Mai Lai and its Legacy

The Vietnam War Massacre, its Effects, its Heroes and Villains

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Dead Bodies at Mai Lai - Courtesy of American D.O.D
Dead Bodies at Mai Lai - Courtesy of American D.O.D
The impact of the Mai Lai massacre on the Vietnam War, the American military and the American public. The heroes of Mai Lai, like the villains, were American soldiers.

Speaking on the Vietnam War in his presidential address of Nov 3rd 1969, President Nixon said “North Viet Nam cannot defeat or humiliate the United States. Only Americans can do that.” Little did he realize that an incident over a year earlier at an obscure Vietnamese village called Mai Lai, and a resultant court-martial a few months after his address, would prove his words amazingly prophetic.

Mai Lai

Mai Lai is a hamlet in the Son My district of Quang Ngai Province of the then South Vietnam Republic. During the Vietnam War, Quang Ngai Province was a hotbed of Viet Cong insurgents and a constant thorn in the side of the American military. On March 16, 1968, Captain Ernest Medina ordered ‘Charlie Company’ into the Mai Lai area. The exact wording of those orders was to become a major bone of contention in subsequent investigations and court hearings.

Mai Lai Massacre

Like a lot of the American forces in Vietnam in 1968, Charlie Company was in a demoralized state. It had suffered casualties by sniper fire, machine-gun fire, mines and other forms of attack. Earlier that year the “Tet Offensive” had shown just how tenuous the whole concept of the war had become.

When Charlie Company entered Mai Lai they encountered no resistance from Viet Cong Soldiers, yet three hours later there were over 500 civilian Vietnamese, men, women and children, dead. Lieutenant William Calley, for whatever reason, ordered his men to kill, burn and destroy everything in the village. By late evening the American Army Headquarters was claiming a victory, with 128 Viet Cong and some civilians killed. It was to take over a year and numerous investigations before the full horror of Mai Lai was to emerge into the public domain.

Mai Lai Heroes

Later of course the American public and the world was to learn that just as the villains of Mai Lai were American soldiers, so too the heroes of Mai Lai were also American Soldiers. Hugh Thompson, Army helicopter pilot, with his door-gunner Lawrence Colburn and crew chief Glenn Andreotta came upon U.S. ground troops killing Vietnamese civilians in and around the village of My Lai. According to Chief My Lai prosecutor William Eckhardt, “When Thompson realized what was happening he put his helicopter down, put his guns on Americans, and said he would shoot them if they shot another Vietnamese.”. Both the American public and Vietnam veterans owe a debt of gratitude to these heroes of Mai Lai.

Results of Mai Lai Massacre

The massacre, its attempted cover up and the court cases resulting from it was to have a profound effect on all aspects of American society. The "drip, drip" nature of the unfolding of the incident was to drain away any remaining support among ordinary Americans for a war that seemed endless and increasingly pointless. It also dented the very strong loyalty the American Public had to their Armed Forces. Never before had Americans considered that their army was capable of atrocities normally associated with Nazi and World War 2 Japanese soldiers.

The Mai Lai massacre also impacted on the American Military and its procedures for issuing operational orders during military engagements. The “Medina Standard” holds that a commanding officer, being aware of a human rights violation or a war crime, will be held criminally liable when he does not take action. Although Medina was eventually found not guilty, all American Army commanders are now fully aware of what might befall them should they fail in their duty to civilians.

Larry O'Sullivan, Larry O'Sullivan

Laurence O'Sullivan - Larry O'Sullivan, Irish short story and freelance Article writer now living in Thailand. I am Irish, 55 years old and am now living in ...

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16 Comments

Comments

Oct 19, 2008 5:43 PM
Guest :
I had never heard of the "Medina Standard" before this.
Thanks!
Oct 19, 2008 5:44 PM
Guest :
This is a very well written article. The points of issue are intact and to the point, and this article does not drag on about the unnessary. All in all, this is a very informative well written piece of work.
Oct 19, 2008 5:46 PM
Guest :
The last two comments were in courtesy of "N.B.N PRODUCTIONS."
Oct 28, 2008 9:02 PM
Guest :
The Tragedy of Vietnam written by Patrick J. Hearden calls it the "My Lai Massacre".

