> 01:30:13,498
And the remembrances of Major Kushner
1658
01:30:13,599 --> 01:30:15,265
are everywhere in their house.
1659
01:30:15,366 --> 01:30:17,465
Toni, however, knows only that he's away,
1660
01:30:17,566 --> 01:30:19,275
that he's been captured,
that grandfather fills in
1661
01:30:19,299 --> 01:30:20,566
until Dad comes home.
1662
01:30:20,666 --> 01:30:24,532
The Kushners worry, but they do not grieve.
1663
01:30:24,631 --> 01:30:26,599
Don Farmer, ABC News, reporting.
1664
01:30:29,465 --> 01:30:31,366
(siren wailing in distance)
1665
01:30:33,499 --> 01:30:35,600
NARRATOR: In February 1970,
1666
01:30:35,699 --> 01:30:38,832
in a house in an industrial
suburb of Paris,
1667
01:30:38,932 --> 01:30:41,432
Henry Kissinger began a new series
1668
01:30:41,533 --> 01:30:44,999
of secret negotiations... talks so secret
1669
01:30:45,100 --> 01:30:49,266
even the secretary of state
was not told about them.
1670
01:30:49,367 --> 01:30:51,399
His negotiating partner
1671
01:30:51,499 --> 01:30:55,233
would be Le Duan's close
political ally, Le Duc Tho,
1672
01:30:55,332 --> 01:30:58,867
a veteran of 40 years of
revolutionary warfare
1673
01:30:58,966 --> 01:31:02,800
and party intrigue... shrewd, implacable,
1674
01:31:02,899 --> 01:31:06,601
and openly scornful of Vietnamization.
1675
01:31:06,700 --> 01:31:09,368
If the United States could not win
1676
01:31:09,467 --> 01:31:12,668
with half a million of its own
troops, he asked Kissinger,
1677
01:31:12,767 --> 01:31:15,433
"How can you succeed when
you let your puppet troops
1678
01:31:15,534 --> 01:31:17,833
do the fighting?"
1679
01:31:17,933 --> 01:31:21,133
The American admitted he had no answer.
1680
01:31:26,900 --> 01:31:29,101
Despite the impasse in Paris,
1681
01:31:29,200 --> 01:31:32,801
Nixon's first year had been a triumph.
1682
01:31:32,900 --> 01:31:38,968
He had withdrawn 115,000
troops from Vietnam.
1683
01:31:40,302 --> 01:31:43,501
American casualty figures were down.
1684
01:31:43,602 --> 01:31:46,169
Reduced draft calls
1685
01:31:46,268 --> 01:31:48,401
and the president's new lottery system
1686
01:31:48,501 --> 01:31:51,569
had blunted some opposition to the war.
1687
01:31:54,434 --> 01:31:56,901
And the violent actions
of some revolutionaries
1688
01:31:57,001 --> 01:32:00,602
were tarnishing the antiwar cause itself.
1689
01:32:00,701 --> 01:32:04,569
Between September 1969 and May 1970,
1690
01:32:04,669 --> 01:32:07,268
there would be hundreds of bombings...
1691
01:32:07,369 --> 01:32:09,201
banks and courthouses,
1692
01:32:09,302 --> 01:32:12,469
induction centers and ROTC buildings.
1693
01:32:12,570 --> 01:32:14,512
("Psychedelic Shack" by The
Temptations starts playing)
1694
01:32:14,536 --> 01:32:16,435
One police officer was killed.
1695
01:32:17,670 --> 01:32:19,070
Three would-be bombers
1696
01:32:19,170 --> 01:32:22,870
accidentally blew themselves
up in Greenwich Village.
1697
01:32:22,969 --> 01:32:25,135
TEMPTATIONS: ♪ Well, well
1698
01:32:25,236 --> 01:32:29,170
NANCY BIBERMAN: The antiwar
movement split apart.
1699
01:32:29,269 --> 01:32:32,036
And there were people who
felt that the only way
1700
01:32:32,135 --> 01:32:35,870
we were ever gonna end the war
was by becoming more violent.
1701
01:32:35,969 --> 01:32:38,803
You know, that we had to match
violence with violence.
1702
01:32:38,902 --> 01:32:43,636
How that was gonna happen
wasn't spoken about openly.
1703
01:32:43,737 --> 01:32:46,371
But there was just this undercurrent.
1704
01:32:46,470 --> 01:32:48,737
This is a plumbing pipe
1705
01:32:48,836 --> 01:32:52,270
completely full of gunpowder.
