BRIAN WILLSON,
bw@brianwillson.com, www.brianwillson.com
After participating
in the Vietnam War as a member of the U.S. Air Force, Willson became a peace
activist. In 1987, in a civil disobedience action with other activists at a
military base, Willson lost his legs when a train carrying munitions bound for
Central America accelerated instead of stopping. At the request of the
Institute for Public Accuracy, he provided a statement today and will be
available for interviews:
"My Air Force Combat Security unit was dispatched to Binh Thuy on March 7, 1969, to fortify a Vietnamese-controlled air base a few miles northwest of Can Tho City in Phong
Dinh Province, about 100 miles southwest of Saigon. I was the first lieutenant
in charge of this unit.... As a security officer I quickly had to acquaint
myself with intelligence reports on 'enemy' activity, and locations and types
of friendly resources. I had not been in Vietnam more than a month or so when
it was becoming obvious to me that virtually everybody, other than a select few
identified Vietnamese business, political, and military leaders, was at least
secretly hostile to the U.S. presence and sympathetic with the Vietnamese
struggle for independence from any outside political force. After Tet 1968, the
U.S./CIA Phoenix program had become especially intense in eliminating political
and military leadership in the Vietcong, and U.S. air and ground forces had
become much more indiscriminate in killing Vietnamese and calling them all VC.
"Bob Kerrey and I, along with nearly 4 million other U.S. men and women, were thrust into a fundamentally immoral, lawless intervention against the authentic desires of
the Vietnamese to build an independent, sovereign nation. My job was, in
essence, to protect airplanes in between their missions bombing villages, the
latter all having been identified as being in a 'free fire zone,' which made it
easy to rationalize destroying everything. On occasion I witnessed through
ground observations the aftermath of villages bombed with only bodies of young
women, many children, and a few elderly strewn on the ground. I never saw any
weapons in these virtually defenseless villages.
"Our lawless, violent intervention in Vietnam was, unfortunately, not an aberration. This is a tough conclusion, one that is extremely painful, to acknowledge about the
nation of our upbringing and citizenship. But we veterans have a choice to take
courageous responsibility for our actions, even if our government will not. Bob
Kerrey and his men killed for this lie, and this terrible assault on the
Vietnamese people. The only difference between Kerrey and myself is that I was
never in a position to personally kill while in Vietnam. But I was part of a
killing machine, even being complicit in the bombing campaigns, and I saw
dozens and dozens of the bodies of women and children.
"It is time to acknowledge our responsibility and to take leadership in a national healing process. Our souls, and the soul of our country, are at stake. Furthermore, the
future of peace in the world may rest on a profound reckoning on the part of
people in the U.S. that our imperial policies have been wrong, and that we now
want to truly make amends for our crimes. I urge Bob Kerrey to be truly
courageous about revealing his role while in Vietnam, and ask other veterans to
do the same. The future of the human condition, not just our souls, may actually
be at stake."
Also available for
interviews: