It has long been said history is actually "His Story". The point being only one version of what occurred is ever actually taught. This is largely a true statement, and normally only the winning side is allowed to create the narrative, but the United States is rather unique in its willingness to sometimes allow the losing side to tell the story.
Such is the case with our education system’s description of the Cold War.
Contrary to what the last two generations have been taught, the Cold War didn’t end because public opinion and angry protests caused our government to slow down its aggressive behavior against poor, innocent countries striving to live in peace and harmony with Mother Nature. It ended because we caused the true aggressors, the Communists (and by that I specifically mean the Russians), to crap their pants.
What I am about to tell you comes
            mostly from my own personal experience and from military briefings I received
            shortly after these aspects were discovered. The fact you may not be aware of
            them can be primarily ascribed to the ignorance, some of which is deliberate, in
            the people telling the stories today. Certainly none of this is classified, and
            anybody who was willing to do the research could put it all together from other
            sources, but, sadly, that might actually be our country’s biggest problem. Most
            Americans now prefer being spoon fed garbage over having to find anything
            better on their own.
It is true there are none so blind
            as those who will not see, but following behind that truth is another pertinent
            observation. There are none so ignorant as those who refuse to verify what
            they’ve been taught. I hope you will be interested enough to compare an
            eyewitness account to the version currently in the textbooks.
For those who weren’t alive during
            the Cold war, and/or weren’t taught much about it, this ‘war’ was pretty much a
            political struggle between communism and western democracy wherein none of the
            major players fought each other directly.
Russia was the leader of the
            communist side back then because all communism everywhere had its roots, and
            took its guidance, at least initially, from Russia. Even when a conglomeration
            of several countries ‘joined’ together to form the Soviet Union, the Russians
            were the ones truly in charge.
For the most part, the other
            countries in the Soviet Union were merely a buffer zone around Mother Russia to
            protect it from a large land attack, but many of these nation-states, such as
            East Germany and Bulgaria, were also useful for committing the crimes Russia
            couldn’t openly do itself. Russia gave the orders, but it was always later able
            to claim its hands were clean when other countries got caught doing the dirty
            work.
What American educators usually fail to mention is there was an awful lot of dirty
            work being done, and none of it led to the betterment of mankind. The so-called
            ‘worker’s paradise’ the commies have been trying to create with all their shenanigans
            for the last hundred years has never even come close to being attained.The communists are really good at breaking eggs, but they still haven’t made the omelet.
All you need do is look at how many
            countries under the Soviet umbrella were forced to join, and see how many
            millions of people were murdered under their reign, to realize the Soviet Union
            truly was an "evil empire".
Remember that phrase? Ronald Reagan
            made it popular, but do you think he picked it at random? Uh-uh. It was
            deliberate, and, even though most Americans never realized it, that phrase freaked
            the Russians out worse than anything else we could have said. This is where leftists
            always fall short. They’re so busy mocking people and ideas they don’t like,
            they don’t take time to actually study what’s going on. Please let me briefly
            explain what the leftists missed. There were a lot of things we did that
            freaked out the Russians, and one of the biggest ones was Vietnam.
Our entry into Vietnam was simply to
            stop the spread of communism. It’s no more complicated than that. Forget all
            that rubbish about American imperialism or colonialism. If any of that nonsense
            was true, we would have sent over an army at least three times larger, and we
            would have massively attacked the north.
No country with designs of building
            an empire would have done what we did, so, the big question is this: why didn’t
            we obliterate North Vietnam altogether and force them into unconditional surrender? With
            our military might we could have easily conquered the entire region in just a
            few months, and the fact we didn’t even try to take over their government tells
            you everything you need to know about our real purpose.
Has any anti-war or anti-American
            activist ever bothered to give a rational explanation for why any country
            hell-bent on conquest would try to attain such a goal using all the stupid
            restrictions we placed upon our troops? Just take some time to think about that
            for a little bit, and you’ll see it doesn’t make any sense. I mean, seriously,
            if imperialism was our sole purpose then we must be the most peaceful
            war-mongers in the history of mankind!
