John Pilger previously commented on Ken Burns' documentary about the Vietnam War. You can read about it here:
http://sainthoward.blogspot.com/2017/09/ken-burns-vietnam-extravaganza.html
Now comes Nick Turse with another thoughtful review:
War is not combat, though combat is a part of war. Combatants are not the main participants in modern war. Modern war affects civilians far more and far longer than combatants. Most American soldiers and Marines spent 12 or 13 months, respectively, serving in Vietnam. Vietnamese from what was once South Vietnam, in provinces like Quang Nam, Quang Ngai, Binh Dinh, as well as those of the Mekong Delta – rural population centers that were also hotbeds of the revolution — lived the war week after week, month after month, year after year, from one decade into the next. Burns and Novick seem to have mostly missed these people, missed their stories, and, consequently, missed the dark heart of the conflict.
To deprive their Vietnamese enemies of food, recruits, intelligence, and other support, American command policy turned large swathes of those provinces into “free fire zones,” subject to intense bombing and artillery shelling, that was expressly designed to “generate” refugees, driving people from their homes in the name of “pacification.” Houses were set ablaze, whole villages were bulldozed, and people were forced into squalid refugee camps and filthy urban slums short of water, food, and shelter.
You can read the rest @
https://theintercept.com/2017/09/28/the-ken-burns-vietnam-war-documentary-glosses-over-devastating-civilian-toll/
I served in the Army during the Vietnam War but never made it over there. Believe it or not, it's something I regret ... since I now have no idea what the war really was like.
But if I had to bet, I'd put money on Nick Turse being closer to the truth than Ken Burns.
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