1706
01:32:52,371 --> 01:32:54,580
TEMPTATIONS: ♪ Music so high
you can't get over it ♪
1707
01:32:54,604 --> 01:32:57,003
NIXON: My fellow Americans,
1708
01:32:57,104 --> 01:32:59,671
we live in an age of anarchy,
1709
01:32:59,770 --> 01:33:02,304
both abroad and at home.
1710
01:33:03,804 --> 01:33:08,770
We see mindless attacks on
all the great institutions,
1711
01:33:08,871 --> 01:33:11,237
which have been created
by free civilizations
1712
01:33:11,336 --> 01:33:14,003
in the last 500 years.
1713
01:33:15,372 --> 01:33:17,504
Even here in the United States,
1714
01:33:17,605 --> 01:33:21,204
great universities are being
systematically destroyed.
1715
01:33:25,238 --> 01:33:27,971
If, when the chips are down,
1716
01:33:28,072 --> 01:33:30,572
the world's most powerful nation,
1717
01:33:30,672 --> 01:33:32,372
the United States of America,
1718
01:33:32,471 --> 01:33:37,337
acts like a pitiful, helpless giant,
1719
01:33:37,437 --> 01:33:41,137
the forces of totalitarianism and anarchy
1720
01:33:41,238 --> 01:33:43,904
will threaten free nations
and free institutions
1721
01:33:44,004 --> 01:33:45,572
throughout the world.
1722
01:33:45,672 --> 01:33:49,638
NARRATOR: On April 30, 1970,
1723
01:33:49,739 --> 01:33:51,505
President Nixon shocked the world
1724
01:33:51,606 --> 01:33:54,673
by announcing that he had
sent 30,000 American troops
1725
01:33:54,772 --> 01:33:58,405
storming into Cambodia.
1726
01:33:58,505 --> 01:34:01,573
The previous month, Prince Norodom Sihanouk
1727
01:34:01,673 --> 01:34:03,873
had been overthrown in a coup.
1728
01:34:03,972 --> 01:34:06,306
For years, he had allowed
the North Vietnamese
1729
01:34:06,405 --> 01:34:08,972
to keep sanctuaries in his country,
1730
01:34:09,073 --> 01:34:11,005
but he had not protested
1731
01:34:11,106 --> 01:34:14,606
when American planes bombed them.
1732
01:34:14,705 --> 01:34:17,306
The new president, Lon Nol,
1733
01:34:17,405 --> 01:34:21,273
was an anticommunist, backed
by the United States.
1734
01:34:21,374 --> 01:34:23,674
Nixon now felt he could do
1735
01:34:23,773 --> 01:34:27,406
what American generals had
been wanting to do for years...
1736
01:34:27,506 --> 01:34:31,273
pursue the enemy beyond the
borders of South Vietnam.
1737
01:34:32,773 --> 01:34:35,607
The 30,000 American troops
1738
01:34:35,706 --> 01:34:40,874
were joined by 50,000 ARVN soldiers.
1739
01:34:40,973 --> 01:34:42,906
The objective was to attack
1740
01:34:43,006 --> 01:34:45,674
North Vietnamese base
camps and supply lines
1741
01:34:45,773 --> 01:34:48,973
and to buy time for the
South Vietnamese Army
1742
01:34:49,074 --> 01:34:51,473
as it got ready to fight on its own.
1743
01:34:53,474 --> 01:34:55,741
Nixon told the public
1744
01:34:55,840 --> 01:34:59,407
he had ordered an "incursion,"
not an "invasion,"
1745
01:34:59,507 --> 01:35:04,041
intended only to protect
American boys in South Vietnam
1746
01:35:04,140 --> 01:35:08,308
and in response to North
Vietnamese "aggression."
1747
01:35:11,207 --> 01:35:15,075
GILLAM: I wasn't worried
about political conflict.
1748
01:35:15,175 --> 01:35:17,808
I was worried about, "Am I gonna be alive
1749
01:35:17,907 --> 01:35:19,375
in the next ten minutes?"
1750
01:35:20,974 --> 01:35:24,308
We were on the Western
edge of the invasion.
1751
01:35:24,407 --> 01:35:27,676
We went as far as anybody went in Cambodia.
1752
01:35:27,775 --> 01:35:28,941
(gunfire)
1753
01:35:29,042 --> 01:35:30,441
And it was a hot LZ.
