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Toledo
Blade Report on Vietnam War "Tiger Force" Atrocity
Is
Only the Beginning
by
Nick Turse
Dissident
Voice
November 13, 2003
On
October 19, 2003, the Ohio-based newspaper the Toledo Blade launched a four-day
series of investigative reports exposing a string of atrocities by an
elite, volunteer, 45-man "Tiger Force" unit of the U.S. Army's 101st
Airborne Division over the course of seven months in 1967. The Blade goes on to
state that in 1971 the Army began a 4.5 year investigation of the alleged
torture of prisoners, rapes of civilian women, the mutilation of bodies and
killing of anywhere from nine to well over one hundred unarmed civilians, among
other acts. The articles further report that the Army's inquiry concluded that
18 U.S. soldiers committed war crimes ranging from murder and assault to
dereliction of duty. However, not one of the soldiers, even of those still on
active duty at the time of the investigation, was ever court martialed in
connection with the heinous crimes. Moreover, six suspected war criminals were
allowed to resign from military service during the criminal investigations
specifically to avoid prosecution.
The
Toledo Blade articles represent some of the best reporting on a Vietnam War
crime by any newspaper, during or since the end of the conflict. Unfortunately,
the articles tell a story that was all too common. As a historian writing his
dissertation on U.S. war crimes and atrocities during the Vietnam War, I have
been immersed in just the sort of archival materials the Toledo Blade used in
its pieces, but not simply for one incident but hundreds if not thousands of
analogous events. I can safely, and sadly, say that the "Tiger Force"
atrocities are merely the tip of the iceberg in regard to U.S.-perpetrated war
crimes in Vietnam. However, much of the mainstream historical literature
dealing with Vietnam War atrocities (and accompanying cover-ups and/or sham
investigations), has been marginalized to a great extent -- aside from
obligatory remarks concerning the My Lai massacre, which is, itself, often
treated as an isolated event. Unfortunately, the otherwise excellent reporting
of the Toledo Blade draws upon and feeds off this exceptionalist argument to a
certain extent. As such, the true scope of U.S.-perpetrated atrocities is never
fully addressed in the articles. The men of the "Tiger Force" are
labeled as "Rogue GIs" and the authors simply mention the that Army "conducted
242 war-crimes investigations in Vietnam, [that] a third were substantiated,
leading to 21 convictions... according to a review of records at the National
Archives" – facts of dubious value that obscure the scope and number of
war crimes perpetrated in Vietnam and feed the exceptionalist argument.
Even
an accompanying
Blade piece on "Other Vietnam Atrocities," tends to
decontextualize the "Tiger Force" incidents, treating them as fairly
extraordinary events by listing only three other relatively well known atrocity
incidents: former Senator, presidential candidate and Navy SEAL Bob Kerrey's
raid on the hamlet of Thang Phong; the massacre at Son Thang -- sometimes
referred to as the "Marine Corps' My Lai"; and the war crimes
allegations of Lt. Col. Anthony Herbert -- most famously chronicled in his
memoir Soldier. This short list, however, doesn't even hint at the scope and
number of similar criminal acts.
For
example, the Toledo
Blade reports that its "review of thousands of classified Army
documents, National Archives records, and radio logs reveals [the "Tiger
Force"] ... carried out the longest series of atrocities in the Vietnam
War [from May and November, 1967]..."Unfortunately, this seven month
atrocity-spree is not nearly the longest on record. Nor is it even the longest
string of atrocities by one unit within its service branch. According to
formerly classified Army documents, an investigation disclosed that from at
least March 1968 through October 1969, "Vietnamese [civilian] detainees
were subjected to maltreatment" by no less than twenty-three separate
interrogators of the 172d Military Intelligence (MI) Detachment. The inquiry
found that, in addition to using "electrical shock by means of a field
telephone," an all too commonly used method of torture by Americans during
the war, MI personnel also struck detainees with their fists, sticks and boards
and employed a form of water torture which impaired prisoners' ability to
breath.
Similar
to the "Tiger Force" atrocities chronicled by the Blade, documents
indicate that no disciplinary actions were taken against any of the individuals
implicated in the long-running series of atrocities, including 172d MI
personnel Norman Bowers, Franciszek Pyclik and Eberhard Gasper who were all on
active duty at the time that the allegations were investigated by Army
officials. In fact, in 1972, Bowers' commanding general pronounced that
"no disciplinary or administrative action" would be taken against the
suspected war criminal and in a formerly classified memorandum to the U.S. Army
Chief of Staff, prepared by Colonel Murray Williams on behalf of Brigadier
General R.G. Gard in January 1973, it was noted that the "...determination
by commanders to take no action against three personnel on active duty who were
suspected of committing an offense" had not been publicly acknowledged.
Their crimes and identities kept a secret, Bowers, Pyclik and Gasper apparently
escaped any prosecution, let alone punishment, for their alleged actions.
Similarly,
the Toledo Blade pays
particular attention to Sam Ybarra, a "notorious suspect," who
was named in seven of the thirty "Tiger Force" war crimes allegations
investigated by the Army -- including the rape and fatal stabbing of a
13-year-old girl and the brutal killing of a 15-year-old boy. Yet, Ybarra's
notorious reputation may well pale in comparison to that of Sergeant Roy E.