No, the simple truth is we weren’t
            trying to conquer anything or anybody, and it’s the communists who have always
            been the true aggressors. Spreading their ideology over the entire world has
            consistently been their stated goal, and it has never been ours. Here’s the
            proof. All the communists have ever had to do to avoid fighting us was stay
            inside their own borders. Why didn’t they? Why was it okay for them to invade
            countries and evil for us to try stopping them?
Please let me point out another incredibly obvious fact nobody yet seems to have noticed. The United States has never committed troops in any war overseas that wasn’t started by somebody else before we even got involved, and this is something the communists can’t say.
As far as Vietnam goes, the
            communists and other haters of America love to crow we were forced to quit
            fighting an immoral war, but, if that was true, what moral good did the
            communists bring about with their glorious ‘people’s’ victory?
Two years after our troops were
            pulled out the communists conquered South Vietnam, along with Laos and
            Cambodia, and, despite all their lofty promises, their first order of business
            wasn’t to set up a benevolent government for the peasant class. No, it was to
            start purging these countries of undesirables. They mindlessly slaughtered millions
            of people they had earlier claimed they only wanted to save, and, after a
            couple years of this, those who had managed to survive became so desperate more
            than a million of them decided it was safer to risk crossing the Pacific Ocean
            in shabby, little boats than to remain under communist rule. (We know a little
            over a million made it, but we’ll never know how many of them died in the
            attempt. Nonetheless, considering how large and dangerous that ocean is, it
            seems highly likely the ones who survived represent less than half the number
            who left).
Anybody truly believe they were only fleeing a bad economy or the after-effects of Yankee Imperialism? Those who do are delusional. The Boat people were fleeing for their
            lives, and, if America was so evil, why did they want to come here? The leftists
            in our country may not have figured out the answer to that question, but the
            Russians did. They knew this exodus only proved communist rhetoric didn’t match
            communist reality, on a scale the entire world could see, and the worst part,
            from their perspective, was they had no way to hide it. Vietnam wasn’t a formal part of the Soviet sphere, so Russian influence wasn’t enough to make the Vietnamese follow their orders, and there was no way the Russians could cover this up by themselves. Even if they had the
            resources, which they absolutely did not, it would have been impossible for them to effectively
            wall in the entire region the way they had in Berlin.
This was when the
            Russians first realized they were in danger of expanding their empire beyond
            their ability to control it. It also set the stage for open-minded people to
            see the difference between communist controlled countries and freer nations.
Just consider this. The one country
            in the region they couldn’t conquer, Thailand, is doing much better than all
            three of these countries put together, more
            than forty years after the professed people’s Utopia was created, and, in
            case you haven’t noticed, neither Russia nor China has been able to
            significantly improve its own influence in the affairs of the world since then,
            let alone that of any of their offspring countries. For all the technological
            advances they either stole or bought from western countries, these two leaders
            of communism in theTwentieth Century are still desperately trying to catch up to capitalism.
Here’s why. Despite the fact our
            politicians decided to fight the war in Vietnam as stupidly as possible, and
            their idiotic behavior caused us much harm at home, the effect this war had on
            the Russians was even more damaging.
This is important. The Soviet
            mindset was very different from ours, and they simply could not understand what
            we were doing. They didn’t believe we were merely making stupid decisions; they
            thought we must be up to something devious. To protect themselves from a force
            they knew was much stronger than their own, the communists devoted more of
            their economic resources to the military than to the care and feeding of their
            people. It was the logical thing to do when our behavior was so confusing to
            them, especially when they suspected they were in danger of being hit with a sneak-attack, but it wasn’t something they could afford to keep doing long-term. This
            was part of what led to the Soviet collapse.
You don’t even have to be Russian to
            understand their confusion. Why would we fight in Vietnam at all, let alone
            stay so long, when there was nothing in it for us? It cost us blood and
            treasure, and for what? There was nothing there we either needed or wanted, and
            the truth is the region really had nothing of value to any country as highly
            developed as ours.
When loud-mouth liberals tell you we
            were merely out to spread American imperialism, please ask what we could have
            possibly gained from it. What, the Vietnamese produced rice so good it was
            worth fighting over? Hardly. The only reason we were there was to let the
            communists know there were limits on how far we were willing to let them
            spread. You might think we lost, but the war cost China and Russia as much as
            it did us, and we were much better able to afford it. Aside from which, who
            says we lost? As I mentioned earlier, our military forces had been removed from
            the country two years before Saigon even fell. Under that standard of defeat the
            Korean War is a loss we’re only waiting for the communists to formally finalize.
