The Bell Curve -- Joseph N. Bell
Two close friends of many years -- Richard and Lee Thomas -- spent
last weekend with us. Although they live in Portland, Ore., and we see
them probably once a year, we picked up our talk instantly, as one does
with old friends. And on this visit, it took an unexpected turn.
My wife and I had just seen a movie called “Hart’s War” that we
thought vaguely paralleled Richard’s experience in World War II. We knew
only that he had been wounded in the Battle of the Bulge and ended the
war in a German prison camp; we had never questioned him about the
details. Last weekend we did -- not only because of “Hart’s War” but also
because we’re acutely aware of a whole spate of war movies now playing in
our theaters.
The story we heard was harrowing. Richard was 17 years old when he
enlisted in the Army and 18 when he was called in 1944. He had nine
months of infantry training in the States before he was shipped over to
France, where the Allies were inexorably pushing the Germans back into
their homeland. When his company was moved into Belgium two weeks before
Christmas, the men they replaced told the newcomers they were lucky. The
heavy fighting was over; the Germans were in full retreat.
On the night of Dec. 15, Richard’s unit members went to sleep at their
positions still embracing those reassurances. They were awakened a few
hours later by a devastating artillery barrage followed by an
overpowering wave of German troops. Richard was in charge of a machine
gun squad that included four other green soldiers. Six times they pulled
back, set up a new position, and pulled back again. The sixth time, an
artillery burst just behind them poured shrapnel into their midst.
Richard and two others were hit in the legs.
As the wounded lay immobile, they were overrun. Richard remembers in
graphic detail three German soldiers standing over them, staring down and
debating what to do. One of the Germans said in English: “The war is over
for you.” Richard was, he told us, beyond fear by this time. His life was
spared because this was early in the battle when the Germans were still
taking prisoners. Richard and one of his companions were taken to a
German hospital, then to a prisoner-of-war camp. He learned later that
his severely wounded gunner was later euthanized at a mobile hospital.
Richard tells all this matter-of-factly. He talks about fear the same
way: a teenager facing death in his seven-day war, so shaken by the
events of the night that finally fear becomes a kind of blessed numbness.
He simply doesn’t think about it while he does his job as he was trained.
Those of us involved in the same war who never had to face the
battlefield terrors of an infantryman have often wondered how we might
have dealt with them.
This same question has recurred to me while watching the increasing
tide of war movies -- both in our theaters and on television -- since the
publication of “The Greatest Generation” and the release of “Saving
Private Ryan.” Only recently have I become aware that most members of
this new generation of war films offer a basic difference in tone from
their predecessors.
“Black Hawk Down” and “We Were Soldiers” are the best examples. There
are no laggards, malcontents, racists or political debates here. Both of
these films are fulsome tributes to the grunts, the fighting men who
accepted and performed their duties with strength, selfless courage and
honor. Richard Thomas would have been seen the same way. But this point
is brought home by technical brilliance with such relentless, graphic and
bloody depiction of the horrors of combat against a determined and
resourceful enemy that these films carry a stronger antiwar message by
implication than earlier films did by design.
“We Were Soldiers,” for example, opens with a scene of the French
army, exhausted after 10 years of warfare against a Vietnamese army
seeking freedom from colonial France, giving up the fight to go home. We
have to fill in the lesson (it would help to read Robert McNamara’s mea
culpa “In Retrospect”) that it took us almost as long to reach the same
conclusion.
The film ends with with a Viet Cong colonel surveying the dead on a
battlefield and saying: “Now it is the Americans’ war. But the end will
be the same.” In between these bookends of futility, we watch American
soldiers face the daily reality of fighting a determined people who are
defending their own turf. In “We Were Soldiers,” that turf was Vietnam.
In “Black Hawk Down,” it was Somalia. The turf differed. The courage of
the men and the body bags didn’t.
I don’t know if the people who made these films saw them as a protest
against war, but they should be required viewing for the suits in
Washington while they consider using the “war on terrorism” as a
rationale for expanding our military commitment beyond Afghanistan.
That’s when things start to get murky. At least Richard Thomas knew what
he was fighting for. That should be a prerequisite for sending any more
Americans into battle.
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column
appears Thursdays.
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