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U.S. Vietnam war general dies at 91
By UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL
Published July 19, 2005
[line]
Gen. William Childs Westmoreland, who commanded U.S. ground forces in Vietnam, has died of natural causes in Charleston, S.C., at age 91.
Westmoreland died Monday night at the Bishop Gadsden retirement home in Charleston, where he had lived with his wife for several years, said his son, James Westmoreland.
Dispatched to Southeast Asia by President Lyndon Johnson in 1964, when the United States had 16,000 advisers there, Westmoreland was hailed as the commander who could bring the North Vietnamese to heel and impose democracy on the region. He ended up commanding a force of more than 500,000.
He served under Republican and Democratic presidents and prided himself on his loyalty to each of his commanders, The State newspaper in Columbia, S.C., reported.
"I went out of my way not to go political," he said. "I was a soldier and carried out the mission given to me by the commander in chief, who was president of the United States."
In addition to his son and wife, Westmoreland is survived by two daughters and six grandchildren.
U.S. Vietnam war general dies at 91
By UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL
Published July 19, 2005
[line]
Gen. William Childs Westmoreland, who commanded U.S. ground forces in Vietnam, has died of natural causes in Charleston, S.C., at age 91.
Westmoreland died Monday night at the Bishop Gadsden retirement home in Charleston, where he had lived with his wife for several years, said his son, James Westmoreland.
Dispatched to Southeast Asia by President Lyndon Johnson in 1964, when the United States had 16,000 advisers there, Westmoreland was hailed as the commander who could bring the North Vietnamese to heel and impose democracy on the region. He ended up commanding a force of more than 500,000.
He served under Republican and Democratic presidents and prided himself on his loyalty to each of his commanders, The State newspaper in Columbia, S.C., reported.
"I went out of my way not to go political," he said. "I was a soldier and carried out the mission given to me by the commander in chief, who was president of the United States."
In addition to his son and wife, Westmoreland is survived by two daughters and six grandchildren.