• certified_expert@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    As the many fictions necessary to sustain the war were exposed, Nixon and company needed a new approach — and a new lie. In a press conference on May 19, 1969, Defense Secretary Melvin Laird announced the existence of around 1,300 American soldiers now deemed “missing in action,” around half of whom were believed to be prisoners of war. The unaccounted for would now publically be described as “POW/MIA,” implying that any serviceperson missing in Vietnam could also be a prisoner of war. This transformed the war from a political issue into a humanitarian one, trading public support for sympathy. It didn’t matter why we were there in the first place: our boys were there, and by God were we going to do anything to get our boys home.

  • zip@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    2 days ago

    This was a great article. Thank you for sharing it with us! It sounds like the author and I had similar upbringings, and then similar journeys of un-learning what we were taught, realizing what was and wasn’t true, etc. This article put a lot of things into words that I’m not quite able to.