From the BBC:
“William Calley, face of My
Lai massacre, dead at 80”
A former US officer who was the
only person to be convicted in connection with the My Lai massacre during the
Vietnam War has died, according to reports. William Calley died on 28 April at
the age of 80, the Washington Post and New York Times reported, citing official
death records.
Calley led the US Army platoon
that carried out the mass murder of hundreds of civilians, including women and
children, in the Vietnamese village of Son My in 1968. He was sentenced to life
in prison in 1971 for killing 22 civilians, but only served three days behind
bars after then-President Richard Nixon ordered his release under house arrest.
The My Lai massacre is known as
one of the worst war crimes in American military history. The killings shocked
the US public at the time and galvanised the anti-Vietnam war movement. According
to the Vietnamese government, 504 people were killed in the massacre. Calley, a
junior college dropout from South Florida, enlisted in the army in 1964. He was
quickly promoted to junior officer and then second lieutenant, at a time when
the US army was desperate for soldiers.
On the morning of 16 March 1968,
Calley’s unit was airlifted to a hamlet in Son My - known to US soldiers at the
time as My Lai 4 - on a mission to search and kill Viet Cong members and
sympathisers. When they arrived, the officers were met with no resistance from
the residents of the village, who were found cooking breakfast over outdoor
fires, according to a 1972 report by journalist Seymour Hersh in the New
Yorker. Mr Hersh reported that Calley and his unit proceeded to kill the
civilians in the following hours. Many were rounded up in small groups and
shot, he said. Others were pushed into a drainage ditch and shot, or were
killed in or near their homes. Women and girls were raped by American officers
and then murdered, Mr Hersh reported. The massacre was initially covered up but
became public a year and a half later, thanks in large part to Mr Hersh’s
reporting, which earned him a Pulitzer Prize.
Calley was one of 26 soldiers who
were charged with criminal offences and the only one convicted. His conviction
polarised Americans. Some deemed him a war criminal while others felt the
junior officer was used as a scapegoat to shift blame for a massacre that was
ultimately the responsibility of his superiors. While he was given a life
sentence, Calley only served three-and-a-half years under house arrest after
President Nixon commuted his sentence.
Calley married Penny Vick, the
daughter of a jewelry store owner in Columbus, Georgia, in 1976. The couple had
one son, William Laws Calley III, and divorced in the mid-2000s. He rarely
spoke about his role in the My Lai massacre and had refused to sit down with
historians and reporters. In 2009, he apologised while speaking to the Kiwanis
Club of Greater Columbus. “There is not a day that goes by that I do not feel
remorse for what happened that day in My Lai,” he said. “I feel remorse for the
Vietnamese who were killed, for their families, for the American soldiers
involved and their families.”
The Washington Post first
reported Calley’s death on Monday, after receiving a tip from a Harvard Law
School graduate who uncovered it in public records. No cause of death has been
cited.
^ It are events like this one
that turned the American People against the Vietnam War and all the Soldiers
fighting it - even though the vast
Majority of American Soldiers did not commit War Crimes. ^
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