A very good article
From the Clark County Conservative
http://lewwaters.wordpress.com/2009/11/03/unsung-heroes-that-won-the-cold-war/Unsung Heroes That Won The Cold War
By lewwaters
Once
again we prepare to honor those who have served in all of our wars,
paying special homage to those who did not return from our wars. Nearly
all of us who served in combat zones over our history view those whose
names are etched in stone on the many Veterans Memorials as the true
heroes of our conflicts.
Viet Nam is labeled as “America’s
Longest War” due to our involvement in that country from 1950 to the
fall of Saigon in 1975. That 25 years pales when considering that after
World War Two, we began engagement in a much longer war, but a more
quiet war, a war where our Troops did not fire weapons at the enemy but
stood at the ready nonetheless, training for a battle that never
materialized.
The “Cold War” was fought with political conflict,
military tension, and economic competition with the increasingly
threatening build up of the most brutal weapons known to mankind that
never were used.
That war lasted 46 years, 1945 to 1991 and was
manned by many millions of heroes who often fought boredom in lonely
outposts in the Arctic, walked along a fenced border in Europe or flew
many hours circling in pre-staging areas armed with nuclear weapons
awaiting the order to return any attack against our nation from the
very formidable enemy we fought against, the Soviet Union and the
oppressive stranglehold that ideology had on so many European countries
as they attempted to spread their influence on peaceful nations.
East German Fence
While
the world sat on the brink of nuclear annihilation and moved as close
as it ever has during the early 1960’s, it never saw the feared nuclear
confrontation between the two superpowers, in spite of our engagements
in both the Korean and Viet Nam wars.
On November 9, 1989 the
world witnessed the beginning of the end of the Soviet Empire as a wall
built to divide the city of Berlin Germany came crumbling down, opened
by citizens of the divided city who longed to be free and to freely
visit relatives who lived on the free side of the city.
President
Ronald Reagan’s infamous speech where he uttered the ominous words,
“Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall” two years earlier, saw their
fulfillment. The wall dividing Berlin and the fence dividing the
country opened up and freedom returned to that half of the country.
By December 1991, the world watched as the Soviet Union itself collapsed
Much
credit was given to President Reagan for winning the Cold War, with
some preferring to grant credit to President Jimmy Carter for starting
the collapse in the late 1970’s.
Truth be known, all presidents
who came along during the time of the Cold War continued policies set
in motion by President Harry S. Truman shortly after World War Two. It
was he who initiated the Berlin Airlift in 1948 to break the blockade
of Berlin initiated by the Soviets to force allied powers out.
While
we tend to give accolades to presidents and generals for victories, it
is the hard work and extraordinary efforts of the common soldiers and
officers who flew those planes, loaded and unloaded them and who
directed aircraft safely in and out of Berlin that broke the blockade.
Likewise,
as we feared invasions from communist nations close and far away or
nuclear annihilation from ICBM attacks, it was the common soldiers who
again manned sub-freezing temperatures across the northern hemisphere
in lonely radar stations in what was called the DEW Line that kept
vigil should a Soviet launch begin.
It was common men and women
who sat in offices in front of monitors and screens watching 24 hours a
day 7 days a week in undisclosed locations watching for any warning
sign of a pending attack.
It was ordinary people who joined a
peace-time Air Force and who manned bombers armed with nuclear weapons
circling the edges of our nation 24 hours a day 7 days a week, leaving
their posts only when a relief flight came up top take over.
It
was people from all over the country, all races, all colors,
descendants of all nationalities who enlisted out of high school or
answered the call of the nation in the draft and who served their two
years along the borders of Europe, the DMZ of South Korea, Japan, the
Philippine Islands and lonely posts spread across the globe and
prepared to fight off any enemy that would be foolish enough to try to
conquer our nation from outside.
Some of these same people
joined in the silent service of our Naval Forces, above and below the
surface of the world’s oceans who, like the Air Force’s Strategic Air
Command kept constant vigil far away from their homes to keep America
and her inhabitants safe from oppression.
Many protected those
of my generation who fought in Viet Nam and those who served elsewhere
as we grew into adults and learned from their sense of duty to stand up
to the oppression of communism and carry forth their vigilance.
As
we approach this 20th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall, it is
to those Cold War Warriors who never had to face the enemy head-on, who
didn’t have the chance to earn medals of valor, who may have never
collected hazardous duty pay, but stood at the ready should they have
been called that I dedicate this Veterans Day to this year.
It is to their service and sacrifice that supplied the deterrent we all took for granted that I recognize this year.
Whenever
we may feel their contribution to our greatness as a nation was not
worth as much as ours, remember the famous photo from 1961 of the East
German Soldier leaping across the wire in Berlin to the free west as
the city was being divided by the communists.
East German Soldier Leaping
To
all my brothers and sisters who served throughout the Cold War,
standing watch on cold and miserable nights around the world, well
done. Your steadfastness and readiness is what won the Cold War. Your
combat may have been boredom, but you stood watch, keeping America
safe, always at the ready.
“A veteran – whether active duty,
retired, national guard, or reserve – is someone who, at one point in
his or her life, wrote a blank check made payable to The ‘United States
of America’, for an amount of ‘up to and including my life.’” (Author
unknown)
Thank you too all who served.
Posted by:
Jerald Terwilliger
National Chairman
American Cold War Veterans, Inc.
"We Remember"