Our kids in university may not know
            we ultimately won the Vietnam War in 1972, signed a peace treaty in January
            1973, and then pulled all our troops out, but the communists have never
            forgotten it. It’s the biggest reason they don’t interfere with other countries
            now nearly as much as they used to.
With the exception of misguided college-educated
            students who have graduated since at least 1980, the entire world knows we
            clobbered North Vietnam into submission. Prior to the massive bombing of Hanoi,
            the North Vietnamese had no interest in peace talks for anything other than
            political grandstanding. However, as soon as the Soviets realized we wanted to
            end the war, and we no longer cared how we did it, they finally started putting
            pressure on the North to take the peace talks more seriously. The Russians had
            a better understanding of what our true capabilities were than North Vietnam
            did, and they knew we were fed up. Signing a peace treaty to get us to leave
            was far better than making us angry enough to unleash genuine hell upon the
            North.
The Soviets knew if we had pounded Hanoi
            another few months, instead of signing that crappy "Peace with honor" treaty,
            we would have caused North Vietnam to completely collapse.
Even though the communists were able to publicly claim victory, the Soviets were highly disturbed by what that ‘victory’ had done to them. One of the reasons Vietnam affected the Russians so
            strongly was because it didn’t fit in with all the treaties we were signing
            with them over arms reduction. On the one hand we are telling them we are
            willing to reduce our forces and live in peace, and on the other hand we were
            telling them we were willing to fight them for years on end in little countries
            with no real value to us. They were painfully aware we’d been fighting and
            winning in Vietnam, despite having voluntarily tied one hand behind our back, and when they looked at all the truly powerful weapons we were saying we didn’t actually need and were willing to
            destroy, they seriously started to suspect we were merely toying with
            them.
The Soviets never did fully grasp
            the way our two-party system caused our actions to seem so schizophrenic. They
            only had one party, and that was the sole form of government control they
            understood, so it was therefore inconceivable to them for any powerful country
            to have more than one ideology making important decisions. From their
            perspective we were just playing "good cop, bad cop", and this always caused
            them to ignore our good cop routine for fear the bad cop was just waiting to
            slap them.
Although they didn’t know it, the
            liberals in our country were the ones playing good cop. They may have
            understood the way they were sucking up to any leftist dictator calling us
            names was making America appear weak to the rest of the world, but what the
            libs never realized was the Russians believed we were merely using that
            apparent weakness to hide our true strength.
No matter how stridently our
            left-leaning politicians tried to set our country up for failure, the Russians were
            worried it was nothing more than a ruse. They were convinced we would
            eventually drop the facade, and they actually thought they were being baited
            into starting a war we already knew they could not win.
This was something President Reagan
            was not only smart enough to figure out, it was a fear he set out to exploit. Think
            about it. Why let the Soviets simply worry we might easily be able to defeat
            them, when we had the capability to prove it beyond all doubt? To do that Ronald
            Reagan decided to stop playing the good cop altogether, and he began letting
            the Soviets see how much faster we could advance our technology than they could
            theirs. That more than anything else led to the Soviet collapse. I should know,
            I was there, and I watched it happen.
I wasn’t old enough to join the military until 1973, so my experience of the Vietnam War was only as an avid observer, but, even so, I paid close attention to the lessons learned, and I
            had a pretty good seat for the rest of the show. Let me put a few of the key
            pieces together.
In 1976 a Soviet pilot took his
            MIG-25 and defected to Japan. We didn’t get to examine that plane for a while,
            but when we did we were shocked to discover the Russians were still using
            vacuum tubes. The transistor had been developed in 1947, and had been widely
            used in our electronics since at least the early 60’s, so we totally expected
            the Soviets to be using transistors also.
