a OPINION Wednesday, August 6,1989 Wed i Government admits lied about Vietnam A book published by the Army says the American people often got more straight information about the Vietnam War from the press than from the gov ernment. Mike Feinsilber By Mi Associated Press STAFF The government lied to the people, the book says, although it avoids using that blunt word. “But newsmen went into thefierj served napalm exploding and recj its effects with their cameras,”hki l lammond writes. On one issue, “the facts were differ ent” from what was put out by the De fense Department, it says. On another occasion, U.S. officials “dissembled” about what Americans were actually doing at a time they were in Vietnam as “advisers.” One early-in-the-war dispatchlii New York Times’ David Halbersiat porting gains by an “almost coch Cong in the Mekong Delta, sour f mined the official view of progres Secretary of State Dean Rusk pich apart at a news conference. That is rare official candor. Even 20 years after the fact, it is unusual for the government to own up to misleading the people. Woodstock ’89: The Yuppie Generation We’ve heard a lot about the Woods tock Music and Arts Estival in the past weeks, because it’s the 20th anniversary of the “weekend of peace, love and mu sic,” as its promoters called it. Yet even 20 years after the event, many people don’t remember Woodstock as anything more than the bird in the Peanuts comic strip. If something like Woodstock hap pened today, would it be anything more than comical? As Woodstock was a sym bol of the ’60s generation, Woodstock ’89 would be a symbol of our genera tion. i ^ t spectators taste. who are devoid of musical Timm Doolen Matt McBurnett Of course Posin’ (oops, Poison) couldn’t compare to the big stars of the festival, Pistils ’N Flowers and Bon Jovi, singing songs that are incomprehensible but obviously sexual. Candor’s author is William M. Ham mond, a civilian historian on the Penta gon payroll. His book, “Public Affairs: The Military and the Media, 1962- 1968,” issued by the Government Print ing Office, is part of a series the Army is publishing on every aspect of its role in the Vietnam War. But when Halberstam’s story Wi back to Saigon for an autopsy, military, while disputing someofltit tails, “failed to contradict the repor: main point — that the war in the4 was going against the South Viet ese,” Hammond reports. Woodstock, New York, has unpre dictable weather, so it should be held somewhere where the climate is de pendable — like Palm Springs, but we’d still call it “Woodstock.” But instead of holding it in Palm Springs, it’d be held 45 miles a way at a place with a lot of parking— maybe a mall. who didn’t die before they got old, could put on a set, but I doubt any- body’d be able to hear them, including Townshend. There is always a chance that rap mu sic would rear its ugly head at the ’89 festivities. Highlights of the show would the be Eazy E.’s performance featuring an actual drive-by killing and Run D.M.C.’s on the spot filming of an Ad idas commercial. In recounting the tortured history of relations between the government and the press during the war, Hammond il lustrates the perils when a democracy wages a second-hand war that the Con gress hasn’t declared and the people haven’t committed themselves to. It wasn’t that reporters were than the military. Instead, theU.S sion in Saigon, eager to placate te ington and buck up the South Vietr. ese, ignored the same evidence tha; newsmen found. The biggest battles would be over who gets the movie rights and who would be the biggest sponsor. Coca-Cola vs. Pepsi, IBM vs. AT&T, Miller vs. Coors — who would win? The fans, I’m sure. Trojan would surely be a major backer, supplying condom machines for the hundreds of thousands of fans. And the Red Cross would have to be on hand to provide AIDS testing — no more of that “free love” bit. Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young would probably perform, but David Crosby would have to be under the watchful eyes of his parole officer and the people at Nutri-Systems. Jefferson Airplane (or is it Jefferson Starship, or is it just Starship?) might fly in but Grace Slick’s voice would be in absentia. Whereas almost everybody at Woods tock was on drugs, most of the people at the ’89 festival would be on diets. In stead of the “freakout tent” for pe'ople on bad acid trips, they’d have the “frea kout tent” for people who had broken their diets and had eaten real ice cream instead of yogurt. An announcement over the loudspeakers: “The brown yo gurt now circulating among us is not specifically too good.” Because neither public nor legislative backing had been won, the Kennedy and Johnson administrations felt com pelled toward constant optimism. Until it became a mocking phrase, Washing ton had constantly to report that “the light at the end of the tunnel” was in sight. Vietnam was the first uncensc modern American war. The Kenu administration toyed with censors but ultimately felt it could notwi the inevitable charge that it was: Americans to perish in a “clandts Antonie war.” When the Saigon