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SERVICE ARCHIVE SUBMISSIONS/CONTACT ABOUT DV
by
Mickey Z.
April
28, 2003
On
Jan. 17, 1991, Navy Capt. Michael Scott Speicher, 32, was piloting a F/A-18
fighter jet at the start of the first Gulf War. Hit by an air-to-air missile
fired by an Iraqi warplane, Speicher, known as a "top gun among fliers,"
was later given up for dead. However, as reported by Chicago Tribune foreign
correspondent, Christine Spolar ("U.S. hunts POW of '91 war," April
24, 2003), "Classified documents show that Speicher was seen years after
being shot down." As recently as early 2002, a host of unnamed, anonymous,
yet "credible" sources declared Speicher to be alive and in Iraqi custody.
A
faulty DNA test misidentified a body as that of Speicher's and the case was
considered closed. "His wife remarried, and she and her new husband, a former
Navy pilot, had two children," explained Spolar. When Speicher's fighter
plane was found, largely intact, in December 1993, everything changed. The
Pentagon admitted the error and by 2000, President Bill Clinton publicly
declared Speicher "might be alive" and "if he is -- we're going
to do everything to get him out."
In
reality, of course, little was done to secure Speicher's release...but he was
promoted twice and, dead or alive, is now a captain.
Besides
highlighting U.S. military inefficiency and insensitivity, Speicher's story
evokes images of a soldier left behind to face inhuman torture in a hateful
country. This image, along with more recent U.S. POWs like Jessica Lynch,
resurrects a potent tool of wartime spin: The template of a dehumanized enemy
victimizing the good guys (and girls) was forged during the U.S. invasion of
South Vietnam.
"There
are some fairly obvious needs being met by the images of American POWs tortured
year after year by sadistic Asian communists," states H. Bruce
Franklin,
author of MIA: Mythmaking in America. Considering the influence this fairy tale
has wielded both in pop culture and in demonizing the Vietnamese, its veracity
is remarkably tenuous.
"It
is unique," Franklin says. "What distinguishes it is that this is an entirely
manufactured issue." It is also an emotional issue, an issue susceptible
to spin. Spin-inspired emotion helps account for its durability; it helps
explain how Americans have managed to ignore far greater numbers of MIAs in
other wars. In WWII and the Korean War, between 20 and 25 percent of U.S.
combat dead were never found. In Vietnam, it was 3.4 percent.
This
is where the "manufactured" part comes into play.
Upon
his election in 1968, President Richard Nixon added an unusual precondition at
the Paris Peace Talks with North Vietnam: Before the U.S. would agree to even
discuss terms for ending the war, Hanoi and the southern insurgents must
release all U.S. POWs. "This is totally crazy," says Franklin.
"This is not what belligerent nations do. They figure out the terms for
ending the war and then they exchange POWs."
The
New York Times, of course, did not agree. In 1969, the newspaper o record
weighed in the POW/MIA debate, calling it a "a humanitarian, not a political
issue," before condemning "the Communist side" as
"inhuman." According to Franklin, "Nixon and Kissinger were
manufacturing the belief that there might be POWs for very specific purposes:
to renege of the $4 billion in aid and to keep the war going. There is
irrefutable evidence that they were doing this and they were doing it
consciously."
Wartime
spin was once again called on to recast the enemy as a merciless villain and it
worked. A pro-war group called Victory in Vietnam Association (VIVA) concocted
a scheme to sell bracelets engraved with the names of POWS and MIAs to fund a
campaign to raise awareness. Before the end of the war, more than 10 million
Americans wore bracelets, including celebrities from Johnny Carson to Sonny and
Cher to Nixon himself.
Such
lucrative mythmaking took root in a nation seeking to justify and explain its
behavior and position. Celluloid POW-rescuers like Rambo and Chuck Norris
exacted revenge not only on Vietnam but also on the U.S. government for its
inaction. As late as 1991, 69 percent of Americans believed that POWs were
still being held in Vietnam and 52 percent believed the U.S. government had not
done enough to bring the POWs home.
With
a handful of U.S. POWs having been held in the Gulf (and now destined for book
deals and TV movies) and U.S. corporations poised to "rebuild" the post-Hussein
Iraq, not much is said these days about those alleged POWs in Vietnam...where
American sneaker companies now erect sweatshops and utilize impoverished
Vietnamese as cheap labor.
So,
how do you say "just do it" in Arabic?
Mickey Z. is the author
of The Murdering of My Years: Artists and Activists Making Ends Meet (www.murderingofmyyears.com)
and an editor at Wide Angle (www.wideangleny.com).
He can be reached at: mzx2@earthlink.net.