Walter Cronkite: Nattering Nabob of Negativism
Such is American “mainstream media’s” preoccupation with fact-free labeling is that when pompous old phony Walter Cronkite died at 92 last week the canard floated freely from the news agencies that here was “the most trusted man in America.” Ironically by trusting this egocentric faux sage, Americans and its president were misled to lose America’s first war. True one would hope a president would be resolute enough not to be swung to and fro by someone like Cronkite…or to base the act of winning a war on public sentiment and to pursue through to the end…but such was the case with Lyndon Johnson in the late 1960s. And also with the media where in an era of no cable, no internet, no talk radio the biggest megaphones were held by CBS, ABC and NBC along with the unflaggingly liberal big urban dailies and newsmagazines.
Up to 1968 Cronkite had an honorable career covering wars and assassinations. He was a firm supporter of the Vietnam war until Tet. Then, after a trip to Vietnam in early 1968, he…as the ranking CBS anchor…more than anyone else convinced Americans to toss in the chips on the Vietnam war-making the 58,209 American lives lost in that engagement all but in vain since they were albeit honorably engaged in a war that America lost via public opinion…through his inaccurate reporting swayed by liberal ideology by Cronkite and other media types of the Tet Offensive.
The men and women who lost their lives were thus betrayed by a portly avuncular anchor who gloried in his own celebrity and ratings in acclamation of his pronouncements, having earlier supported the war as essential to defeating Communism. His switch led Lyndon Johnson to say “if I’ve lost Walter Cronkite, then I’ve lost everything.” That tells one a lot about Johnson but polls and media were his nemesis. Johnson’s utter weakness was matched by that of Robert McNamara and the so-called “wise men” who gathered around him. If leaders were to gauge winning wars on public support, George Washington would have capitulated, James Madison would have surrendered having been forced to flee the Capitol, Lincoln would have surrendered after Bull Run and George W. Bush would have tossed up his hands when the Iraq insurgents began to take a toll of American lives.
American lives spent to win the Vietnam War were not wasted but they were entitled to have a president not give up in the face of their glorious sacrifice. As it was, largely due to Cronkite…and the influence this relativist had over our institutions basis his ratings…their lives were sacrificed as magnificently as those soldiers of other wars, but because of the media which swayed Johnson from his perch…led largely by Cronkite…the hallowed dead were denied their sacred right-to have participated in a winning phase of what John Kennedy called “the long twilight struggle” in this chapter of the Cold War to attain victory. Always adept at wiping away a tear when a liberal icon died, Cronkite’s ego began to be enlarged by his celebrity. But the worst was to come.
Rather than the media calling Cronkite’s dereliction to national attention, short-hand myth instead of factual labeling has canonized a newsman who for whatever reason had more to do with America losing the war than any other single American.
For those who want the unvarnished facts, here they are. On the evening of the last day of January, 1968 during the Tet holiday Vietnamese communist armies launched attacks on dozens of towns and U.S. bases in South Vietnam. Long before that, shrinking national media correspondents such as David Halberstam of The New York Times became convinced we should get out. They formed an emotional chord with the unshaven, un-bathed (and that’s before we consider the men) ill-educated students, the children of affluence, at Ivy League universities. Forgotten was the need to stress patriotism. Arthur (Punch) Sulzberger the published of The New York Times asked his son Pinch who was at Harvard if he could muster up at least fraternal regard for an American soldier killed by the Viet Cong. Pinch Sulzberger, now the publisher, told his father “not a chance. Matter of fact I would welcome it since we are the invaders of their land.” This self-same Pinch who would cheer the death of an American soldier runs the bankrupt New York Times today-talk about an index of decadence.
Up to that time the American people were behind Johnson and his prosecution of the war. But the avalanche of news media and Cronkite’s commentary that we were defeated at Tet changed public opinion…despite the fact that it later it became known that Tet was an enormous Communist defeat. No correction ever came from Cronkite for he was on the glory-road to personal adulation, fatal for a newsman. Johnson of course was uncertain and as soon as public support melted, he melted. For comparison, let us see how George W. Bush endured the most savage criticism and saw it through to victory in Iraq.
Cronkite’s pronouncement changed the U. S. by making a false sloppily judged news perception reality…as it happened many times since but not with as disastrous a result. Liberals canonized Cronkite for his pronouncement and he luxuriated in their warm glow. Larded with acclamations, he was seen as an intellectually honest savior. Johnson who was never buttressed in certainty beyond his own poll numbers, saw his ratings decline and tossed in the chips. Robert McNamara his weak-willed numbers defense secretary was shattered and literally wept himself to dissolution in his office. A ruined man, bereft of any confidence, he was sacked and a canny opportunist lobbyist-lawyer Clark Clifford came in with a history of placating Johnson who was his client. With Gene McCarthy entering the presidential primary in New Hampshire…in a display of savagery because McCarthy was passed over for vice president in favor of Hubert Humphrey… and Bobby Kennedy coming in afterward, Johnson was transformed into a ruined old man who refused to continue the war with aggressiveness.
