Wednesday, March 27, 2019
Soldiers Personal Narratives of the Vietnam War and The Vietnam War and the Tragedy of Containment :: Vietnam War Essays
Soldiers individualized Narratives of the Vietnam warfare and The Vietnam War and the Tragedy of Containment After reading the Soldiers Personal Narratives of the Vietnam War and The Vietnam War and the Tragedy of Containment, both information did not fight down from each one other. What both information actually do is that they compliment each other. When reading The Vietnam War and the Tragedy of Containment, we are reading a historic outline from a historians point of view. But not all of the analysis can genuinely give the readers a sense of what the war is really like. So by reading the Soldiers Personal Narratives of the Vietnam War, we are reading what the soldiers of the Vietnam War actually goes through and what the soldiers are thinking. For instance, from The Vietnam War and the Tragedy of Containment, it describes The Army cherished proof of enemy casualties--high kill ratios--to present to Washington. Philip Caputo recalled If its dead and its Vietnamese, its V iet Cong, was the rule of feel in compiling casualty statistics. Similarly from The Vietnam War and the Tragedy of Containment, it writes In March of 1968 an American unit was patrolling the village of My Lai in Central Vietnam. They had suffered late(a) losses, were frustrated by their inability to find the enemy and anxious for revenge. They travel up unarmed women, children, and elderly civilians, raped the women, then opened fire. The killed all over 300 Vietnamese civilians, mostly women and children. By reading these passages, it makes readers feel revolt about the war and how the leaders approached their frustrations of who their enemies were. But reading these passages does not give a personal detail of how the soldiers felt or were thinking as these tragedies were occuring. For instance, from the Soldiers Personal Narratives of the Vietnam Wars The Commo Man, it describes a very powerful narrative of how a Vietnamese civilian was shot by a U.S. soldier I knew what the S arge was dismissal to do, but I didnt say anything. I just watched, as if in a dream, unconnected from the world around me, paralyzed, impotent. I could have halt it. The Bummer and I were close. All I had to do was say Bummer, dont do it. unless four little words, and the spell would have been broken. Instead, I said nothing, and watched as Sarge put his rifle to his shoulder, took aim and fired.
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