Our surprise stemmed from the fact
            we’d known all along they were stealing our technology to build their planes (you
            may have noticed how closely theirs resemble ours), but until that moment we
            didn’t fully appreciate how little of the sophisticated stuff they were able to
            replicate. The Russians had managed to become the world’s best producers of
            vacuum tubes, so their planes were functioning reliably enough to be a threat, but
            their reliance upon this technology was holding them back from advancing as quickly
            as we were. By relying upon vacuum tubes, their LBB’s (Little Black Boxes), were much heavier and bulkier than ours, and that meant their planes couldn’t carry all the ECM (Electronic Countermeasures), and advanced guidance systems our planes were equipped with. Despite their menacing facade, Soviet planes were massively outclassed.
(As a related side note, a few years
            later, when we had significantly advanced the capabilities of integrated
            circuit chips, both China and Russia suddenly discovered they were so incapable
            of building these chips themselves they were forced to buy up the electronic
            devices we were selling around the world, including toys, just to get their
            hands on our chips. In this case their problem wasn’t an inability to
            manufacture the chips; their problem was they couldn’t build facilities clean
            enough to produce them without contamination. This more than anything else is
            proof autocratic government control of a country’s production is vastly
            inferior to free-market control).
Shortly after the Mig-25 incident,
            the movie Star Wars came out. I didn’t think it was much more than an amusing
            bit of fluff, but sometime later I found out it was being viewed as a threat by
            the Soviets. During one of our periodic briefings on the world situation, we
            were informed the Soviets had been trying very hard to gather information about
            how we had made the film. They couldn’t believe any country would put that much
            effort into the creation of such a realistic movie strictly for entertainment
            purposes, and they were especially worried it wasn’t all make-believe. The
            Soviets didn’t have the knowledge or equipment to produce such elaborate special
            effects illusions themselves, and they couldn’t believe whatever technology we
            used for this picture would only have peaceful applications. They were highly
            suspicious we had even used some of our military tech to add realism. That
            might seem funny to you, but it wouldn’t if you understood Soviet paranoia.
The knowledge we had of Soviet
            capabilities and fears in the early eighties put us on the path to wearing them
            down. Without making any formal declarations of what our plan to defeat the
            Soviet Union was, President Reagan began letting them see how fast we could
            develop new technology. Things you probably never noticed sent out an informal
            challenge to the Soviets.
For instance, during our first space
            shuttle launch nobody (except the Soviets) thought a thing about it when we
            dragged out cameras and started counting how many tiles had fallen off the
            shuttle body during launch. Until that moment the Soviets had no idea our
            camera lenses were strong enough to get clear images of small items at such
            great distances. That was when they realized just how much our spy satellites
            could actually see, and they immediately changed the way they tried to hide
            people and objects from our view. Not that we cared. We weren’t giving them any
            information we didn’t want them to have; we were just quietly letting them see
            how far ahead of them we actually were.
We were basically letting them know
            they could steal our current technology, and it wouldn’t do them much good. It
            normally took 3 to 5 years for the Soviets to develop their own versions of our
            stolen technology, and we wanted them to understand by the time they had a
            working copy it would already be obsolete. Even more ominous to the Soviets was
            their worry we were still hiding technology far better than what we were
            putting on display.
Here’s where it got interesting. When
            President Reagan announced we were going to start building a defense system
            against nuclear attack – the Strategic Defense Initiative (SDI) – the liberals
            promptly decided to make fun of it by calling it Star Wars. If they were trying
            to undermine President Reagan they couldn’t have picked a worse name.
This is because the Soviets never
            paid much attention to what we were saying officially. They relied much more
            heavily upon outside indicators to tell them what we were really up to, and
            this particular indicator was sending them a very disturbing message.
It’s absolutely hilarious how this
            affected the Russians. They were highly concerned Star Wars the movie was based
            on real technology, and for the first time the people in America who openly
            supported Gorbachev were now seeming to admit the technology was already in our
            possession. This plus the "Evil Empire" label was making the Soviets think we
            considered ourselves to be part of a real Rebel Alliance, and they couldn’t
            believe we would be so open about it unless we were already convinced we had
            the technology to win.
Therefore, the liberal mockery in
            this instance actually gave Ronald Reagan more leverage to use towards
            weakening the Soviet Union.
The libs still don’t understand the
            role they played in causing the Soviets to panic, but at the time President
            Reagan clearly did. You may have noticed he made no effort whatsoever to discourage people from using that term.
