Subject:
We've waited a long time for this PLEASE READ, VERY IMPORTANT!!!
I am not one to ask you to forward a web page, but in
this case, I will break ranks! This has been a long time coming and needs to be
heard now more than ever. It took 30 years for David Horowitz to realize what a
lot of knew on the ground in Vietnam. I applaud his courage at a time when it is
most needed. Send it on...
David Horowitz Published Oct 2 2001
As a former antiwar activist who helped to organize the
first campus demonstration against the war in Vietnam at the University of
California, Berkeley in 1962, I appeal to all young people who are participating
in antiwar demonstrations on college campuses to reconsider. The hindsight of
history has shown that our efforts in the 1960s to end the war in Vietnam had
two practical effects. The first was to prolong the war. Since the war ended in
1975, North Vietnamese generals have said that they knew they could not defeat
the United States on the battlefield, so they counted on the division of our
people at home to win the war for them.
The Viet Cong forces we were fighting in South Vietnam
were destroyed in 1968. In other words, most of the war and most of the
casualties in the war occurred because the dictatorship of North Vietnam counted
on the fact that Americans would give up the battle rather than pay the price
necessary to finish it. This is what happened.
The
blood of hundreds of thousands of Vietnamese and tens of thousands of Americans
is on the hands of the antiwar activists who prolonged the struggle and gave
victory to the Communists. The second effect springs from the prolonging of the
war, and that was to surrender South Vietnam to the forces of communism. This
resulted in the imposition of a monstrous police state, the murder of hundreds
of thousands of innocent South Vietnamese, the incarceration in reeducation
camps of hundreds of thousands more and a quarter-century of abject poverty
imposed by crackpot Marxist economic plans.
This,
too, is the responsibility of the so-called antiwar movement of the 1960s. I say
"so-called" because while many Americans were sincerely troubled by
the U.S. war effort, the organizers of this movement were Marxists and radicals
who supported a Communist victory. Today, the same people and their followers
are organizing campus demonstrations against America's effort to defend its
citizens against the forces of international terrorism and anti-American hatred
responsible for the Sept. 11 attacks. I know better than most, about the
importance of protecting freedom of speech and the right of citizens to dissent.
But I also know that there is a difference between honest dissent and malevolent
hate, between criticism of national policy and sabotage of the nation's
defenses.
In
the 1960s and 1970s, the tolerance of anti-American hatreds was so high that the
line between dissent and treason was erased. Along with thousands of other New
Leftists, I was one who crossed the line between dissent and actual treason by
publishing classified government information in Ramparts magazine. I did so for
what I thought were the noblest of reasons, to advance the cause of social
justice and peace. I have lived to see how wrong I was and how much damage we
did -- especially to those whose cause we claimed to embrace, the peasants of
Indochina who suffered grievously from our support for the Communist enemy.
If I have one regret from my radical years, it is
that this country was too tolerant toward the treason of its enemies within. If
patriotic Americans had been more vigilant in the defense of their country, if
they had called things by their right names, if they had confronted us with the
seriousness of our attacks, they might have caught the attention of those of us
who were well-meaning but utterly misguided. And they might have stopped us in
our tracks.
I appeal to those of you who are attacking your
country, full of self-righteousness, who, like me, might live to regret what you
have done. I have lived to see how wrong I was.
-- David Horowitz, president of the Center for the Study of Popular
Culture in Los Angeles, is editor in chief of Frontpagemagazine.com. He wrote
this for the Los Angeles Times.
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