1754
01:35:30,542 --> 01:35:35,242
I got holes shot in my backpack.
1755
01:35:35,341 --> 01:35:36,742
I was laying on my face
1756
01:35:36,841 --> 01:35:38,975
and they were shooting
holes in my backpack,
1757
01:35:39,076 --> 01:35:42,042
which means they missed my
head by maybe four inches.
1758
01:35:43,941 --> 01:35:47,275
I really didn't think I would
see the end of that week.
1759
01:35:47,376 --> 01:35:49,542
(gunfire)
1760
01:35:49,641 --> 01:35:51,542
(indistinct chatter on radio)
1761
01:35:53,676 --> 01:35:57,208
NARRATOR: The sight of American
troops crossing the border
1762
01:35:57,309 --> 01:36:01,243
into Cambodia reignited
the antiwar movement.
1763
01:36:01,342 --> 01:36:02,543
Come on, let's go!
1764
01:36:02,642 --> 01:36:04,743
NARRATOR: If the troops were coming home,
1765
01:36:04,842 --> 01:36:06,877
if the war was winding down,
1766
01:36:06,976 --> 01:36:10,877
why had Nixon decided to widen it?
1767
01:36:10,976 --> 01:36:13,776
How could invading another country
1768
01:36:13,877 --> 01:36:17,743
help bring peace to Southeast Asia?
1769
01:36:17,842 --> 01:36:19,543
HUNTLEY: The reaction on the campuses
1770
01:36:19,642 --> 01:36:21,142
was swift and predictable.
1771
01:36:21,243 --> 01:36:22,842
The students and many of their teachers
1772
01:36:22,942 --> 01:36:24,442
were against the president.
1773
01:36:24,543 --> 01:36:27,709
Princeton students called for
a nationwide student strike.
1774
01:36:27,810 --> 01:36:31,510
Antiwar rallies were planned
at Harvard, MIT, Indiana,
1775
01:36:31,611 --> 01:36:33,744
Purdue Universities and other colleges.
1776
01:36:39,010 --> 01:36:42,244
NARRATOR: On Monday morning, May 4, 1970,
1777
01:36:42,343 --> 01:36:44,843
some 2,000 students gathered on the commons
1778
01:36:44,943 --> 01:36:48,710
at Kent State University in Kent, Ohio.
1779
01:36:48,811 --> 01:36:52,544
Some were simply moving
from class to class.
1780
01:36:52,643 --> 01:36:56,044
Others planned to attend a
rally called to protest
1781
01:36:56,143 --> 01:36:58,744
Nixon's widening of the war
1782
01:36:58,843 --> 01:37:04,612
and the presence of the Ohio
National Guard on campus.
1783
01:37:04,711 --> 01:37:07,745
Governor James Rhodes had
called in the guardsmen
1784
01:37:07,844 --> 01:37:09,211
two days earlier
1785
01:37:09,312 --> 01:37:14,778
after a mob set the old
wooden ROTC building on fire
1786
01:37:14,879 --> 01:37:16,778
and then prevented the fire department
1787
01:37:16,879 --> 01:37:19,245
from putting out the flames.
1788
01:37:22,211 --> 01:37:26,245
Rhodes had compared protestors
to Nazi brownshirts
1789
01:37:26,344 --> 01:37:29,778
and promised to use "every
weapon to eradicate
1790
01:37:29,879 --> 01:37:34,112
the worst sort of people
we harbor in America."
1791
01:37:34,211 --> 01:37:36,113
(bell clanging)
1792
01:37:38,746 --> 01:37:43,979
The guardsmen's weapons were
loaded with live ammunition,
1793
01:37:44,080 --> 01:37:45,813
though no one in the crowd knew it.
1794
01:37:45,912 --> 01:37:49,080
MAN: Why do you have to have a gun?!
I don't understand!
1795
01:37:49,180 --> 01:37:52,046
MAN (on megaphone): Leave
this area immediately!
1796
01:37:52,145 --> 01:37:55,912
NARRATOR: The students
were ordered to disperse.
1797
01:37:56,012 --> 01:37:57,645
They stood their ground.
1798
01:37:57,746 --> 01:37:59,645
(shouting)
1799
01:38:03,746 --> 01:38:06,912
Tear gas scattered some of them.
1800
01:38:07,012 --> 01:38:08,913
(shouting)
1801
01:38:26,181 --> 01:38:30,047
The guardsmen seemed to fall back.