"the Bummer" Bumgarner, a soldier who served with the 1st Cavalry
Division and later the 173d Airborne Brigade. According to a former commander,
"the Bummer" was rumored to have "personally killed over 1,500
people" during a forty-two week stretch in Vietnam. Even if the number was
exaggerated, clues on how Bumgarner may have obtained high "body
counts" came to light in the course of an Army criminal investigation of
an incident that took place on February 25, 1969. According to investigation
documents, Bumgarner and a subordinate rounded up three civilians found working
in a rice paddy, marched them to a secluded area and murdered them. "The
Bummer" then arranged the bodies on the ground with their heads together
and a grenade was exploded next to them in an attempt to cover-up their crime.
Assorted weapons were then planted near the mutilated corpses to make them
appear to have been enemy troops.
During
an Army criminal investigation of the incident, men in Bumgarner's unit told
investigators that they had heard rumors of the sergeant carrying out similar
acts in the past. Said one soldier in a sworn statement to Army investigators:
"I've
heard of Bumgarner doing it before -- planting weapons on bodies when there is
doubt as to their military status. I've heard quite a few rumors about
Bumgarner killing unarmed people. Only a couple weeks ago I heard that
Bumgarner had killed a Vietnamese girl and two younger kids (boys), who didn't
have any weapons."
Unlike
Sam Ybarra, who had been discharged from the military by the time the
allegations against him came to light and then refused to cooperate with
investigators, "the Bummer" was charged with premeditated murder and
tried by general court martial. He was convicted only of manslaughter and his
punishment consisted merely of a demotion in rank and a fine of $97 a month for
six months. Moreover, after six months, Bumgarner promptly re-enlisted in the
Army. His first and only choice of assignments -- Vietnam. Records indicate he
got his wish!
Military
records demonstrate that the "Tiger Force" atrocities are only the
tip of a vast submerged history of atrocities in Vietnam. In fact, while most
atrocities were likely never chronicled or reported, the archival record is
still rife with incidents analogous to those profiled in the Blade articles,
including the following atrocities chronicled in formerly classified Army
documents:
A
November 1966 incident in which an officer in the Army's Fourth Infantry
Division, severed an ear from a Vietnamese corpse and affixed it to the radio
antenna of a jeep as an ornament. The officer was given a non-judicial
punishment and a letter of reprimand.
An
August 1967 atrocity in which a 13-year-old Vietnamese child was raped by
American MI interrogator of the Army's 196th Infantry Brigade. The soldier was
convicted only of indecent acts with a child and assault. He served seven
months and sixteen days for his crime.
A
September 1967 incident in which an American sergeant killed two Vietnamese
children -- executing one at point blank range with a bullet to the head. Tried
by general court martial in 1970, the sergeant pleaded guilty to, and was found
guilty of, unpremeditated murder. He was, however, sentenced to no punishment.
An
atrocity that took place on February 4, 1968, just over a month before the My
Lai massacre, in the same province by a man from the same division (Americal).
The soldier admitted to his commanding officer and other men of his unit that
he gunned down three civilians as they worked in a field. A CID investigation
substantiated his confession and charges of premeditated murder were preferred
against him. The soldier requested a discharge, which was granted by the
commanding general of the Americal Division, in lieu of court martial
proceedings.
A
series of atrocities similar to, and occurring the same year as, the
"Tiger Force" war crimes in which one unit allegedly engaged in an
orgy of murder, rape and mutilation, over the course of several months.
While
not yielding the high-end body count estimate of the "Tiger Force"
series of atrocities, the above incidents begin to demonstrate the ubiquity of
the commission of atrocities on the part of American forces during the Vietnam
War. Certainly, war crimes, such as murder, rape and mutilation were not an
everyday affair for American combat soldiers in Vietnam, however, such acts
were also by no means as exceptional as often portrayed in recent historical
literature or as tacitly alluded to in the Blade articles.
The
excellent investigative reporting of the Toledo Blade is to be commended for
shedding light on war crimes committed by American soldiers of the 101st
Airborne Division in 1967. However, it is equally important to understand that
the "Tiger Force" atrocities were not the mere result of "Rogue
GIs" but instead stem from what historian Christian Appy has termed the
American "doctrine of atrocity" during the Vietnam War -- a strategy
built upon official U.S. dictums relating to the body count, free-fire zones,
search and destroy tactics and the strategy of attrition as well as unofficial
tenets such as "kill anything that moves," intoned during the "Tiger
Force" atrocities and in countless other atrocity tales, or the "mere
gook rule" which held that "If its dead and Vietnamese, it's
VC." Further, it must also be recognized that the "Tiger Force"
atrocities, the My Lai massacre, the Herbert allegations and the few other
better-known war crimes were not isolated or tangentially-related incidents,
but instead are only the most spectacular or best publicized of what was an
on-going string of atrocities, large and small, that spanned the entire
duration of the war.
The
headline of one Blade article proclaims, "Earlier Tiger Force probe could
have averted My Lai carnage," referring to the fact that the 101st
Airborne Division's "Tiger Force" troops operated in the same
province (Quang Ngai), with the same mission (search and destroy) months before
the Americal Division's men committed their war crimes. But atrocities were not
a localized problem or one that only emerged in 1967. Instead, the pervasive
disregard for the laws of war had begun prior to U.S. buildup in 1965 and had
roots in earlier conflicts. Only by recognizing these facts can we hope to
begin to understand the "Tiger Force" atrocities and the history of
American war crimes in Vietnam, writ large.
Nick
Turse is a Columbia University graduate student completing a dissertation
on American war crimes during the Vietnam War.
*
Related Article: “Tiger
Force” and the Costs of Forgetting US Crimes in Vietnam by Joseph Nevins.
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