January 31st, 2011
On 30 Jan 1968, I was a rifle company commander in the 101st Airborne Div in Vietnam when the Tet Offensive began. It was the most intensive fighting I ever experienced.
In coordinated attacks all across South Vietnam, communist forces launch their largest offensive to date against South Vietnamese and US troops. Dozens of cities, towns, and military bases were attacked. Battles raged for weeks; the fight to reclaim the city of Hue from communist troops was particularly destructive—and that’s where I was. American and South Vietnamese forces lost over 3,000 men during the offensive. Estimates for communist losses ran as high as 40,000.
The massive offensive was not a military success for the communists, but the US media portrayed it that way and the resulting protests in the US and media misrepresentations were enough to keep the North Vietnamese in the war, despite the terrible military pounding they took.
I’ve spoken to hundreds of Iraq/Afghan vets; all agree on one thing about our mainstream media. Fox News gets it right about half the time; no other news network even comes close. And they really miss understanding what’s important over there and what is not. Don’t trust our mainstream media.
Tags: Afghanistan, communists, defeat., fox news, Iraq, Tet Offensive, US media, Vietnam
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January 31st, 2011
On 30 Jan 1943 the British Royal Air Force began a bombing campaign on the German capital that coincided with the 10th anniversary of Hitler’s accession to power.
To celebrate the anniversary of Hitler’s 1933 becoming the head of the German government, both propaganda minister Joseph Goebbels and head of the Luftwaffe Hermann Goering planned to give radio addresses to the German people. Goebbels would hail an impending victory in Russia, saying “A thousand years hence, every German will speak with awe of Stalingrad and remember that it was there that Germany put the seal on her victory.” As the speeches were broadcast, RAF fighters rained bombs on Berlin, the beginning of devastating attacks on German cities that would last until the very end of the war. To make matters even worse for the Germans, the next day a massive surrender of German troops occurred at Stalingrad.
Let’s remember to keep our military strong–while we cut our nation’s budget. I think the Departments of Education and Energy could go with little negative impact.
Tags: Berlin, bombing, Dept of, Dept of Education, England, Germany, Stalingrad, WW II
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January 30th, 2011
Today in 1834, Andrew Jackson becomes the first President to use federal troops to quell labor unrest when the banks of the Potomac burst into violence when workers on the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal rioted. We don’t permit that any more. But our government is actively working on a plan to control the internet–much as the governments of China and Egypt are doing as I write this. We need to get our federal government under control.
Tags: Andrew Jackson, China, Egypt, internet, President, troops
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January 28th, 2011
On 28 Jan 1915 an act of Congress created the US Coast Guard. Several organizations that had existed for a long time were merged under the new name. Anyway, happy birthday, Coasties!
Tags: birthday, congress, US Coast Guard
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January 27th, 2011
1/27/2010
Episode 163
Topics
News and Comment by the Col: Five Stars for Petreaus
Craig Gray: Self-Defense
Kathy Jackson: armed women
Keith St Clair; Last Thoughts: Point/Counterpoint
Listen to this episode:
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