
The Westmoreland Legacy in Official Iranian War Statistics
The ghost of William Westmoreland, the U.S. general in charge of operations in the Vietnam War, lives on in Pete Hegseth, current U.S. Secretary of Defense/War. Every time I watch Hegseth give a press conference updating us on how things are going in our attack on Iran, I hear statistics that don’t seem to be borne out by coverage on the evening news. Specifically, Hegseth continuously maintains that Iran’s missile and drone attacks on U.S. assets and our allies are down 87 percent, oops, or was it 93 percent? Westmoreland, if you were around in those days, was famous for his “body counts” of dead Viet Cong and North Vietnamese Army soldiers. The underlying assumption was that North Vietnam would eventually reach a point where it could no longer mount a large enough offensive because it would run out of men, women, and children (ugly, but true) to fight its war. Problem was, these body counts were either completely inflated or totally fabricated, take your pick. The North’s massive Tet Offensive of 1968, though its forces lost, put the lie to U.S. assertions that the North’s forces had been decimated, and public opinion shifted totally against the war, bringing about
The Westmoreland Legacy in Official Iranian War Statistics
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