Seeing how I am guest blogging for a Texan, it makes sense to write about a Texas politician who in many ways was larger than life: Lyndon Johnson.

I could write about the Great Society or Medicare or the Civil Rights Act, but not today. While any one of those accomplishments would be worthy book material, I wanted to zero in on the main failure of his Presidency: Vietnam.

The Left has been trying to turn the current war in Iraq into President Bush’s Vietnam. So far they have been unsuccessful. Bush has stuck to his guns and the all volunteer military continues to do a splendid job. But still, the Left tries to make Bush into another Johnson.

They want a Vietnam analogy; I will give them one that actually will fit Vietnam, if the Left has their way.

My father fought in Vietnam. His tour was from 1966 to 1967. He saw some furious combat and luckily escaped unscathed. His unit was a very professional, highly trained unit. They fought the enemy hard and believed in the cause in which they were engaged in. I would suspect that a large percentage of our combat troops during that time frame felt the same way. By the winter of 1967 and the spring of 1968 the American public had begun to lose confidence in the war. We still were winning every engagement but the press had turned against the U.S. after Tet and were actively seeking to undermine our mission and our President.

By the spring of 2004, the war in Iraq had entered a new phase. The growing terrorist presence in the country and the deployment of improvised explosive devices (IED’s) began taking a large toll on our troops. New tactics were developed to fight the new threat faced by taking on the IED’s. As if on cue, the MSM began to hammer the administration for failing to predict this new phase of combat. They began asking asinine questions such as why didn’t we have plans to deal with this threat before it surfaced and why weren’t our weapons functioning as planned? The famous answer by Rumsfeld that you go to war with the army you have, infuriated the press, but no truer words have ever been spoken.

1968 and 2004. Both were election years. Both sitting Presidents were embroiled in a war that was beginning to wane in popularity. Both faced a hostile, if not borderline treacherous press. How did each man act?

President Johnson, like President Bush sat down to talk to the American people to explain that things may look bad, but that if we are strong, we will prevail. President Johnson:

Even while the search for peace was going on, North Vietnam rushed their preparations for a savage assault on the people, the government, and the allies of South Vietnam.

Their attack–during the Tet holidays–failed to achieve its principal objectives.

It did not collapse the elected government of South Vietnam or shatter its army–as the Communists had hoped.

It did not produce a “general uprising” among the people of the cities as they had predicted.

The Communists were unable to maintain control of any of the more than 30 cities that they attacked. And they took very heavy casualties.

But they did compel the South Vietnamese and their allies to move certain forces from the countryside into the cities.

They caused widespread disruption and suffering. Their attacks, and the battles that followed, made refugees of half a million human beings.

The Communists may renew their attack any day.

They are, it appears, trying to make 1968 the year of decision in South Vietnam–the year that brings, if not final victory or defeat, at least a turning point in the struggle.
This much is clear:

If they do mount another round of heavy attacks, they will not succeed in destroying the fighting power of South Vietnam and its allies.

President Bush:

We see the nature of the enemy in terrorists who exploded car bombs along a busy shopping street in Baghdad, including one outside a mosque. We see the nature of the enemy in terrorists who sent a suicide bomber to a teaching hospital in Mosul. We see the nature of the enemy in terrorists who behead civilian hostages and broadcast their atrocities for the world to see.

These are savage acts of violence, but they have not brought the terrorists any closer to achieving their strategic objectives. The terrorists — both foreign and Iraqi — failed to stop the transfer of sovereignty. They failed to break our Coalition and force a mass withdrawal by our allies. They failed to incite an Iraqi civil war. They failed to prevent free elections. They failed to stop the formation of a democratic Iraqi government that represents all of Iraq’s diverse population. And they failed to stop Iraqis from signing up in large number with the police forces and the army to defend their new democracy.

But there is one huge difference: President Johnson turned his tail and ran. Bush stood his ground. Johnson may not have pulled the troops out and left the South Vietnamese to fend for themselves, but his pulling out of the Presidential race had about the same effect. Some 40 years after the fact, when I watched the replay of his address to the nation those haunting words sent chills down my spine:

With America’s sons in the fields far away, with America’s future under challenge right here at home, with our hopes and the world’s hopes for peace in the balance every day, I do not believe that I should devote an hour or a day of my time to any personal partisan causes or to any duties other than the awesome duties of this office–the Presidency of your country.

Accordingly, I shall not seek, and I will not accept, the nomination of my party for another term as your President.

Can you imagine the shock on the American people? But more importantly, can you imagine the shock on the men in the field? After all, if the President is getting out because it has gotten tough, then why should they stay, fight and die?

