CHARLESTON, S.C. (AP) — Retired Gen.
William Westmoreland, who commanded American troops in Vietnam — the
nation's longest conflict and the only war America lost — died
Monday night. He was 91.
Westmoreland died of natural causes
at Bishop Gadsden retirement home, where he had lived with his wife
for several years, said his son, James Ripley
Westmoreland.
The silver-haired, jut-jawed officer, who rose
through the ranks quickly in Europe during World War II and later
became superintendent of West Point, contended the United States did
not lose the conflict in Southeast Asia.
"It's more accurate
to say our country did not fulfill its commitment to South Vietnam,"
he said. "By virtue of Vietnam, the U.S. held the line for 10 years
and stopped the dominoes from falling."
He would later say he
did not know how history would deal with him.
"Few people
have a field command as long as I did," he said. "They put me over
there and they forgot about me. But I was there seven days a week,
working 14 to 16 hours a day.
"I have no apologies, no
regrets. I gave my very best efforts," he added. "I've been hung in
effigy. I've been spat upon. You just have to let those things
bounce off."
Later, after many of the wounds caused by the
divisive conflict began to heal, Westmoreland led thousands of his
comrades in the November, 1982, veterans march in Washington to
dedicate the Vietnam War Memorial.
He called it "one of the
most emotional and proudest experiences of my life."
William
Childs Westmoreland was born near Spartanburg, S.C., on March 26,
1914, into a banking and textile family.
His love of uniforms
began early.
He was an Eagle Scout and attended The Citadel
for a year before transferring to the U.S. Military Academy at West
Point. He graduated in 1936 and, during his senior year, held the
highest command position in the cadet corps.
Westmoreland saw
action in North Africa, Sicily and Europe during World War II. He
attained the rank of colonel by the time he was 30.
As
commander of the 34th Field Artillery Battalion fighting German
Field Marshal Erwin Rommel, he earned the loyalty and respect of his
troops for joining in the thick of battle rather than remaining
behind the lines at a command post.
He was promoted to
brigadier general during the Korean War and later served in the
Pentagon under Army Chief of Staff Maxwell
Taylor.
Westmoreland became the superintendent of West Point
in 1960 and, by 1964, was a three-star general commanding American
troops in Vietnam.
After his four-year tour in Vietnam,
Westmoreland was promoted to Army chief of staff. He retired from
active duty in 1972 but he continued to lecture and participate in
veterans' activities.
Westmoreland was married to the former
Katherine "Kitzy" Van Deusen and the couple had three
children.
A decade after his retirement, Westmoreland fought
another battle involving Vietnam.
In 1982, he filed a $120
million lawsuit against CBS over a documentary "The Uncounted Enemy:
A Vietnam Deception," which implied he had deceived President
Johnson and the public about enemy troop strength in
Vietnam.
At the time, Westmoreland said the question "is not
about whether the war in Vietnam was right or wrong, but whether in
our land a television network can rob an honorable man of his
reputation."
After an 18-week trial in New York, the case was
settled shortly before it was to go to the jury.
The
settlement was characteristic of the general's ambivalent
relationship with the press.
In his autobiography, "A Soldier
Reports," Westmoreland wrote that in Vietnam, while he "tried to
avoid any vendetta against the press," he sometimes resented the
time he had to spend correcting "errors, misinterpretations,
judgments and falsehoods" contained in news reports.
But he
wrote that the press is "such a bulwark of the American system, that
it is well to tolerate some mistakes and derelictions to make every
effort to assure that total freedom and independence continue to
exist."
In later years, Westmoreland often spoke to Vietnam
veterans' groups, accepting invitations to visit veterans' groups in
all 50 states, his son "Rip" Westmoreland said.
"That became,
in effect, his raison d'etre," the younger Westmoreland recalled.
"He did have a point of view on Vietnam but he did not speak about
that. He was not out there trying to justify anything."
A
look at the career of Gen. William Westmoreland: - 1936:
Graduated from U.S. Military Academy. - 1942-44: Fought as army
artillery officer in Tunisia, Sicily, France, Belgium and
Germany. - 1944-45: Chief of staff of Ninth Infantry
Division. - 1960-63: Superintendent of the U.S. Military
Academy. - 1964-1968: Commanded U.S. forces in the Vietnam
War. - 1968-1972: Army chief of staff. - 1974: Seeks
Republican nomination for governor of South Carolina, losing the
party's primary election. - 1982: Led march in Washington to
dedicate Vietnam War Memorial. |