1802
01:38:30,146 --> 01:38:34,247
But then members of Troop G
wheeled around and opened fire
1803
01:38:34,346 --> 01:38:38,381
on students gathered in
and around a parking lot.
1804
01:38:40,381 --> 01:38:43,182
(distorted gunshots echoing)
1805
01:39:09,847 --> 01:39:12,014
PROTESTOR: Somebody call for an ambulance!
1806
01:39:12,115 --> 01:39:13,683
(others shouting)
1807
01:39:13,782 --> 01:39:16,749
There's people dying down here!
Get an ambulance up here!
1808
01:39:16,848 --> 01:39:18,749
(indistinct shouting)
1809
01:39:23,415 --> 01:39:26,782
NARRATOR: 67 rounds in 13 seconds
1810
01:39:26,883 --> 01:39:31,282
killed two young women and two young men...
1811
01:39:34,183 --> 01:39:37,348
Including an ROTC scholarship student
1812
01:39:37,448 --> 01:39:39,915
who had simply been an onlooker.
1813
01:39:45,616 --> 01:39:50,317
SAM HYNES: That dead child on the ground
1814
01:39:50,416 --> 01:39:53,716
was one of ours.
1815
01:39:53,817 --> 01:39:57,117
If we could kill our own students,
1816
01:39:57,216 --> 01:40:02,317
uh, what had happened to our country?
1817
01:40:04,416 --> 01:40:07,283
NARRATOR: Nine more students were wounded,
1818
01:40:07,384 --> 01:40:11,349
one of whom was permanently paralyzed.
1819
01:40:23,717 --> 01:40:28,085
Several hundred angry,
grieving students sat down
1820
01:40:28,185 --> 01:40:30,217
and demanded to know why the guardsmen
1821
01:40:30,318 --> 01:40:32,217
had fired on their friends.
1822
01:40:35,717 --> 01:40:38,551
MAN: Sir, you've got a
couple hundred students...
1823
01:40:38,650 --> 01:40:40,017
NARRATOR: An officer ordered them
1824
01:40:40,118 --> 01:40:41,885
to "disperse or we will shoot again."
1825
01:40:41,984 --> 01:40:44,885
How long will you give us?
You've got five minutes.
1826
01:40:44,984 --> 01:40:47,885
GLENN FRANK: Please listen to me right now!
1827
01:40:47,984 --> 01:40:50,484
NARRATOR: Only the anguished pleas
1828
01:40:50,585 --> 01:40:55,151
of geology professor Glenn
Frank averted further tragedy.
1829
01:40:55,252 --> 01:40:56,951
STUDENT: Talk, Dr. Frank. Talk.
1830
01:41:14,485 --> 01:41:17,619
(indistinct voices)
1831
01:41:22,351 --> 01:41:25,187
MIKE HEANEY: That just symbolized for me
1832
01:41:25,286 --> 01:41:29,152
what this war was doing to our culture.
1833
01:41:29,253 --> 01:41:31,019
These were kids on both sides,
1834
01:41:31,120 --> 01:41:33,887
young National Guard boys
1835
01:41:33,986 --> 01:41:37,253
who had very little training
and probably scared,
1836
01:41:37,352 --> 01:41:39,486
and not well led
1837
01:41:39,587 --> 01:41:41,387
and-and young men and
women on the other side
1838
01:41:41,452 --> 01:41:42,952
protesting the war out there
1839
01:41:43,053 --> 01:41:45,286
for, you know, idealistic reasons.
1840
01:41:45,387 --> 01:41:47,919
And look at what happens
1841
01:41:48,019 --> 01:41:54,053
when we let things get as bad as they got.
1842
01:41:54,152 --> 01:41:55,786
("Woodstock" by Joni Mitchell playing)
1843
01:41:55,887 --> 01:41:58,453
NARRATOR: According to one national poll,
1844
01:41:58,554 --> 01:42:01,321
58% of the American people
1845
01:42:01,420 --> 01:42:04,254
thought the killings justified.
1846
01:42:07,220 --> 01:42:10,453
The parents of the dead ROTC student
1847
01:42:10,554 --> 01:42:13,188
received a flood of hate mail,
1848
01:42:13,287 --> 01:42:16,653
suggesting that they should be
grateful their boy was dead
1849
01:42:16,754 --> 01:42:21,321
since he'd been "just another communist."
