Tag Archives: Vietnam War

Walter Cronkite Vietnam

Walter Cronkite Vietnam

February 27, 1968
Walter Cronkite Vietnam
Cronkite in Vietnam (photo from CBS news)
Walter Cronkite Vietnam

The News

In 1968 you got your news from newspapers, radio, or TV. Newspapers typically published a morning edition, though there were certainly afternoon papers that the grammar school paperboy delivered while listening to his transistor radio.

At 7 PM (ET), that paperboy might have sat down with his father (Mom was putting younger siblings to bed) and watched the half-hour evening news. There were three networks: ABC, NBC, and CBS and until 1963 the shows were just 15 minutes long.

Walter Cronkite Vietnam

Walter Cronkite

The news anchors were Chet Huntley and David Brinkley on NBC,  Frank Reynolds on ABC, and  Walter Cronkite on CBS. They ruled the news airwaves, particularly Walter Cronkite, who was sometimes referred to as “the most trusted man in America.” I learned the word avuncular when someone used it describing him.

Every news organization has biases. It selects what to report and what not to report, but the aim is to be objective. Reports tried to stick with observable facts. Editorializing during the evening news was unusual.

Reporting from the field was different, too.  Unlike today when reporters are “embedded” with a military group and go only where that group go, reporters then could go where they could go. In other words, if a reporter could find a way to get to the front or wherever, that reporter could go there.

Walter Cronkite Vietnam

Tet Offensive

On January 30, 1968, the Viet Cong and North Vietnam Army troops launched the Tet Offensive attacking a hundred cities and towns throughout South Vietnam. The surprise offensive was closely observed by American TV news crews in Vietnam which filmed the U.S. embassy in Saigon being attacked by 17 Viet Cong commandos, along with bloody scenes from battle areas showing American soldiers under fire, dead and wounded. The graphic color film footage was then quickly relayed back to the states for broadcast on nightly news programs.

While the American and South Vietnamese troops repulsed the Tet Offensive, the near success of the campaign forced many back home to question the idea that we had been in control, that we were winning, that the war would end soon.  Questioned particularly in light of  Gen. William Westmoreland, commander of U.S. Military Assistance Command Vietnam, telling U.S. news reporters the previous November: “I am absolutely certain that whereas in 1965 the enemy was winning, today he is certainly losing.”

Walter Cronkite Vietnam

February 27, 1968

On February 27, 1968, Walter Cronkite delivered the news as always: objectively and calmly, but at the end of his report he did something unusual.

Prepared. Not off script. Cronkite said…

Tonight, back in more familiar surroundings in New York, we’d like to sum up our findings in Vietnam, an analysis that must be speculative, personal, subjective. Who won and who lost in the great Tet Offensive against the cities? I’m not sure. The Vietcong did not win by a knockout but neither did we.

We’ve been too often disappointed by the optimism of the American leaders…

Both in Vietnam and Washington to have faith any longer in the silver linings they find in the darkest clouds. For it seems now more certain than ever, that the bloody experience of Vietnam is to end in a stalemate. To say that we are closer to victory today is to believe in the face of the evidence, the optimists who have been wrong in the past.

To say that we are mired in stalemate seems the only realistic, if unsatisfactory conclusion. On the off chance that military and political analysts are right, in the next few months we must test the enemy’s intentions, in case this is indeed his last big gasp before negotiations.

But it is increasingly clear to this reporter that the only rational way out then will be to negotiate, not as victors, but as an honorable people who lived up to their pledge to defend democracy, and did the best they could.

This is Walter Cronkite. Good night.

Here is a piece of that report:

The common story after Cronkite’s report is that President Lyndon Johnson turned to his press secretary, George Christian, and said, “If I’ve lost Cronkite, I’ve lost the country.”

It can be argued that Cronkite’s statement didn’t actually have the impact that history credits it, but it can’t be argued that at time of relatively limited news media when a generally well-respected man whom people watched five nights a week and depended upon for their news went against something, opinion scales were tipped toward getting out of Vietnam.

Walter Cronkite Vietnam

David Miller Draft Card Burner

David Miller Draft Card Burner

David Miller was not the first person to burn his draft card in protest of US involvement in the Vietnam War, but his case became the most publicized.

As more and more people protested the war, various ways of demonstrating that protest began. When burning a draft card was first being done, it was not illegal to do so.

David Miller Draft Card Burner

David Miller Draft Card Burner
Eugene Keyes Draft Card Burner

For example, Eugene Keyes burned his draft card on Christmas Eve 1963. He used to flame to light a peace candle.  The same day, Selective Service mailed Keyes a notice to report for his physical examination. ( NYT article)

On May 12, 1964 twelve student publicly burned their draft cards in New York City.

On May 5, 1965, forty men burned their draft cards at the University of California, Berkeley and a coffin was marched to the Berkeley Draft Board.

On August 31, 1965, President Johnson signed a law making the burning of draft cards a federal offense subject to a five-year prison sentence and $1000 fine. [The constitutionality of the federal law was upheld by the US Supreme Court in US v. O’Brien (May 27, 1968)]

On October 15, 1965, David Miller, a Catholic pacifist,  publicly burned his draft card. Three days later, the FBI arrested him. In its November 5 issue, Time magazine described the action of Miller and other draft card burners as “a post-adolescent craze.”

Miller responded to that description from the Onondaga County Penitentiary. [note the term Vietniks]

David Miller Draft Card Burner
Nov. 26, 1965, Vol. 86, No. 22
David Miller Draft Card Burner

Union Square burnings

David Miller Draft Card Burner
Photo by Neil Haworth, courtesy of War Resisters League
Draft-card burners in 1965 at the Union Square Pavilion, from left, Tom Cornell, Marc Edelman, Roy Lisker, David McReynolds and Jim Wilson. Dutch-born clergyman and activist A.J. Muste is at right in hat and topcoat.