If the Left wants a Vietnam analogy, they will have one if Bush does what they want. The Left (I am specifically directing this at you Cindy Sheehan) wants the U.S. to pull out right now. If we do that, it will be the same as Johnson announcing he is quitting. The effect on our enemy is known. Just look at how North Vietnam played it to their advantage. Look at the loss of prestige America suffered all through the 1970’s. In many ways our weakness in Vietnam and after emboldened the terrorists we now fight. So I ask you, look at history and see what happens when you tuck your tuck your tail and run. Our men end up having died for nothing and out enemy is emboldened, which guarantees that future generations will one day have to finish the job that the current generation should have finished. If you want Vietnam, you will get it if Bush pulls a Johnson. Just remember that the consequences will be far reaching. The Left thought they won a great victory when the U.S. failed in Vietnam. If so, then they have the blood of thousand upon thousands of innocent people on their hands. Our failure and weakness afterwards led to where we are today.

Cross posted over at WILLisms.com

5 Responses to “The Left vs. The U.S.”

  1. on 04 Oct 2005 at 6:42 am Cullen

    Johnson was a pussy. He didn’t fight the war with the complete aresenal at his hands. He refused to bomb the north. He also micromanaged every air strike. He didn’t let his field commanders — hell, his appointed chiefs of staff or SecDef — make the calls it was their jobs to make.

    The north was so strengthened by the fact that we were fighting a retaliatory war, rather than taking the fight to the real enemy (in general). Nixon inhereted a mess.

    Cross posted over at WILLisms.com

  2. on 04 Oct 2005 at 8:02 am WunderKraut

    Cullen’s point about Nixon is an important one. I wanted to say something about that, but the post had already run long. So, I will address it in the comments.

    I am no fan of the way Nixon handled the war. But like Cullen said, he inherited a mess. By the time Nixon actually took office, the long, bitter year of 1968 was over. By then the country was bitterly divided, the troops in the field were becoming more demoralized and the Pentagon was shuffling more and more draftees to Vietnam and sending the regular troops out of harms way.

    How could anyone fight a war when all those things were going against you? He could have done a much better job. The whole Peace With Honor thing was just wrong. It was and is still obvious that the North Vietnamese were not going to stop their quest for the South. By 1972 and 1973, Nixon was tied up with scandal. By the time poor Gerald Ford became President, he had not hope. We had already pulled out from Vietnam with the promise of continued support for the South Vietnamese. But then a Democratic and very Left wing Congress passed the Foreign Assistance Act in 1974 which left South Vietnam all alone. It was not long before the North over ran the South and thousands upon thousands of people were rounded up and executed. Many thousands more fled from the Communist “utopia”, heading for the U.S.

    I really feel that Johnson’s retreat started the snow ball rolling. A stronger leader would have unleashed the military to do what is should have been doing. A stronger leader would have united the country instead of letting the war fester. A stronger leader would have run for the second term, even though it was not the easy thing to do.

  3. on 04 Oct 2005 at 8:27 am Cullen

    Johnson’s handling of the war in total started the ball rolling. He wasn’t fighting a winning war. He was applying band aids to a wound that required a tourniquet.

    Nixon, I think would have done a better job, but he was also concerned about popular opinion of the war. I honestly think he was worried about being branded a war criminal if he fought the war the way it needed to be done.

    Another oddity — in an unsuccessful campaign, you never hear about any strong military leadership. That is, in VN, you had no Pershings, Pattons or MacArthurs. I have always wondered if stronger military leadership (as opposed to some of the politic-ing that was going on) would have made any significant difference.

  4. on 04 Oct 2005 at 8:37 pm WunderKraut

    I am not disputing how sucky of a President Johnson was. I was going to mention how much the “war on poverty” in many ways has perpetuated a cycle of dependence on the government, but I elected to shorten the post a bit.

    I also do not dispute that he should have let the military run the war, instead of picking individual targets and setting rules and boundaries and all the other dumb ass things he and McNamara did.

    My main point was that when he did turn and run away from his problem, it was the end of the Democrats and it was the end of the war. The psychological impact on our enemy and on our troops cannot be overestimated. Bush had the chance and he still does have a chance to do something similar. Pulling out and leaving, which the Left wants the U.S. to do, would have the same empowering/demoralizing affect on our enemy and our troops. That is a Vietnam analogy that does work.

  5. on 05 Oct 2005 at 8:53 am Draco

    You know, we can all sit here and comment on how presidents have handled war and get angry over their methods. But what would you have done in their place? Sure, I dont agree with some of the decisions that have been made in our country’s history, but I cant put myself in their shoes and see what I would have done. They may have been right. Probably were wrong, but its not my place to judge. What upsets me is the fact that men faught for the U.S. military and the whole time it seemed like everyone stateside was against them. Think of it like that. How would you feel knowing your going into combat, you might die, and theres nobody that supports you back home? I think that was the real tragedy with the Vietnam war. Not the president but the support of the people.