1850
01:42:22,453 --> 01:42:26,420
(man speaking indistinctly over megaphone)
1851
01:42:26,520 --> 01:42:30,021
During the days that followed,
all across the country,
1852
01:42:30,122 --> 01:42:32,689
more than four million college students
1853
01:42:32,788 --> 01:42:34,689
demonstrated against the war
1854
01:42:34,788 --> 01:42:37,721
and what had happened at Kent State.
1855
01:42:40,255 --> 01:42:44,221
MITCHELL: ♪ I came upon a child of God
1856
01:42:44,322 --> 01:42:48,822
♪ He was walking along the road ♪
1857
01:42:48,921 --> 01:42:50,788
♪ And I asked him
1858
01:42:50,889 --> 01:42:53,089
♪ Where are you going?
1859
01:42:53,189 --> 01:42:57,055
♪ And this he told me
1860
01:42:57,154 --> 01:43:01,823
NARRATOR: 448 campuses closed down,
1861
01:43:01,922 --> 01:43:07,489
and the National Guard was
called out in 16 states.
1862
01:43:07,590 --> 01:43:08,823
MITCHELL: ♪ Band
1863
01:43:08,922 --> 01:43:10,955
♪ I'm gonna camp out
1864
01:43:11,056 --> 01:43:14,623
NARRATOR: At Jackson State
University in Mississippi,
1865
01:43:14,722 --> 01:43:18,890
state police opened fire on a dormitory.
1866
01:43:18,989 --> 01:43:20,823
Two students died.
1867
01:43:20,922 --> 01:43:23,823
12 more were wounded.
1868
01:43:25,823 --> 01:43:27,855
Jackson State, those were my people.
1869
01:43:27,955 --> 01:43:29,789
Those were black kids.
1870
01:43:29,890 --> 01:43:32,123
And they died.
1871
01:43:32,222 --> 01:43:35,624
MITCHELL: ♪ Back to the garden
1872
01:43:35,723 --> 01:43:38,023
NARRATOR: Army private Tim O'Brien
1873
01:43:38,124 --> 01:43:41,824
was now back home in Minnesota.
1874
01:43:41,923 --> 01:43:45,391
O'BRIEN: There was a huge march
1875
01:43:45,490 --> 01:43:47,290
after the Kent State shootings in St. Paul,
1876
01:43:47,391 --> 01:43:49,656
and I joined the march.
1877
01:43:49,757 --> 01:43:54,923
I just wanted to put my body
amidst these 100,000 people,
1878
01:43:55,023 --> 01:43:58,191
that word "no" being uttered by
my body, if not by my mouth,
1879
01:43:58,290 --> 01:43:59,691
by just making that march.
1880
01:43:59,790 --> 01:44:03,290
That same march I was doing in Vietnam
1881
01:44:03,391 --> 01:44:05,656
that seemed senseless and purposeless
1882
01:44:05,757 --> 01:44:06,892
and without direction,
1883
01:44:06,991 --> 01:44:09,825
here it felt sensible and purposeful
1884
01:44:09,924 --> 01:44:13,258
and with direction, heading
for that state capital
1885
01:44:13,357 --> 01:44:16,657
to say no.
1886
01:44:16,758 --> 01:44:19,957
And, boy, did it feel good.
1887
01:44:20,058 --> 01:44:21,957
(chanting "Peace now")
1888
01:44:24,892 --> 01:44:26,724
NARRATOR: Marine Corporal Bill Ehrhart
1889
01:44:26,825 --> 01:44:29,258
was a student at Swarthmore College
1890
01:44:29,357 --> 01:44:33,424
near his hometown in eastern Pennsylvania.
1891
01:44:33,524 --> 01:44:37,957
EHRHART: And here's this
very famous photograph.
1892
01:44:38,058 --> 01:44:40,893
And I just looked at this thing.
1893
01:44:45,158 --> 01:44:46,658
And I came unglued.
1894
01:44:48,925 --> 01:44:52,292
I don't know how long I
sat down on the curb,
1895
01:44:52,393 --> 01:44:55,826
and I don't know if I was
there for 15 minutes
1896
01:44:55,925 --> 01:44:57,358
or an hour and a half.
1897
01:44:57,458 --> 01:44:59,693
Just had a breakdown.
1898
01:44:59,792 --> 01:45:03,458
Just crying, sobbing uncontrollably.
1899
01:45:03,559 --> 01:45:05,401
All I could think was, "It's
not enough to send us
1900
01:45:05,425 --> 01:45:07,759
"halfway around the world to die.
