Former U.S. Defense Secretary Robert McNamara is dead. He died in his sleep at 5:30 a.m. Monday. He was 93.
There is a monument dedicated to his military and geopolitical expertise in Washington, D.C. It is the Vietnam War Memorial. It lists the names of 58 thousand dead Americans who were sent to their deaths because McNamara -- a former president of Ford Motor Company -- was given the power to intervene (in whatever manner he chose) in a civil war in Southeast Asia that became yet another chapter in the insanity that was the Cold War.
In addition to the 58 thousand Americans, at least 2.5 million Indochinese -- most of whom were Vietnamese -- also were killed. All of these people -- thousands of soldiers, hundreds of thousands of civilians -- had their lives ripped from them as a direct result of the actions McNamara took in his dedication to the belief in the absolute primacy of American Corporatism and the need to force that belief on as much of the world as we could, no matter the consequences; no matter the destruction or the number of dead and crippled or the mentally destroyed.
By his own definition he was a War Criminal. Any action that is necessary to define that term -- war criminal -- was an action taken by Robert McNamara. From the fire bombing of Vietnamese cities and the subsequent murder of tens of thousands of innocent civilians to the establishment of murderous "free fire" zones in the countryside, McNamara's killing spree was without limits, without restriction, completely outside the rules of war so carefully crafted by the world's "civilized" societies.
The curious can read McNamara's biography here. However, his true legacy is to be found in American men now in their 60s who still carry the with them the memories of the war crimes perpetrated against yet another innocent country the United States decided to invade and destroy. His legacy also can be found in the monuments scattered throughout Vietnam -- memorials to the death and destruction caused for no sane reason by the United States. Or in the hideous genetic deformities still occurring in newborns -- nearly 40 years after the war ended in the worst defeat for the U.S. in its history -- that are a direct result of the United States saturating Vietnam in a poisonous flood of the deadly herbicide Agent Orange.
The list of crimes against humanity committed by the United States in Vietnam is a long one. It is a list too horrifying for us to acknowledge. To do so would bring an end to whatever belief still remains here in our sad, broken country that the United States operated honorably during the bloody and war-eaten 20th Century. And we Americans are not ready for that -- especially not now, not at a time when the record shows we have become a nation whose highest elected officials ordered the torture of men charged with no crime and given no rights in order to extract phony "confessions." A nation whose leaders see nothing wrong in saturating yet another country with yet another toxic substance -- this time explosives made with depleted uranium -- that is already producing thousands of horrific birth defects and hideous cancers. So . . . there will be no acknowledgment, no discussion, no truth, no reconciliation. Not now. Maybe never.
Our century-long history of lies employed in the expansion of empire, crimes against humanity, wars of opportunity, and the wanton killing of millions of innocent civilians is a history in which Robert McNamara fits easily and comfortably.
Mike Malloy can be heard daily on his radio show 9pm - 12pm ET. Visit
www.mikemalloy.com to stream live or find a station near you.
Want to reply to a comment? Hint: Click "Reply" at the bottom of the comment; after being approved your comment will appear directly underneath the comment you replied to
Obama fits quite easily into that history also. This country can no longer be allowed to exist. We are a barbaric people doing barbaric things to millions of innocent people. We have become the enemy of ourselves. It's time for a reckoning.
I appreciate your reference to men in their 60's. I believe that the reason there are so many more cases of PTSD from the Viet Nam and Iraq/Afghanistan wars is the extreme cognitive dissonance produced in the honorable young soldiers and officers who are raised to have civilized values and then are put into situations where they are told to act in ways they know to be illegal and immoral.
Why are the names of LBJ and Richard Nixon always invoked -- along with McNamara's -- when the Vietnam War is talked about and regretted, but the name JFK isn't brought up?
"
It was JFK who turned this minor conflict into a fully-fledged war when he sent 16,000 troops into Vietnam.
Before that, the US had been represented by a mere handful of 'advisers.
I think the reason may be that the student protests in this country did not hit any crecendo until LBJ and then continued on through Nixon. I mean the nation did not wake up to what the government was up to until some time after Kennedy had passed.
You must be logged in to comment. Log in or connect with