Title: By Cadet Hodge
1 2What happened
The My Lai massacre took place March 16, 1968 as
the 11th brigade of the American Division
entered the village of My Lai. As the troops
entered the superior officers said to search an
destroy and that's just what the brigade did.
The killing was extremely brutal and extreme.
          The killing of more than 100
unarmed civilians. The leader of this massacre
was Lieutenant William Calley. At the village
there were said that the some of the civilians
were raped, shot in prayer, and beaten. Â
       The massacre at My Lai didn't reach
America until November 1969. The news of this
atrocities caused a severe movement in the
already divided American public. The public
began to question the military conduct of the
soldiers. People began to demand the government
begin to investigate this stories horror.
3Cover up
- Initial investigations of the My Lai incident
were undertaken by the 11th Light Infantry
Brigade's Commanding Officer, Colonel Oran
Henderson, under orders from Americal's Assistant
Commanding Officer, Brigadier General Young.
Henderson interviewed several soldiers involved
in the incident, then issued a written report in
late April claiming that approximately 22
civilians were inadvertently killed during the
military operation in My Lai. The army at this
time was still describing the event as a military
victory resulting in the deaths of 128 enemies.
4Six months later
- Six months later, a 21-year-old soldier of the
11th Light Infantry named Tom Glen wrote a letter
accusing the Americal Division of routine
brutality against Vietnamese civilians the
letter was detailed, its allegations horrifying,
and its contents echoed complaints received from
other soldiers. Colin Powell, then a young US
Army Major, was charged with investigating the
letter, which did not specifically reference My
Lai. Powell wrote "In direct refutation of this
portrayal is the fact that relations between
American soldiers and the Vietnamese people are
excellent." Later, Powell's refutation would be
called an act of "white-washing"
5Courts martial
- On March 17, 1970, the United States Army charged
14 officers with suppressing information related
to the incident. Most of these charges were
dropped. - U.S. Army Lt. William Calley was convicted in
1971 of premeditated murder in ordering the
shootings and initially sentenced to life in
prison two days later, however, President
Richard Nixon ordered him released from prison,
pending appeal of his sentence. Calley served
3½ years of house arrest in his quarters at Fort
Benning, Georgia, and was then ordered freed by
Federal Judge J. Robert Elliot. Calley claimed he
was following orders from his captain, Ernest
Medina Medina denied giving the orders and was
acquitted at a separate trial. Most of the
soldiers involved in the My Lai incident were no
longer enlisted. Of the 26 men initially charged,
Lt. Calley's was the only conviction.
Lieutenant William Calley
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