Miller’s arrest did not stop the draft card burning. For example, on November 6, 1965 in Union Square, NYC, Thomas Cornell (teacher) Marc Edelman (cabinetmaker), Roy Lisker (novelist and teacher), and James Watson (on staff of Catholic Worker Pacifist Movement) burned their draft cards. (2015 Villager article)

On December 21, the four were indicted.

David Miller Draft Card Burner

David Miller

On February 10, 1966 a jury convicted David Miller of burning his draft card.

On March 15, Federal District Judge Harold R Tyler, Jr gave Miller a three-year suspended sentence and placed him on probation for two years.

Tyler also stipulated that:

  • Miller obtain a new draft card within two weeks
  • carry that draft card
  • obey all lawful orders of his Selective Service board
  • if called to serve, to submit to induction into the armed services

Miller said after, “I have no intention of obeying any of the judge’s directives even if I have to go to jail.”

Anti anti-Vietnam violence

As an example of how divisive the war in general and draft card burning became, on March 31, 1966, high school boys punched and kicked seven anti-Vietnam demonstrators on the steps of the South Boston District Court House after four of the protesters had burned their Selective Service cards. With shouts of “Kill them, shoot them,” about 50 to75 high school boys charged the steps and knocked the demonstrators to the ground as a crowd of 200 watched. David O’Brien, 19, was one of the card burners. On July 1, O’Brien was sentenced to a Federal Youth Correctional Center for an indefinite term.

David Miller Draft Card Burner

Judicial process

On October 13, 1966, the US Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit upheld Miller’s conviction. It held that Congress had the right to enact a law against destroying a draft card so long as it did not infringe on a constitutional right.

The NY Civil Liberties Union challenged the constitutionality of law prohibiting draft card burning on December 12, 1966. The appeal charged that the law was an unconstitutional abridgment of the freedom of expression guaranteed by the First Amendment and its purpose is to suppress dissent.

The US Court of Appeals for the First Circuit held unconstitutional the amendment to the Selective Service Act that forbade the burning of draft cards on April 10, 1967.

On May 27, 1968, in United States v. O’Brien in a 7 – 1 opinion, the Supreme Court upheld the 1965 law that made it a crime to burn or otherwise destroy or mutilate a draft card. Chief Justice Warren, writing the majority opinion, rejected the lower court’s contention that draft card burning was “symbolic speech” and that Congress was forbidden by the First Amendment’s free-speech guarantees to outlaw it. (Oyez article)

After Miller lost in the U.S. Supreme Court, he served 22 months in federal prison in Pennsylvania from 1968 to 1970.

David Miller Draft Card Burner

Honky Tonk Communists

Miller later wrote I Didn’t Know God Made Honky-Tonk Communists.  Here is a link to an excerpt from the Reclaiming Quarterly site. 

David Miller Draft Card Burner

Photographer Eddie Adams

Photographer Eddie Adams

February 1, 1968

Photographer Eddie Adams
Eddie Adams posing in 1968 with his picture of Nguyễn Ngọc Loan, a South Vietnamese National Police Chief executing a Viet Cong officer named Nguyễn Văn Lém.

Eddie Adams had been photographing war zones since he joined the Marines in 1951 during the Korean War as a combat photographer.

In 1968 he was in Vietnam with the Associated Press.

Photographer Eddie Adams

On January 30, 1968  the Viet Cong and North Vietnamese Army troops launched the Tet Offensive attacking a hundred cities and towns throughout South Vietnam.  American TV news crews closely observed the surprise offensive  and filmed Viet Cong commandos attacking the U.S. embassy in Saigon along with bloody scenes from other battle areas showing American soldiers under fire, dead, or wounded. The various media quickly relayed the graphic color film footage  back to the states for broadcast on nightly news programs.

Photographer Eddie Adams

On February 1, 1968, Eddie Adams happened upon a scene. He took a photograph and later, as usual, turned in his film. Little did he realize he had taken an iconic picture. One that for many encapsulated the reason why the United States was involved in an immoral war.

Adams himself simply felt he’d taken another war picture. Another picture of another person killed.

Adams won the 1969 Pulitzer Prize for Spot News Photography and a World Press Photo award for the photograph.

But the awards and fame were not what Adams remembered nor understood. Adams wrote in Time magazine in 1998: Two people died in that photograph: the recipient of the bullet and  General Nguyen Ngoc Loan. The general killed the Viet Cong; I killed the general with my camera. Still photographs are the most powerful weapons in the world. People believe them; but photographs do lie, even without manipulation. They are only half-truths. … What the photograph didn’t say was, ‘What would you do if you were the general at that time and place on that hot day, and you caught the so-called bad guy after he blew away one, two or three American people?’…. This picture really messed up his life. He never blamed me. He told me if I hadn’t taken the picture, someone else would have, but I’ve felt bad for him and his family for a long time. … I sent flowers when I heard that he had died and wrote, “I’m sorry. There are tears in my eyes.”

Photographer Eddie Adams

Post script

Eddie Adams died on September 18, 2004. His obituary appeared in the New York Times.

After re-posting this blog entry in 2019, Jean Van White posted the following comment: Short story–years ago I was in hospital after surgery. I awoke, foggy from drugs and swore I saw the shooter at the foot of the next bed. Tim came in, and in my drugged state I pulled him close and whispered 3 words–“It’s the shooter.”. He had no idea what I mean and suggested Icut back on morphine. Long story short–it was the shooter visiting his daughter in the next bed. He owned a restaurant in nearby Springfield.

My response was: Holy Shit!

Photographer Eddie Adams