Friday, December 10, 2010

Quote

"Television brought the brutality of war into the comfort of the living room. Vietnam was lost in the living rooms of America--not on the battlefields of Vietnam. " ------Marshall McLuhan, 1975

Blunt reality of war in Vietnam

 

It was perhaps the most controversial cover for LIFE magazine, which usually steered clear of controversy. Paul Schutzers captured this image of a VietCong prisoner gagged and bound, being taken prisoner by American forces during the Vietnam War. Photography and news coverage like this helped to turn the American public against the Vietnam war.

Thursday, December 9, 2010

My reason for choosing this topic.

My reason for choosing this topic is because being from Southeast Asia, the effects of the Vietnam war is still felt  in present day in the ASEAN reigion. And from reading this chapter in Mightier than a Sword, I gained a much deeper insight into the history,politics and most importantly importance of television that played into the war. This chapter highlights how television is the most powerful medium in history. That is truly undeniable, even though pictures in print are worth a thousand words, images that are communicated through television are vivid in color and motions and conveys more than a thousand words to its viewers.  The television had the tremendous power to reach into every corner of American society to send them the true message of the war. Without censorship. It communicated words through it's footages that could not otherwise be conveyed via words in print. Americans depended on the television as their major news source when the reality of the battlefield was brought to them to their living rooms through the television. When people saw blood on their screens in all its glory, they were exposed to the reality and brutalities of war. Over the few years, television journalists Greg Harris and Jack Perkins from NBC narrated the war to their viewers with vivid and emotional descriptions completed with bloody scenes, no one could turn their eyes away from their television sets. However, Americans soon realized the truth about the Vietnam war and started changing their opinions and withdrawing the support for the war from the Tet offenses, the Zippo cigarette lighter which torched an entire Vietnamese village and a Southern Vietnamese, a U.S. ally who shot a prisoner in cold blood without trail. All of these images were brought to American's viewers and stunned the entire Nation and not to mention, the entire world. Walter Cronkite, a legendary journalist, was determined to uncover the truth about what really was going on and flew across the world. His statement to America through television was that no one really was winning the war, the power of his words and status as a legendary journalist carried such tremendous weight that Johnson had to step down. With the coverage of protests and protesters dying due to finding out about Nixon sending in more troops, this was conveyed through the media to the public and sent a message about morals. This shows us how extremely powerful the news media is, that it can literally shape and determine history. Through what they say, Americans chose not to continue with the war. Without the help of the news media and television, the war would probably have continued longer than it did with never ending problems and limited solutions. Journalists are some of the most powerful people in this world and without them reporting the realities of the war, things might have turned out very different with extremely negative consequences. Much worse than the present day effects of the Vietnam War. Exposing the reality of the war, bloodbath and all to the everyday American shows the democratic system of America, as this is something that is not allowed in a media that is controlled by it's government. Through the voice of credible news journalists and the media, the story of the powerful, the powerless, the victims and the deception of politics and politicians to the American society about the war was narrated to Americans in the most graphic and vivid details imaginable.

More war protestors


Vietnam War protesters. 1967. Wichita, Kansas, 1967

Protest

Tet Offensive 1968, US Embassy & Saigon fighting

 

Credit: MadMax2k2 from www.youtube.com

Outline

Chapter 12: Vietnam War. Bringing the battle field into the American living room.

This is the outline which highlights the beginning of the Vietnam War to the time when Television evolved as a powerful major news medium and how it exposed the brutal bloody immoral horrors of the war and how it was simply not possible for the United States to win the Vietnam war to the American public through their television sets in the comforts of the home. American Viewers went from supporting the war to being completely against it through the images they were showed from the television. In other words, television news helped end the war.

1. American's longest war: 

Early 1950s President Truman initiated the U.S. involvement with Vietnam and sends military troops.
1954 Vietnam was divided into two main territories. The North being controlled by the Communists and the South was pro democracy.
1964 Vietnam being a part of Americans lives.
Congress assured that all U.S. forces in Southeast Asia would be supported.
1965 Johnson sends massive troops to Vietnam.
1967 The number of U.S. troops exceeds 500,000 due to the U.S. being unfamiliar with the warfare practised by their enemy.

2. The most powerful medium in History. The Television.

Mid 1960s, most people started receiving their news from television instead of newspapers.
1972, 2/3s of Americans named the television as their source for major news.
Through 1967, television coverage of the war was favorable to the U.S. policy.

3. Exposing the horrors of the War.

1967 NBC Greg Harris reports from Vietnam in the presence of the troops about the reality of the horrors going on in Vietnam.

4. A Zippo lighter creates a storm.

In 1965, Safer films troops torching a Vietnamese village killing many innocent Vietnamese peasants.
Fred Friendly runs footage through CBS to the anger of President Johnson of many americans.

5. Tet stuns a Nation.

1968, North Vietnamese starts the Tet by sending the Viet Cong suicide squad to the U.S. Embassy in Saigon killing five American soldiers. This was a psychological win for the Viet Cong shocking the American public damaging the American's trust in the Johnson's administartion.

6.The Shot felt around the world: 
Howard Tucker captures film of prisoner being shot in cold blood by a Southern Vietnamese officer,someone who was on the side of the United States. This footage left Americans disillusioned and they realized the truth about the war. Americans attitudes towards the war were starting to change.

7.Exposing the war as unwinnable

Walter Cronkite sets on a mission to Vietnam to uncover the truth. He concludes through the screens of millions of Americans from Vietnam that they were not winning the war. His words had a huge impact. President Johnson announced that he would not be running for reelections a month later and that the United states participation in the war would be greatly decreased.

8. Antiwar Protesters.

By mid 1968, the tet offensive and Walter Cronkite statement made journalists suspicious of government policies and more forgiving towards dissidents.

1970, war protesters became much more aggressive to the point of people losing their lives when they found out that Nixon sent more troops to other parts of Southeast Asia.