A shooting war was lurking in Asia on the morning of April 11, 1963, though of course none of us knew it. Memories of the missiles of October lingered, and we were impatient young Cold Warriors -- finally about to move on from the Navy's submarine school at New London, Conn.
There were 30 or so in our class; we'd studied together, and gone to sea on occasion, for close to three months. They'd told us all about the risks of service in submarines and, indeed, even trained us to meet some of them. Duty aboard any warship is a gamble, but the boats were deemed especially problematic -- for good reason, as we were about to learn.
It was 8 A.M. Our instructor, a World War II combat vet with the colorful ribbons and pins to prove it, entered the classroom, turned to face us -- and quietly announced the loss, with 129 officers and men, of the USS Thresher.
Then he wept.
The tears fell softly, with dignity. The submarine service is tightly knit, and old friends had died ungently the day before. We sat motionless, not precisely having heard angels' wings in the instructor's words -- but now there wasn't a man in the room who didn't know in his bones how fragile a reed life can be.
That afternoon, on schedule, we received orders to the fleet. I would serve aboard two submarines in the ensuing 36 months, never to dwell on that April morning -- quite deliberately so -- but never to forget it, either. There would be tense moments, but no grave peril. In that we were lucky, my classmates and I.
America lost two other submarines during the Cold War: the USS Cochino, in the Norwegian Sea in 1949 with seven dead; and the USS Scorpion, in 1968 off the Azores with all hands -- 99 officers and men -- dead. During World War II, 52 boats had gone to sea and failed to return. The first lost in action at sea was the USS Shark, sunk by a Japanese warship in the Celebes Sea with a crew of 58 on Feb. 11, 1942; the last was the USS Bullhead, sunk by Japanese aerial bombs with 84 officers and men in Japanese coastal waters on Aug. 6, 1945.
All in all, 3,505 American submariners in World War II were lost to combat - - fully 20 percent of those who served in the boats. Proportionally, casualties in the "silent service" were heaviest in the Pacific campaign -- exceeding even those of the justly storied U.S. Marine Corps.
On this coming Memorial Day, as always, submarine veterans will gather all across the nation quietly to memorialize their own. Bells will toll -- 52 times, to mark the lost boats of the Good War; then thrice more, for Cochino, Thresher, and Scorpion. Wreaths will be cast upon moving waters.
This is meant, principally, to honor departed heroes. But there is also an implied celebration of community: a commemoration of shared experiences, of commonality of purpose, of a time when circumstance sometimes demanded the extraordinary from quite ordinary men -- who did not disappoint. These are the happy few, who gave some, remembering their brothers, who gave all.
Not so long ago, Americans accepted wartime service for what it is -- a cruel lottery. Men under arms present themselves, more or less at random, to mortal danger. Some are killed; others are wounded; most live to fight another day -- and eventually to return to a grateful nation that never thought to doubt that honor attaches to all who go in harm's way for honorable purposes.
Walk a dusty mile along Cemetery Ridge at Gettysburg, which commands the upsloped meadows where Lee's Army of Northern Virginia was effectively broken -- and the fate of a great nation was decided -- in heat and smoke and blood and horror on the afternoon of July 3, 1863. Read the big monuments, one by one and unit by unit. Here, chiseled into cold stone, you'll find the names of the men who fought on that day -- from general officers to drummer boys. Yes, battle deaths are noted. But not morbidly.
In the national consciousness there were only heroes at Gettysburg, and the memorials reflect this. So, too, do those honoring what brave men did at Belleau Wood; at Midway and D-Day and Bloody Tarawa and the Hurtgen Forest; at Pusan and Inchon and in the hellish retreat from the Chosin Reservoir.
Some were braver than others, of course, and some were not brave at all. That's the way of war. But America made no real distinctions: Memorials -- in village squares, small-town halls, and big-city church vestibules -- list together all the men who went to war. And, just as at Cemetery Ridge, appropriate note is taken of those who died. The utility of this is subtle, but significant: Properly, the fallen are commemorated -- but in a context that validates the participation of all who served the country in times of crisis.
Vietnam, of course, was different.
Vietnam produced The Wall -- which honors, if that's the appropriate word, those who died in America's longest war. But, pointedly, it does not honor those who served and then came home. And this is an important distinction -- one certainly worth keeping in mind on May 25 as Memorial Day images fill the nation's television screens.
The name McManus -- my name -- appears seven times on The Wall. There's Charles Verne, from Woodland, Ala.; Frank Joseph, from Jackson Heights, Queens; Jerry Doyne, from Atlanta, Louisiana; John, from Manhattan; Mark Lawrence, from Los Angeles; Michael George, from Bridgeport, Mich.; Robert Francis, from Wayne, N.J.; and Truman Joseph, from Mansfield, Conn.
How many McManuses actually went to Vietnam? I haven't a clue. Am I grateful that I wasn't one of them? Yes, of course. And this seems almost to be the purpose of The Wall. By focusing solely on the 58,202 dead, the monument stirs relief in those who were not called. It helps the gentlemen who were called, but refused to answer, rationalize their behavior. And -- there is no euphemistic way to put this -- it casts those who went and died as, principally, victims.
Where is there a wholly honest national representation of the 8.7 million young men who went to Vietnam between 1964 and 1973, acquitted themselves with -- yes -- honor, returned, and got on with their lives? Nowhere. Certainly the Three Soldiers statue forced upon the Vietnam Memorial by veterans who clearly understood the real purpose of The Wall seems purposely to underscore the victimization theme. How else to characterize the sculpted infantrymen's vaguely heroic, but obvious, distress?
This merely reinforces, for future generations, the message of The Wall itself: that service in Vietnam was somehow tinged with dishonor.
Surely, the Vietnam Memorial disconnect will make it harder to fill the ranks the next time -- just as The Wall's morbid fascination with death to the exclusion of all else will concentrate disproportionate public attention on potential casualties when future conflicts arise.
In this sense, then, it can fairly be said that The Wall is the final, and arguably the most significant, victory of the antiwar movement. Scores of thousands of Vietnam veterans resolutely pay no heed to any of this, of course. Nor should they. On Memorial Day, they'll go to The Wall, or to church, or just to a quiet place, to hold fallen comrades in their thoughts, if only for a moment or two.
So know this well: They do not believe the men they honor to have been victims, nor themselves -- and neither should you. For surely they were not. But what a pity that still these veterans stand alone, 25 long years later.
Bob McManus is deputy editorial-page editor of the New York Post.