This leads us to another area where
            leftists always portray a false picture. They claim the whole SDI idea was
            impossible and we were just bluffing, but they only make that claim because we
            never did build it. We definitely could have if we had ardently pursued it, and
            the only reason it never got completed was because the leftist politicians in
            our country eventually were able to cut its funding.
I would like to point out two things
            about that. One, these same leftist politicians, way back then, were saying
            they hated the idea, not because it wouldn’t really work, but because they
            thought it would tilt the "balance of power" to our favor. Two, if they truly
            believed it was all a bluff they wouldn’t have worked so hard to cut funding for
            it, and that alone proves they really did know it was possible.
However, that was still in the
            future. By the mid 80’s the Soviets had seen enough of our technological
            capabilities to know we weren’t bluffing, and I personally know how deeply
            concerned Gorbachev was over SDI because I was there when he met with President
            Reagan in Iceland. The first thing Gorbachev said was if we weren’t ready to
            get rid of the Star Wars program then there was no reason for further talks.
President Reagan didn’t even blink.
            He merely said we weren’t giving up SDI, and then he left. He was actually on
            his way to give us a speech when Gorbachev called and asked him to come back. I
            had to spend the entire day waiting in a hangar to finally hear President
            Reagan’s speech, but it was worth the wait. For the first time I could remember,
            a president of the United States was telling us he was willing to stand up to
            the Soviets and make them back down.
I have to tell you, it was a great speech, and, since it was the
            first presidential speech I had personally attended, I also thought it was the
            first time a Republican politician had said something really important. I didn’t
            know until I saw the news coverage of it later how much the American media
            ignored Republican speeches. The TV news broadcasts spent all of thirty seconds
            each covering it, and none of them played back a single thing of substance
            president Reagan said.
I cannot stress this enough. If all
            you knew of this meeting was the way the news portrayed it, you never would
            have known how significant the Iceland summit was. President Reagan got
            Gorbachev to make some amazing concessions no Democrat politician would have
            had the guts to even request, and the average American was never told. That was
            when I first realized our news media was actively deceiving the public. We were
            actually winning a war the liberals, and that includes at least 90% of the news
            media, were trying to make sure Americans never even knew was being waged. Happily,
            this didn’t affect President Reagan at all. He ignored the loud-mouthed
            liberals, and continued to push Gorbachev’s buttons.
As it happens, my next assignment
            was to Germany, so I was there both when Reagan made his famous "Tear down this
            wall" speech, and when the wall actually was torn down.
As far as the wall being torn down
            goes, I must confess I didn’t realize what was truly going on at first. My
            initial reaction was we better start sending more troops to West Berlin because
            removing the wall might only be to create better access for Soviet tanks to
            come roaring through. In fact, I still strongly suspect the Russians actually considered
            the idea. They were so desperate by that point the thought of plundering West
            Berlin to gain access to its financial resources and Western manufacturing capabilities
            must have been a serious consideration for them (not to mention West Berlin was deep inside East Germany, and, if it didn’t do anything else, taking over West Berlin would have removed an irritating thorn in the Soviet’s side). I’m also convinced the prior six to seven years of having their noses rubbed in how backward they were in comparison to us was a major factor in them deciding they better not try. Thank you, President Reagan!
In closing I’d just like to say,
            unless we go back to following Ronald Reagan’s example, the idea of America being
            a beacon of hope for the rest of the world to follow is doomed. The leftists would much
            rather see everything good about America be destroyed forever than to admit they
            might have been mistaken in their beliefs, so a strong resistance to their
            idiotic ideas is the only way to save our country. No leftist has ever, or will ever, try to reverse a problem created by leftism. All they ever do is create more phony solutions to the problem, and, in so doing, create more problems. It’s an endless chain of disaster only a conservative can break.
Nevertheless, if conservatives can’t even convince
            people to resist something as stupid as letting boys use the girl’s restrooms
            then the chain has already become too strong to break.
PS: I don’t know which phrase to use right now, "Life to America!" or "Goodbye to America!" I guess I’m forced to hope most Americans will come to their senses before the latter choice is inevitable.


Comments