December 1999/January 2000
President’s Message
Admiral Zumwalt’s Legacy
By George C. Duggins
I speak for every member of Vietnam Veterans of America in mourning the death
and honoring the memory of U.S. Navy Admiral Elmo R. Zumwalt, Jr. The commander
of U.S. naval forces in Vietnam and later Chief of Naval Operations, Admiral
Zumwalt died January 2. As an organization and as individuals, VVA must recommit
itself to Admiral Zumwalt’s efforts to find justice for the victims of Agent
Orange. We can best honor the man and follow his example of leadership by
maintaining pressure on government agencies and policy-making bodies.
Admiral Zumwalt’s mission was to force those in power to take
responsibility for their actions and admit that Agent Orange killed more than
vegetation. For Admiral Zumwalt, it was simple.
It was about the people who selflessly answered their nation’s call to duty
and served honorably in a war that divided the country and which left many
wounds in the fabric of our national character.
It was about their children and grandchildren who, through no fault of their
own, are the unintended victims of a policy that saved lives in Vietnam, only to
take them years after the war ended.
It was about the families who suffer quietly as they watch their veterans
endure the hardships of sickness and hopelessness and then bury them, knowing
all along Agent Orange was the cause of death.
Between 1968 and 1970--the height of the Vietnam War--Admiral Zumwalt had a
tough job: commanding the fleet of American naval river boats that patrolled
South Vietnam’s Mekong Delta. He developed the successful strategy of cutting
riverine supplies from Cambodia to the Viet Cong guerillas. He also ordered the
spraying of Agent Orange over the Delta.
Zumwalt’s son, former U.S. Navy Lt. Elmo R. Zumwalt III, commanded a Brown
Water Navy river boat where his father had ordered the spraying of the
dioxin-contaminated defoliant to deny cover to the enemy.
Admiral Zumwalt’s crusade began after his son was diagnosed with cancer in
1983.
Mirroring his commitment to troops while in Vietnam, Zumwalt became a bold
and forthright spokesman for veterans and their families who have suffered from
the transgenerational effects of Agent Orange contamination.
His voice was strong and clear: the government has an obligation to address
the issue honestly and to provide services and compensation for those who have
been injured.
Just as it was our generation of servicemen and servicewomen who compelled
the VA to recognize Post-traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) as a legitimate
diagnosis, we now must redouble our efforts to force them to face their duty in
the matter of Agent Orange.
Our obligation to the memory of Admiral Zumwalt demands that we vow never to
surrender on this issue. It is much too important to allow it to be trivialized
by those who would have us believe that it is "junk science" or the
ranting of malcontents.
We know better. |