governra bock, tried to kick out troublesome reporif the U.S. Mission felt bound to comt the reporters’ defense. Hammond reaches this conclusion AUS ns pro ion an< Texas, n gove iepubli or. The man pk with an One Continental Army Command memo cabled to Saigon, borrowing a line from songwriter Johnny Mercer, urged American advisers to “accentuate the positive and eliminate the negative.” The Grateful Dead might play, but the audience might be better off dead than listening to Santa Claus (oops, I mean Jerry Garcia) try to play “Uncle John’s Band” at the age of 135. On Sunday morning they’d have to have the “breakfast in bed for 400,000” but this time it would be egg McMuffins and diet Coke, special-ordered from the local McDonald’s. Instead of “three days of peace and music” as the theme, the theme could be “getting a piece of the pie, love of money and video music.” Or they could be honest with the theme and instead of calling it “three days of peace, love and music,” call it “three days of sex, money and self-gratification.” Gone would be the Indian gurus. Woodstock ’89 could feature the spiri tual leader of contemporary pop, Deb bie Gibson. Our teenage pundit could show by example that it is possible to be quite popular with eighth-grade lyrics. Her right-hand men could be any of the Euro-dance groups such as New Order. Eventually the music groups would finish and the crowds would wander back to their suburbs, but the youth of our generation would have a symbol to rally around for 20 years or more. Well, maybe. Reporters weren’t under such re straints. If Buddhists were setting fire to themselves to oppose a repressive Ngo Dinh Diem regime, or if the American- advised and ill-led South Vietnamese army refused to engage an enemy it out numbered and outgunned, reporters felt free to so report — no matter what frustrations resulted in Washington or what tensions were aggravated between the U.S. Embassy and the presidential palace in Saigon. Information officers wereinani possible position. They could noiife what reporters could see for therasel' despite pressure from Washington keep the news out of Saigon fromca tradicting official optimism. Everyone would show up early in their BMWs and private planes. None of this free nonsense, the charge would be a $30 minimum to cover expenses (Visa and Mastercard accepted but no American Express.) And despite the heavy corporate sponsorship, a percent age of the profits from the extravaganza would have to go to charity, so it wouldn't look like they were doing it for the money. The stage would be easy to set up be cause everything would be computer generated. In fact, most of the show could proceed without the use of a sin gle guitar or a drum set. Timm Doolen and Matt McBurnett are junior engineering majors and col umnists for The Battalion. Policy makers in Washington refused to allow information officers in Vietnam to acknowledge the use of napalm be cause they didn’t want the Communists to make propaganda from it. But the American governmento deny the truth. In lying to the public lied to itself too, and at a terrible price Mark S embark other ci In a Dallas . posed t mission aointed tducati T he < mission ans, sail would s “Critics of the press within the tary paid great attention tothemisti of the news media but little to them of the majority of reporters, who tempted conscientiously to tell alls cations of the story. . . . What alienatedt ( | e .^j l ) 1 | l ) American public, in both the Kort constitu and Vietnam Wars, was notnewsco age but casualties. Public supporl each war dropped inexorably by 15p! centage points whenever total U.S.o unities increased by a factor of 10.” bond f mandat legal dr Hanc breaks f In h Hance « and his “New V Mike Feinsilber is a writer for&§ Associated Press. The dance/pop “music” segment could conclude with a rousing perfor mance by Depeche Mode highlighted by a band member playing the synthesizer with his teeth and then setting it on fire and smashing it against the stage. Janis Joplin and Jimi Hendrix proba bly wouldn’t show up, but many of the old greats would. The Who, the guys Next could come the poser-metal portion of the entertainment. Twenty years after Ten Years After’s Alvin Lee dazzled the crowd with what were called “the fastest fingers at Woodstock,” the gals from Poison, devoid of talent, could strum their way into the hearts of those The Battalion (USPS 045 360) Member of Texas Press Association Southwest Journalism Conference The Battalion Editorial Board Ellen Hobbs, Editor Juliette Rizzo, Opinion Page Editor Fiona Soltes, City Editor rew Leder, Chuck Squatriglia, News Editors Steven Merritt, Sports Editor Katny Haveman, Art Director Hal Hammons, Makeup Editor Editorial Policy The Battalion is a non-profit, self-supporting newspa per operated as a community service to Texas A&M and Bryan-College Station. Opinions expressed in The Battalion are those of the editorial board or the author, and do not necessarily rep resent the opinions of Texas A&M administrators, fac ulty or the Board of Regents. 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