Is it spelled wrong here?
Mar 17, 2009 8:23 PM
Guest :
Im writing a paper on the mai lai massacre...im very confused on understanding it. I was wonfering where i can get more information from. And is there anybody i can contact to help me with this?
Apr 8, 2009 8:54 AM
Guest :
this ia a good article. i learned a lot about things. and i got a lot of useable information about it too. thank you
Apr 19, 2009 3:14 PM
Guest :
Sloppy research. The correct spelling is My Lai (pronounced me-lie). You'd think that it would be the first thing the author would check.
Aug 9, 2010 2:10 AM
Guest :
mai lai is correct spelling actually :)
Sep 30, 2010 8:32 AM
Guest :
Very good article. Learnt more about the impact here than most other sources. Thank you.
However I have reason to believe My Lai is actually correct spelling.
Oct 17, 2010 11:08 AM
Guest :
i found this article excellent because i need to know about the impact of my lai on the veitnam war thankyou
Jan 17, 2011 3:12 PM
Guest :
The correct spelling in South Vietnam is Mai Lai, however, the transcriptor in the court case was not aware of this and sparked the use of the spelling "My" as it is an obvious american interpretation of the word "Mai".
Feb 16, 2011 2:10 AM
Guest :
I think that the my lai massacre was a terrible thing!!!
Mar 4, 2011 1:36 AM
Guest :
it looks like a unaliable piece of information of what happened in My Lai. it should have more perspectives in this article to get a true story of what happened on that day. i also believe there should be more information on the impact after My Lai was taken place. but other then the things i have suggested this is a good article well thought out and put together. i will be monitoring your progress from the day which i have sent this comment and see if you will make the changes which are neccessary to make to make this article better in every way.
Mar 15, 2011 8:33 PM
Guest :
This article stated for what ever reason Lt. Calley ordered his men to kill inocent men, women , and children. This my good friends was a Combat Assault. When the Infantry boards helicopters and are flown into an area of opperation. They have distinct orders where to go, when to depart, and it is very clear what the mission is. Lt. Calley acted upon his orders. If you read the Peers Report. It was found, they, the officers met with different platoons and briefed them as to what they were to do. This was Lt. Calley's first Combat Assualt. He had been in country less than ninety days. The Peers Report was written up by a General who was appointed by the president to investigate and see if the Army had covered up the findings and what had taken place there. It was found the Task Force Barker had ran their own in vestigation and everything had, yes, been covered up. Six weeks latter the officers of the Americal Division knew there was gross negligence on the way this opperation had been carried out. General Peers saw fit to bring to justice 48 officers to include Lt. Calley. How ever what otrages the Vietnam Vet the lowest man in command was imprisioned for life, that was recended to house arrest for five years. Then President Richard Milhouse Nixon exsonorated Calley of his wrong doing and released him from house arrest. 47 other officers went scott free. A huge miscarriage of justice. One who want to know the truth would have to go into the field with the C Company 4/3rd for six months prior to this opperation and see all of the maming, death, and countless times they went back over the same area and were loosing men a very demorilizing rate. This type of mental attitude and when you commading officer tells you we are going into the ville tomorrow and get revenge. One E-4 asked what is revenge , Kill anything that moves. He asked a second time. The officer replied any person found in hthe villiage tomorrow is concidered VC. I was in the Artillery 6th of the 11th attatched to the 4/3rd 11th Light Infantry Brigade and as I said, earlier the officers knew the American press had wind of this and it was going to be disscussed in Congress. The officers in the Americal Division eleted to dissban the 11th and rename it the 23 Light Infantry Brigade. The 11th Light Infantry Brigade had a lot of great American fighting men. To disban this unit is a sacrilede to the lives of the young men who did in that unit. To this day their is not 11th Light Infantry Brigade. The United States Army had made such a crucial barbaric mistake they blamed it on the Infantry and not the leadership. I wear an 11th Infantry Sleeve Patch on a hat to Imortalize the men who died in that unit and for those to be proud when they see my patch. I was attached to the unit in the Artillery. C Company was one of the best damn units the United States Army had put together in Sout Vietnam. Long live the 11th. We shall not forget what truly happened that day.
Mar 31, 2011 1:44 AM
Guest :
i agree, thompson was a true hero! and should be greatly honoured and respected, some vietnamese people can owe their lives too him.. GO THOMPSON!!
Apr 27, 2011 7:00 AM
Guest :
This article stated for what ever reason Lt. Calley ordered his men to kill inocent men, women , and children. This my good friends was a Combat Assault. When the Infantry boards helicopters and are flown into an area of opperation. They have distinct orders where to go, when to depart, and it is very clear what the mission is. Lt. Calley acted upon his orders. If you read the Peers Report. It was found, they, the officers met with different platoons and briefed them as to what they were to do. This was Lt. Calley's first Combat Assualt. He had been in country less than ninety days. The Peers Report was written up by a General who was appointed by the president to investigate and see if the Army had covered up the findings and what had taken place there. It was found the Task Force Barker had ran their own in vestigation and everything had, yes, been covered up. Six weeks latter the officers of the Americal Division knew there was gross negligence on the way this opperation had been carried out. General Peers saw fit to bring to justice 48 officers to include Lt. Calley. How ever what otrages the Vietnam Vet the lowest man in command was imprisioned for life, that was recended to house arrest for five years. Then President Richard Milhouse Nixon exsonorated Calley of his wrong doing and released him from house arrest. 47 other officers went scott free. A huge miscarriage of justice. One who want to know the truth would have to go into the field with the C Company 4/3rd for six months prior to this opperation and see all of the maming, death, and countless times they went back over the same area and were loosing men a very demorilizing rate. This type of mental attitude and when you commading officer tells you we are going into the ville tomorrow and get revenge. One E-4 asked what is revenge , Kill anything that moves. He asked a second time. The officer replied any person found in hthe villiage tomorrow is concidered VC. I was in the Artillery 6th of the 11th attatched to the 4/3rd 11th Light Infantry Brigade and as I said, earlier the officers knew the American press had wind of this and it was going to be disscussed in Congress. The officers in the Americal Division eleted to dissban the 11th and rename it the 23 Light Infantry Brigade. The 11th Light Infantry Brigade had a lot of great American fighting men. To disban this unit is a sacrilede to the lives of the young men who did in that unit. To this day their is not 11th Light Infantry Brigade. The United States Army had made such a crucial barbaric mistake they blamed it on the Infantry and not the leadership. I wear an 11th Infantry Sleeve Patch on a hat to Imortalize the men who died in that unit and for those to be proud when they see my patch. I was attached to the unit in the Artillery. C Company was one of the best damn units the United States Army had put together in Sout Vietnam. Long live the 11th. We shall not forget what truly happened that day.
16 Comments
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