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Someone you should remember.

[Armorer's Updated Note: Rather than link to this post in today's H&I Fires, I decided to just repost it, because some of you don't click the links... yes, I know who you are. Co-blogger Bill is the original author of the post.]

I would like to introduce you to someone: CW2 Hugh Thompson. A fellow helicopter pilot from my war...

You probably don't recognize his name and you probably don't know what he did, but you will definitely recognize where and when he did it: My Lai, Vietnam--1968.

What would you call a man who saw his friends committing murder and risked his life to stop them?

Find out in the Flash Traffic/Extended entry.

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From US News and World Reports, August 20, 2004:

Skimming over the Vietnamese village of My Lai in a helicopter with a bubble-shaped windshield, 24-year-old Hugh Thompson had a superb view of the ground below. But what the Army pilot saw didn't make any sense: piles of Vietnamese bodies and dead water buffalo. He and his two younger crew mates, Lawrence Colburn and Glenn Andreotta, were flying low over the hamlet on March 16, 1968, trying to draw fire so that two gunships flying above could locate and destroy the enemy. On this morning, no one was shooting at them. And yet they saw bodies everywhere, and the wounded civilians they had earlier marked for medical aid were now all dead.
On that historic morning, Thompson set his helicopter down near the irrigation ditch full of bodies. He asked a sergeant if the soldiers could help the civilians, some of whom were still moving. The sergeant suggested putting them out of their misery. Stunned, Thompson turned to Lieutenant Calley, who told him to mind his own business. Thompson reluctantly got back in his helicopter and began to lift off. Just then Andreotta yelled, "My God, they're firing into the ditch!"
Thompson finally faced the truth. He and his crew flew around for a few minutes, outraged, wondering what to do. Then they saw several elderly adults and children running for a shelter, chased by Americans. "We thought they had about 30 seconds before they'd die," recalls Colburn. Thompson landed his chopper between the troops and the shelter, then jumped out and confronted the lieutenant in charge of the chase. He asked for assistance in escorting the civilians out of the bunker; the lieutenant said he'd get them out with a hand grenade. Furious, Thompson announced he was taking the civilians out.
Thompson coaxed the Vietnamese out of the shelter with hand gestures. They followed, wary. Thompson looked at his three-man helicopter and realized he had nowhere to put them. "There was no thinking about it," he says now. "It was just something that had to be done, and it had to be done fast." He got on the radio and begged the gunships to land and fly the four adults and five children to safety, which they did within minutes.
Before returning to base, the helicopter crew saw something moving in the irrigation ditch�a child, about 4 years old. Andreotta waded through bloody cadavers to pull him out. Thompson, who had a son, was overcome by emotion. He immediately flew the child to a nearby hospital. Thompson wasted no time telling his superiors what had happened. "They said I was screaming quite loud. I was mad. I threatened never to fly again," Thompson remembers. "I didn't want to be a part of that. It wasn't war." An investigation followed, but it was cursory at best.
A month later, Andreotta died in combat. Thompson was shot down and returned home to teach helicopter piloting. Colburn served his tour of duty and left the military. The two figured those involved in the killing had been court-martialed. In fact, nothing had happened. But rumors of the massacre persisted. One soldier who heard of the atrocities, Ron Ridenhour, vowed to make them public. In the spring of 1969, he sent letters to government officials, which led to a real investigation�
Not all soldiers at My Lai participated in the carnage. Some men risked courtmartial or even death by defying Calley's direct orders to shoot civilians. Eckhardt doesn't think these men were heroes, because they didn't try to stop the murderers. But Colburn thinks they did the best they could. "We could just fly away at the end of the day," he notes. The ground troops had to live together for months.
Colburn and Thompson lived in relative anonymity until a 1989 television documentary on My Lai reclaimed them as forgotten heroes. David Egan, a Clemson University professor who had served in a French village where Nazis killed scores of innocents in World War II, was amazed by the story. He campaigned to have Thompson and his team awarded the coveted Soldier's Medal. It wasn't until March 6, 1998, after internal debate among Pentagon officials (who feared an award would reopen old wounds) and outside pressure from reporters, that Thompson and Colburn finally received medals in a ceremony at the Vietnam Veterans Memorial.
But both say a far more gratifying reward was a trip back to My Lai this March to dedicate a school and a "peace park." It was then they finally met a young man named Do Hoa, who they believe was the boy they rescued from that death-filled ditch. "Being reunited with the boy was just...I can't even describe it," says Colburn. And Thompson, also overwhelmed, doesn't even try.

