top
Santa Cruz IMC
Santa Cruz IMC
Indybay
Indybay
Indybay
Regions
Indybay Regions North Coast Central Valley North Bay East Bay South Bay San Francisco Peninsula Santa Cruz IMC - Independent Media Center for the Monterey Bay Area North Coast Central Valley North Bay East Bay South Bay San Francisco Peninsula Santa Cruz IMC - Independent Media Center for the Monterey Bay Area California United States International Americas Haiti Iraq Palestine Afghanistan
Topics
Newswire
Features
From the Open-Publishing Calendar
From the Open-Publishing Newswire
Indybay Feature

Support the Troops? Support Troop Resistance!

by Mara Ortenburger
The Project, Page 5
The suppresed history of rebellion from the inside. Understanding what the phrase “support the troops” has meant in the past and what it can mean today.
If there is one thing that antiwar folks have heard over and over in the past three years, it is this: feel free to bash Bush, criticize Cheney, and hate on Rumsfeld until your voice is hoarse and your protest signs turn to dust, but, for the love of god, you had better support the troops and you had better support them no matter what.

But what does supporting the troops actually mean? Funneling money into the magnetic ribbon industry? Sending telepathic messages to Iraq through prayer? Allowing military recruiters free access to our schools to bolster troop numbers? Blindly trusting that politicians and generals will conduct the war in the best interests of the soldiers?

While the definition of “support the troops” is vague at best, what it means to be unsupportive of them has been made crystal clear. In fact, it has been burned into our mainstream collective consciousness through historical example: the treatment of soldiers during and after the Vietnam War is generally upheld as the epitome of citizen-soldier relations turned sour. The image of the enraged and irrational antiwar activist cursing and spitting on the stalwart, apolitical soldier returning from Southeast Asia is hauled out and dusted off at almost any indication of contemporary protest activity that goes beyond a meek request to give peace a chance.

This version of Vietnam War history has translated over the years into the idea that antiwar folks should avoid messages and tactics that directly engage members of the armed forces. We are told that soldiers just follow orders and do not have the luxury of sharing our silly philosophical concerns with war because they are busy defending our freedom to have those concerns in the first place. The implication for today seems to be this: if you absolutely must voice your opposition to the war in Iraq please do it in a way that the troops won’t notice because it will only hurt morale and interfere with their ability to fight this war (which, by the way, is going on whether you like it or not).

But this analysis obscures an important historical truth that has drastic implications for understanding what the phrase “support the troops” has meant in the past and what it can mean today: soldiers themselves, including thousands of active duty GIs, were a vital part of the movement to end the war in Vietnam. Far from being political neutrals whose morale suffered as a result of antiwar activity at home, many members of the military actively protested the war from within the belly of the beast.

Sir! No Sir!, a new documentary by director David Zieger, chronicles these efforts for the first time on film and presents an impressive picture of the GI resistance movement that has been suppressed in mainstream accounts of history and in popular representations of the Vietnam War. It was a multifaceted movement that included both individual and collective acts of rebellion at military bases in the US as well as on the frontlines in Vietnam. Some of these acts of defiance happened spontaneously as individual soldiers reacted against unreasonable commands and degrading commanders. In the beginning of the war, these acts were relatively rare and easy to punish with prison sentences. As the war escalated, however, rebellious acts became more frequent and more collective in nature as groups of antiwar soldiers began cultivating a thriving counter-culture of defiance among the ranks.

Between 1966 and 1971 the Pentagon recorded 503,926 “incidents of desertion.” By 1971, entire units were refusing to go into battle. Underground newspapers, with names such as “Fed Up!” and “The Retaliation,” began circulating to spread information within the movement—over 100 separate publications in all. Dozens of coffeehouses, such as the Oleo Strut in Killeen, Texas, were established on or around bases to provide a place for antiwar soldiers to communicate and organize. One of the most popular entertainment shows for the troops was Jane Fonda’s Fuck The Army (FTA) Review. May 16, 1970 was declared Armed Farces Day as thousands of soldiers and veterans staged mass rallies and protests of the war. By 1970, riots at military prisons, acts of sabotage and mutinies at bases, and incidences of “fragging”—officers being killed by their own troops—began occurring at rates that caused one military officer to conclude that “By every conceivable indicator, our army that now remains in Vietnam is in a state approaching collapse.”

Although this rebellion within the military was well documented during the Vietnam years—a staggering amount of evidence is freely available in the public record—it has been almost entirely eradicated from our collective memory. Sir! No Sir! describes an exerted effort by the government, the media, and Hollywood to suppress this history, including the development of the “myth of the spitting hippie,” a cultural fairy tale which was crafted to deemphasize the fact that some of the most effective and intense resistance to the war occurred from within the military itself.

Needless to say, the people in power who have crafted the US invasion and occupation of Iraq do not want this story to be told because it allows for a radical re-conceptualization of what it can mean to “support the troops.” Support the troops by supporting their resistance and rebellion. Support the troops by bringing them home now.

Supporting materials for this article can be found in the extensive archives of the Sir! No Sir! website. The site includes official military reports and transcripts, material from underground GI newspapers, and a huge audio and video database documenting the movement. Check it out at http://www.sirnosir.com!
Add Your Comments

Comments (Hide Comments)
by Utopia Bold
The phrase "support the troops" was cleverly created to trick people into arguing whether or not to "support the troops" By using the term "troops", both sides are already on the side of the warmongers because the discussion has been cleverly directed away from the central idea that
****young people must be supported BEFORE THEY ARE MADE INTO TROOPS!!!!

Young people need support so they dont have to put their lives on the line to try to get a college education or job training. They should all have FREE education and job training so they dont HAVE to be a TROOP! Also, gang intervention, counseling and housing away from abusive relatives or to get off the street until they graduate and can support themselves doing meaningful well paid work.

But gee, the govt cant "afford" this, since instead of education, it is pissing away BILLIONs of dollars on a war started by rich men whose sons will NEVER have to see a battlefield.

Once you are a TROOP its too late to be supported because you are already in harms way.

Globally, youths, mostly young men, have been coerced by their "superiors" to jump into a hideous gladiator arena. Like fighting roosters, men of all nations are put into a bloody arena to enrich the rich arms dealers who thrive on their blood-like hideous vampires.

The anti choices wahoos want to ensure a never ending supply of surplus unemployed youths to feed their war machine. If all women had access to birth control, the rich would run out of youths to send to their deaths.

Men and women of all nations must refuse to let their bodies be used as obedient biological weapons.

by Ministry of Information Retrieval
They're protecting your freedom!!
by Utopia Bold
"They're protecting our freedom!" BS has been swallowed for years. I dont need my freedom protected from measly little nations like Viet Nam, Nicaragua, Iraq etc. do you actually believe that load of shit?!

If there was a global curfew on men and they were not allowed to touch weapons, I wouldnt need my "freedom" protected. Im not "free" to walk anywhere I want because men still skulk around beating and raping women.

Men killed off most of the wild animals, so theres nothing to hunt or kill except other men—and civilian women and children.


We are 100% volunteer and depend on your participation to sustain our efforts!

Donate

$75.00 donated
in the past month

Get Involved

If you'd like to help with maintaining or developing the website, contact us.

Publish

Publish your stories and upcoming events on Indybay.

IMC Network