Vietnam veteran

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Vietnam veteran is a phrase used to describe someone who served in the armed forces of participating countries during the Vietnam War. The term has been used to describe veterans who were in the armed forces of South Vietnam, the United States armed forces, and countries allied to them, whether or not they were actually stationed in Vietnam during their service. However, the more common usage distinguishes between those who served "in country" and those who did not actually serve in Vietnam by referring to the "in country" veterans as "Vietnam veterans" and the others as "Vietnam era veterans." The U.S. government officially refers to all as "Vietnam era veterans."[1]

In the English-speaking world, the term "Vietnam veteran" is not usually used in relation to members of the communist People's Army of Vietnam or the Viet Cong.

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[edit] South Vietnamese veterans

Although exact numbers are difficult to ascertain, it is safe to say that several million people served in the South Vietnamese armed forces, the vast majority of them in the Army of the Republic of Vietnam (ARVN)—between 1956 and 1975. It is known that during 19691971, there were about 22,000 ARVN combat deaths per year and the army reached a peak strength of about one million soldiers during 1972. The official number of anti-communist Vietnamese personnel killed in action was 220,357.

Following the communist victory on April 30, 1975, South Vietnamese veterans were rounded up and sent to reeducation camps, essentially forced labor camps in desolate areas. They were detained without trial for up to decades at a time. After being released, they and their children faced significant discrimination from the communist government. A significant proportion of the surviving South Vietnamese veterans left Vietnam for Western countries, either as boat people or through the Humanitarian Operation (HO).

[edit] United States veterans

According to the U.S. Department of Labor, the Vietnam Era Veterans' Readjustment Assistance Act (VEVRAA) of 1974 states, "A Vietnam era veteran is a person who

  1. served on active duty for a period of more than 180 days, any part of which occurred between August 5, 1964 and May 7, 1975, and was discharged or released with other than a dishonorable discharge; such as K. Addams,1950
  2. was discharged or released from active duty for a service connected disability if any part of such active duty was performed between August 5, 1964 and May 7, 1975; such as R. Barker, 1948 or
  3. served on active duty for more than 180 days and served in the Republic of Vietnam between February 28, 1961 and May 7, 1975; such as J. Lee, 1951." [1]

More than 58,000 US personnel died as a result of the conflict. [2] This comprises deaths from all categories including deaths while missing, captured, non-hostile deaths, homicides, and suicides. The US Department of Veterans Affairs recognizes veterans that served in the country then known as the Republic of Vietnam from February 28, 1961 to May 7, 1975, as being eligible for such programs as the department's Readjustment Counseling Services program (aka Vet Centers)

[edit] Veterans from other nations

Nationals of other nations fought in the American-led coalition, sometimes as armed forces of allied nations, such as Australia and South Korea, but sometimes as members of the US armed forces.

Some foreign nationals volunteered for the US military, but many more were US permanent residents, who were subject to the draft, if they were male, of draft age, and not otherwise deferred or exempt from service.

[edit] South Korean veterans

South Koreans forces at their peak were approximately one-tenth of US forces; by extrapolation that would indicate 250,000 South Koreans served in-country.

[edit] Australian veterans

Australia was directly engaged in the Vietnam as an US ally. Approximately 59,000 Australians served in Vietnam. According to official statistics, 554 personnel died or went missing in action during the Vietnam war. 2400 Australians were wounded.

[edit] New Zealand veterans

Initially, in May 1965, New Zealand provided one 4 gun artillery battery (140 men) with two rifle companies of infantry, designated Victor and Whiskey companies, and an SAS troop arriving later. The New Zealanders operated in Military Region 3 with the Australian forces as part of the ANZAC task force (brigade)based in Nui Dat in Phuoc Thuy Province, North East of Saigon. Even at the height of New Zealand involvement in 1968, the force was only 580 men. New Zealand's total contribution numbered approximately 4,000 personnel. 37 were killed and 187 were wounded. To 2007, no memorial has been erected to remember these casualties.

As a footnote; Much conjecture has arisen concerning the British SAS fighting in Vietnam. Successive British Governments have repeatedly denied the involvement of British troops anywhere in the Vietnam theatre of operations. These denials are now looking decidedly shabby on two fronts. It is now common knowledge that some Royal Navy surface vessels and Royal Navy personnel were in Vietnam and trained Americans to use the fast attack craft that were used extensively on the Mekong Delta and other inland waterways. The second part is that there is now no doubt that an elite unit of British soldiers fought in Vietnam from 1965 to 1967. It does however seem that this unit was not from the British SAS but an equally well trained and elite unit from the UK. Uncorroborated though compelling evidence gleaned from all sides of the conflict, point to this unit carrying out operations against both Viet Cong irregulars and regular North Vietnamese Army units with a very good record of success. Although this unit was based with the Australian and New Zealand SAS at Nui Dat as well as the joint USA/South Vietnamese base at Bien Hoa, it appears to have been a fully autonomous unit, carrying out its own operations.