1901
01:45:07,858 --> 01:45:10,626
"Now they're killing us in the
streets of our own country.
1902
01:45:10,725 --> 01:45:12,094
I have to do something."
1903
01:45:14,127 --> 01:45:15,260
And I finally...
1904
01:45:15,359 --> 01:45:17,159
whenever I finally cried myself out,
1905
01:45:17,260 --> 01:45:19,726
I got up and I joined the antiwar movement.
1906
01:45:22,993 --> 01:45:27,359
MUSGRAVE: I remember when the
kids were killed at Kent State,
1907
01:45:27,459 --> 01:45:30,159
and I thought,
1908
01:45:30,260 --> 01:45:33,426
"My God, we're killing
our own children now.
1909
01:45:33,526 --> 01:45:35,260
We've really gone mad."
1910
01:45:35,359 --> 01:45:36,659
And I wasn't...
1911
01:45:36,760 --> 01:45:39,659
That's when I was hiding from things.
1912
01:45:39,760 --> 01:45:41,694
I wasn't in anybody's movement then.
1913
01:45:41,793 --> 01:45:43,459
I was just drinking.
1914
01:45:45,561 --> 01:45:50,895
But that was one of the things that told me
1915
01:45:50,994 --> 01:45:53,294
America needed a wake-up call.
1916
01:46:00,328 --> 01:46:03,460
("Ohio" by Crosby, Stills,
Nash & Young playing)
1917
01:46:26,528 --> 01:46:29,361
♪ Tin soldiers and Nixon's coming ♪
1918
01:46:29,461 --> 01:46:32,329
♪ We're finally on our own
1919
01:46:32,428 --> 01:46:35,762
♪ This summer I hear the drumming ♪
1920
01:46:35,861 --> 01:46:39,528
♪ Four dead in Ohio
1921
01:46:39,629 --> 01:46:42,329
♪ Got to get down to it
1922
01:46:42,428 --> 01:46:45,728
♪ Soldiers are cutting us down
1923
01:46:45,829 --> 01:46:49,461
♪ Should have been done long ago ♪
1924
01:46:51,996 --> 01:46:53,563
♪ What if you knew her
1925
01:46:53,662 --> 01:46:57,296
♪ And found her dead on the ground? ♪
1926
01:46:57,397 --> 01:47:01,496
♪ How can you run when you know? ♪
1927
01:47:01,597 --> 01:47:03,496
♪
1928
01:47:22,530 --> 01:47:24,930
♪ La la-la-la, la la la la ♪
1929
01:47:25,030 --> 01:47:28,797
♪ La la-la-la, la la la ♪
1930
01:47:28,898 --> 01:47:31,898
♪ La la-la-la, la la la la ♪
1931
01:47:31,997 --> 01:47:35,297
♪ La la-la-la, la la la ♪
1932
01:47:35,398 --> 01:47:37,797
♪ Got to get down to it
1933
01:47:37,898 --> 01:47:41,430
♪ Soldiers are cutting us down
1934
01:47:41,530 --> 01:47:45,297
♪ Should have been done long ago ♪
1935
01:47:47,698 --> 01:47:49,698
♪ What if you knew her
1936
01:47:49,797 --> 01:47:53,764
♪ And found her dead on the ground? ♪
1937
01:47:53,863 --> 01:47:57,498
♪ How can you run when you know? ♪
1938
01:47:57,599 --> 01:47:59,498
♪
1939
01:48:17,731 --> 01:48:20,599
♪ Tin soldiers and Nixon's coming ♪
1940
01:48:20,699 --> 01:48:23,798
♪ We're finally on our own
1941
01:48:23,899 --> 01:48:26,798
♪ This summer I hear the drumming ♪
1942
01:48:26,899 --> 01:48:29,266
♪ Four dead in Ohio
1943
01:48:29,365 --> 01:48:32,432
♪ Four dead in Ohio ♪ Four
1944
01:48:32,532 --> 01:48:34,700
♪ Four dead in Ohio
1945
01:48:34,799 --> 01:48:37,633
♪ Four ♪ Four dead in Ohio
1946
01:48:37,732 --> 01:48:40,299
♪ How could they? ♪ Four dead in Ohio
1947
01:48:40,400 --> 01:48:43,499
♪ How many more? ♪ Four dead in Ohio
1948
01:48:43,600 --> 01:48:48,066
♪ Why? ♪ Four dead in...
149879
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