Almost forty years ago, CW2 Hugh Thompson saw murder in the middle of a war and stopped it. Fewer than twenty hours ago, he died of cancer in the VA Hospital in Arlington, Virginia�

Now is the time at Castle Argghhh! when we dance, In Memoriam.

To see the very tangible results of Chief Thompson's actions - click here.

If you want to learn more about Hugh Thompson - buy the book.

[First Time Visitors - you're welcome and encouraged to poke around in the corners. We try to run a fun place that does a little educating and maybe a nice rant or two. -Warning- This is a memorial post - discussion of the war and My Lai is inevitable - but we've got rules here - discuss the message, don't attack the messenger. Be polite. Others may feel it's bad form to delete comments, I have no such compunction. I won't delete ones I disagree with the content, I'll delete hair-tearing, shirt-rending rants that spew vileness at other people. Be polite (within the limits of a robust conversation, this isn't a graded debate)]





6 Comments

Inretelling the story of My Lai, this is the part that gets skipped. Someone had the decency to stand up and say it was wrong. Both the military and our general history minded folks are wrong when they did this. Without this part of the story, there were no heroes and every Vietnam Veteran was tainted with its stink. Without this part of the story, the military and many fine young men took away the moral that it was better to be quiet and take care of things "quietly". They did not learn that this was a lesson for all regarding the possible effects of war and bad leadership. nor learn the final lesson which is that, in an organization as big as the military, nothing will be a secret. By hiding it, they killed the heroes just as much as any anti-war folks.
 
"When they did this"...I mean, tried to cover up My Lai or using it as a battering ram against Vietnam and those who served.
 
Real heroes never die, Chief. This man will forever live our memories. As an example of what a really righteous man is, instead of the tin plated imitators we run into on a daily basis. He will continue to be an example, an example a chucklehead like me needs right now, of how a real man does what needs to be done, what it means to be a stand up guy. (And just to fling poo, 'cause I can, now why isn't this guy noted as the hero of My Lai instead of Sy Hersch(who swooped down like a vulture after Ridenhour did basically told everyone who would listen to him about it)? Incroiable.)
 
John, Well done, Sir. Sadly to say, he was a very rare breed and COMMANDS our respect. This is the lesson of Nuremburg and Watergate, plausable deniability is not a viable defense. This man's heroic action should be drilled into the bone, even into the very marrow of that bone of every American combatant. This covers the whole range. Yes, this includes the contractors and the CIA. Kat, when someone has said it perfectly, you don't add to it. I just want to say, "Thank you. I can not speak for the other vets." I came from that era, coming up on 60. It is very hard to explain those times, but yet we must. I noticed one day, John was making a comment on the "Global War on Terror." He crassed out the word, "Terror" and put in the word, "Whatever." I would suggest a new name, it would be "The Global War on Tyranny." To the both of you, my THANKS! Grumpy
 
*sigh* I do remember the name, Bill. I remember it because you've written about him before, and with the passion I've come to love, and expect, from you. You're a "do the right thing" guy, just like Thompson. I'm sure there's a special place in heaven for him right now.
 
I forgot what I wrote the last time this was posted, so I'll start from zero, here and now. That fellow has an earnest visage. I rate being earnest very highly. He also displayed great moral courage, which is sadly much rarer than physical courage. If more people had more moral courage, maybe we could get by without having to use the physical variety quite so much. R.I.P., Sir. P.s. Oh, he had the physical kind, too, going down to draw fire...
 
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