There is also considerable hearsay evidence that this unit was involved in the infamous CIA led ‘Operation Phoenix’ campaign, and is credited with over 300 ‘kills’ in ‘Operation Phoenix’ during their time in Vietnam. There is also anecdotal evidence that they had their own HQ in Saigon which was blown up by a Viet Cong truck bomb. The reasons for the unit vanishing from the Vietnam theatre are unclear but compelling evidence and more than one unidentified source have given the following scenario. Towards the end of June 1967, a SLAM operation was carried out somewhere south of Khe Sahn in the A Shau Valley close to the Ho Chi Minh trail. This was a joint Marine, Paratroop and British operation. Figures are unclear but tentatively given as 60 – 70 British soldiers and 300 or so mixed US Marines and Paratroopers under the Command of a Special Operations Officer. All the unconfirmed evidence points to there having been a pitched battle for 5 days and nights between the Allied soldiers and North Vietnamese Army Units. These are believed to have been the 7th Division and the 12th Division, totaling some 7000 men. There are also believed to have been Viet Cong irregulars involved as well although numbers are unknown. Unverified but compelling facts are that when re-enforcements finally managed to reach the beleaguered defenders, it was to find thousands of dead and dying Vietnamese, all suffering from horrific wounds and only 25 wounded and shocked Allied survivors including 3 British soldiers, one of whom had taken command when the American C.O. had been killed. It appears that the Allied soldiers had fought vicious and barbaric hand to hand battles throughout the 5 days and nights. The survivors were airlifted to Mitchell Hospital Saigon and all the re-enforcements told to forget what they’d seen. What is not in dispute is that after June 1967, North Vietnam’s 7th and 12th Divisions were never seen again in action anywhere in either North or South Vietnam. The details of this operation appear to have been covered up by American, British and even the North Vietnamese themselves. Although not proof positive, we believe that this corroborates the evidence of British troops fighting in Vietnam[citation needed].

[edit] Canadian veterans

During the Vietnam era, more than 30,000 Canadians served in the US armed forces. Fred Graffen, military historian with the Canadian War Museum, estimated in Vietnam Magazine (Perspectives) that approximately 12,000 of these personnel actually served in Vietnam. Most of these were natives of Canada who lived in the United States. The military of Canada did not officially participate in the war effort, as it was appointed to the UN truce commissions and thus had to remain officially neutral in the conflict.

110 Canadians died in Vietnam and seven are listed as missing in action.

The numbers of draft US conscientious objectors, draft dodgers and deserters that went to Canada is estimated to be between 30,000 and 70,000 by most authorities.

[edit] Negative stereotypes of Vietnam veterans and efforts to overcome

There are persistent stereotypes about Vietnam veterans as psychologically devastated, bitter, homeless, drug-addicted people who had a hard time readjusting to society, primarily due to the uniquely divisive nature of the Vietnam War in the context of U.S. History.

That social division has expressed itself by the lack both of public and institutional support for the former soldiers expected by returning combatants of most conflicts in most nations. In a material sense also, veterans' benefits for Vietnam era veterans were dramatically less than those enjoyed after World War II. The Vietnam Era Veterans' Readjustment Assistance Act of 1974, as amended, 38 U.S.C. § 4212, was meant to try and help the veterans overcome this.

In 1979, Public Law 96-22 established the first Vet Centers [1], after a decade of effort by combat vets and others who realized the Vietnam veterans in America and elsewhere (including Australia) were facing specific kinds of readjustment problems. Those problems would later become identified as post-traumatic stress disorder.

In the early days, most Vet Center staffers were Vietnam veterans themselves, many of them combat veterans. One of those first Vet Center directors was G. Robert Baker, a disabled Vietnam combat veteran. He ran the Vet Center in San Diego, CA.

As was typical in the early days of the Vet Center program, directors and staff were mainly Vietnam veterans. At the San Diego Vet Center, for example, staff and counselors included Joan Craigwell (a nurse in Vietnam), Dave Hill, Rick Thomas, Robert Gurney, John Hall, Rob Shepard, Don Williams, and Red Redwine (who worked in Yuma, AZ).

Some representatives of organizations like the Disabled American Veterans (notably Johnny Burns) started advocating for the combat veterans to receive benefits for their war related psychological trauma. Some U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs hospital personnel in Southern California (such as Dan Emer, Dr. John Ditzler, and Barbara Small) also encouraged the veterans working at the Vet Centers to research and expand treatment options for veterans suffering the particular symptoms of this newly recognized syndrome.

