American woman exposes US war crimes in Vietnam
Deborah Nelson - American investigative journalist, reporter for The Los Angeles Times, who won the prestigious Pulitzer Prize for journalism, is the author of a series of articles exposing the crimes committed by American soldiers in Vietnam during the My Lai massacre nearly 50 years ago.
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Photo: Sputnik |
Deborah Nelson traveled halfway around the world and spent years knocking on the doors of veterans who participated in the massacre of 19 innocent people in Vietnam in February 1968, persuading them to speak out about the seemingly forgotten incident. She also traveled for months in Vietnam to meet with witnesses to recreate a horrifying story.
Above all, the female journalist gave the American soldiers who participated in the massacre that they had to carry out under orders a chance to apologize to their victims!
In mid-May 2017, 12 years after the series "Behind the Crime" was published, Deborah Nelson shared the stories of a journalist full of conscience.
Turn back history
In February 1968, a month before the infamous My Lai massacre, a unit of American soldiers in central Vietnam swept through a small village and captured 19 unarmed villagers—including women, children, teenagers, and an elderly man.
That day, the soldiers were ordered to “kill everything that moves.” They herded the villagers into an open area and opened fire. After the incident, military investigators took sworn statements from dozens of soldiers, collecting haunting details describing the massacre. However, the case was hushed up, and no one was convicted.
Those testimonies—and those of hundreds of other American veterans who witnessed massacres, killings, rapes, and torture—were placed in a special file by the U.S. Army General Staff in the 1970s that was kept secret for thirty years. The file included substantiated cases involving more than 300 allegations, implicating members of every major division that fought in the war.
In 2005, journalist Deborah Nelson and military historian Nicholas Turse teamed up to uncover the truth behind the piles of classified documents. The articles were later published, and printed into the book "Behind the War" - the most complete story of the two authors' process of seeking answers from those accused of war crimes, from witnesses to the accusations, and from high-ranking officials who covered up the truth.
"Behind the Crimes" looks for the first time at the darkest secrets of the war in Vietnam, and is also a defense of the brave American veterans who protested the unjust war as well as the anti-war political activists of the era - who called for the community's sympathy for the mistakes of the past.
More than 10 years have passed, but Deborah Nelson still hasn’t forgotten even the smallest detail about the time she and her colleagues investigated this case. She said that according to US law, after 30 years, all confidential documents - things that are kept and not allowed to be disclosed - will no longer be confidential.
However, to turn the collected dry documents into stories, witnesses, confessions of all related characters, including victims, witnesses and American soldiers..., is a huge job, and requires a lot of skills and professional expertise to do it.
"I remember it was 2005, I started to approach this huge mountain of records, including 9,000 documents. All of it, it was stored in a giant room like a big library. Time had made dust cover them with traces. I had to put up chairs, even put up ladders to reach it" - Deborah Nelson said.
Touching previously classified documents, Deborah said, was like touching a giant block of ice, and above all, it involved the honor and conscience of those involved.
Using a very scientific method, Deborah grouped them all, all displayed on an excel sheet, according to many columns, what she called the data classification method.
"The information is huge. There are also numbers. I have to do this so that I don't forget, don't miss any information, choose and use the necessary information, ask questions about information that I feel confused about, and need to be explained by the people involved."
From this data sheet, Deborah Nelson said, she planned in her mind to directly meet with the veterans who participated in the massacre - those who were guilty of the victims. Another group of people, which were witnesses, relatives of the victims - people she had never met, had never set foot in Vietnam, but could not help but go, if she wanted to investigate the incident in the most complete and comprehensive way.
Another difficulty is that 30 years have passed, the veterans are now old, some are still alive, some have passed away. And, how can we convince them to talk about a story that, for sure, everyone will avoid?
Again, relying on data analysis, Deborah Nelson went to the US Citizenship and Identity Management website. This website is publicly available. She used the information from there to find the home addresses of the veterans she would meet.
According to Sputnik
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