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Memorandum from
Phillip N Butler, former Vietnam POW, on the Jane Fonda
story:
(A reply I've sent out many times to well-meaning
friends who might have believed the continuing internet
mythology about Ms Fonda.)
I want everyone to
know how much I appreciate your support, concern and respect
for me and my fellow former Vietnam prisoners of war. But
regarding the "Jane Fonda" story, which has been circulating
for years on the internet, I feel morally bound to tell you
what really took place.
This Jane Fonda
story is totally distorted and overblown. Every time I see
it some new embellishment has been added. Jerry Driscoll and
Larry Carrigan are both friends of mine. I knew them in the
prisons of North Vietnam. Neither of them was tortured as a
result of an interview with Jane Fonda. That story is a
complete fabrication. No one died as a result of beatings
after an interview with her. Furthermore, Jane Fonda was not
"nominated" or "elected" as one of the 100 best or whatever
women. All of this is nonsense that has been played out on
the internet for years now.
It's true that
most returned POW's, myself included, do not look kindly on
Fonda because she was photographed on a NVN 37mm gun mount
and served as a shill for what was then our enemy. Then she
came back home and said we POW's were being treated well.
She even continued to deny that we had been treated
badly after we came home and almost unanimously certified
having been tortured at least once. (95% of our POW's were
physically tortured at least once.) I was physically
tortured some half-dozen times, once for 30 days. We also
suffered malnutrition, diseases, lack of medical care,
isolation, exploitation and even death at the hands of our
captors. But seeing her recently on TV interviews to promote
her book has only reinforced my belief that she is merely an
immature, conflicted and spoiled woman.
I believe there is
a more important lesson here though. In my opinion the
Vietnam War was a national and humanitarian disaster. It was
pointless and we lost it to the Vietnamese, who now control
their own country and are in the process of making their own
mistakes much like we do from time to time. It is a sad
chapter in our history where a lot of very wonderful,
courageous and selfless people served and even gave their
lives for no good reason - lives on our side and theirs. We
lost 58,000 killed and they lost over 2 million. Our will to
fight and win has been damaged and their country has been
devastated, probably for centuries, by inconceivable
destruction and war pollution. We have around 1,500 still
missing and they have around 300,000 missing. And
incidentally, we still have over 8,000 missing from Korea
and 45,000 from WWII. Let everyone understand that we DO NOT
always bring our dead and wounded home. War is chaotic hell
on earth and people always get left behind.
Moreover, the real
damage of war remains forever in people's hearts. Thus the
repeated genesis of internet memos like this one.
Phillip Butler,
PhD
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