This was a controversial time, but eventually, the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs opened Vet Centers nationwide. These centers helped develop many of the debriefing techniques used nowadays with traumatized populations from all walks of life.

The Vietnam veterans who started working in the early Vet Centers eventually began to reach out and serve World War II and Korean vets as well, many of whom had suppressed their own traumas or self-medicated for years.

Veterans, particularly in Southern California, were responsible for many of those early lobbying and subsequent Vet Center treatment programs. Among early pioneers were Vietnam veterans Randy Way, Robert Van Keuren, Jack Lyon and Rev. Bill Mahedy (whose book Out of the Night:The Spiritual Journey of Vietnam Vets [2] dealt with issues deeply affecting many war veterans.) These men founded one of the first local organizations by and for Vietnam veterans in 1981 (now known as Veterans Village [3]). Other veteran clinicians in the earliest years of PTSD treatment included Shad Meshad, Rose Sandeki, Frank Walker, and Jack McCloskey, all of whom helped shape and implement early Vet Center treatment strategies.

Especially instrumental in the growing national effort was therapist Tom Williams, Psy. D. A former Captain of Infantry in the USMC, he edited a ground-breaking book in 1980 entitled Post-Traumatic Stress Disorders of the Vietnam Veteran.[3] Published by the Disabled American Veterans, it helped introduce the "syndrome" of PTSD to the wider community.

Other early influences included John P. Wilson, Ph.D. [4] (author of another early work published by the DAV entitled Forgotten Warrior Project) and Charles Figley, Ph.D. [5] (who wrote early on about impacts suffered by the families of Vietnam veterans and later wrote an important book about counselors entitled "Compassion Fatique: Coping with Secondary Traumatic Stress Disorder in Those Who Treat the Traumatized.")

Vets were also largely responsible for taking debriefing and treatment strategies into the larger community where they were adapted for use in conjunction with populations impacted by violent crime, abuse, manmade and natural disasters, and those in law enforcement and emergency response.

For example, combat veteran G. Robert Baker, Ph.D., participated in training counselors in many of these fields and became a founding board member of the International Association of Trauma Counselors (now called the Association of Traumatic Stress Specialists). Many of the best trained Vietnam era trauma specialists in the world are members of this credentialing and trauma response organization. In 1992, Baker became clinical coordinator of the Veteran Administration's National Center for Post Traumatic Stress Disorder in Menlo Park, CA, where he worked until his retirement.

Other notable organizations that were founded during this period included the International Society for Traumatic Stress Studies [6] and the National Organization for Victim Assistance [7]. These organizations continue to study and/or certify post-traumatic stress disorder responders and clinicians.

Overseas, post-traumatic stress disorder counseling was emerging through the leadership of Vietnam combat veterans such as Glen Edwards. The efforts of all such Vietnam veterans were summarized in the 1986 book Johnny's Song: Poetry of a Vietnam Veteran by Steve Mason in his poem entitled “A History Lesson.” Mason (1938-2005) was a decorated combat veteran and poet laureate of the Vietnam Veterans Association.

"There remains no resolution of this war beyond each man's obligation to his world and his conscience to record the True inner-history of his Vietnam experience."

The negative image of the Vietnam veteran has been battled in recent years, primarily by people such as B. G. Burkett. Burkett wrote a self-published book called Stolen Valor in which he gathered statistics attempting to prove that Vietnam Veterans were actually quite prevalent among the government and business leaders of America 30 years after the Vietnam War. Furthermore he discovered a large number of people claiming to be veterans who were not. Using the Freedom of Information Act and military personnel records, he found these 'fake vets' in every walk of life: from the VA hospital, to university professors, to book authors, to interviewees in serious studies of the Vietnam War, to homeless people, to veterans magazines, etc.

There are still, however, many proven cases of individuals who have suffered psychological damage from their time in Vietnam. Many others were physically wounded, some permanently disabled. This trend continues with Desert Storm veterans and for those serving in Iraq.

[edit] In popular culture

The Vietnam veteran has been depicted in fiction and film of variable quality. One example is Tom Cruise's portrayal of Vietnam veteran Ron Kovic in the film Born on the Fourth of July (1989). A more recent example is Bruce Dern's portrayal of a down-and-out veteran in the film Monster (2003). Also, in the adult cartoon series Happy Tree Friends, there is a character called Flippy who is a Vietnam veteran. Every time he is exposed to something that reminds him of the war, like a woodpecker which he thinks is a machine gun, he goes mental and kills everyone in his surroundings.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

[edit] External links

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