Thanks to the media and largely to Cronkite a surprising comment came from Leslie Gelb, then a key operative at the Pentagon. Gelb said “Vietnam passed the bounds of reasonable debate and fair discussion. What was important was not so much what was going on in Vietnam but what was happening in America…The war could e lost only if the American public turned sour on it. American public opinion was the essential domino. U. S. leaders knew it. Hanoi’s leaders knew it.”
Thus the North Vietnamese were secure in going on fighting with the conviction that even if they lost on the battlefield-as they did at Tet which once the Americans regained the initiative mowed down 47.627 of the enemy in that offensive alone (falling just less than America lost in the whole war)…a horrific Communist cost for which there was no decent reportage…American public opinion would follow the French public opinion and give them victory. Suffused with acclamations and honorary degrees from the Left, Cronkite went on to embrace a whole panoply of liberal causes, each gathering more applause from the so-called establishment than preceding.
So now we “honor” the old codger who called the war he once supported “immoral.” What is more immoral than one who betrays his country for liberal applause and acclaim by telling it we had lost the war while withholding the real facts that Tet was a destructive failure for the North Vietnamese. Cronkite continued prattling his “news” with altered statistics…never, ever reciting the facts of ultimate victory… convincing it that all is lost…rendering its president that he could not go on? In private life, Cronkite turned out to be Old Uncle Wackadoodle, endorsing many liberal political and social ideas. Cronkite’s followers in the media persecuted George W. Bush faced when he stood firm for the Surge. Indeed, Cronkite’s prime legatee is Barack Obama who prattled that the Surge wasn’t working and still cannot bring himself to admit its success.
Now we are asked to stand in hushed reverence before the bier of duplicitous old Walter…on the pretext that he was “the most trusted man in America”? Most trusted at that time, yes because he was an agent of duplicity. Unfortunately with which he sold out that trust to urge surrender…and for which he bears major responsibility for desecrating the nation’s honor and the young people who gave their lives for their country to win. Not me, my friends.
Walter Cronkite indeed! Had this man held an important media post of influence during in the Civil War when the Confederate campfires could be seen by Abraham Lincoln from the White House portico…we would have sundered the Union. Spare me your tears for this wicked old relativist who savored Standing Tall in Georgetown.









Ray Goulding of the comedy team of “Bob and Ray” played a character based upon Cronkite in the satirical film “Cold Turkey.” When the network news anchor “Walter Chronic” appears on screen a flourescent bulb illuminates his head as if it were an angelic halo. The locals swoon and Chronic behaves as if it is nothing out of the ordinary. This Norman Lear scripted feature is worth watching surprisingly enough.
You have stated it correctly. Cronkite deserves no honor. Most Americans do not know to this day that the Tet Offensive was a huge military loss to the North Vietnamese and that we really had them where we wanted them and could have won the war soon thereafter. But the liberal media along with the cowardly American Congress threw in the towel and shamed our country – not our men in uniform – and set the stage for apologists like Obama to blame the USA for all the world’s ills.
Not only did Walter mouth the words that his left of center producer/writer wrote for him, he took credit for them.
And, don’t forget, this honored man who presented the news in an unbiased manner actually endorsed Bobby Kennedy for President on the air. So much for fairness and objectivity.
If I may offer a correction or 20:
1. Cronkite did not mouth words that his left-of-center producer/writer wrote for him. He took a script by three different writers that one person had edited, all of them having consulted with the same producers Cronkite had consulted, and then edited it himself.
2. Cronkite never endorsed Robert Kennedy for president on the air.
3. A 1974 poll voted Cronkite the most trusted man in America. Whatever the merits of the poll, it is a fact that the poll was taken and he placed first. Therefore, he could be called the most trusted man in America.
4. He was not a firm supporter of the Vietnam War until the Tet Offensive. He was very much a firm supporter of it during his first trip there in 1965, when he was hosted almost entirely by the high command. In 1968, when he spent more time on the ground and with foot soldiers, and flew out of one city sitting among the corpses of Marines who had been killed, he concluded that the war was not being won and said so in a prime-time program.
5. Lyndon Johnson said that if he had lost Cronkite, he had lost Middle America–not “everything.” But to think that he made a decision about the war simply on Cronkite’s word ignores numerous other factors, and that LBJ had taken his military advisers at face value for so long.
6. Lincoln would not have had to surrender after Bull Run if he based his decision on public opinion because public opinion was in favor of pursuing the war.
7. In January 1968, Arthur O. Sulzberger, Jr., who does not go by the name Pinch, was not a student at Harvard and therefore could not have answered the question his father asked him as a Harvard student at that time.
These are matters of fact, whatever my opinion of the opinions expressed in this article. But if these simple facts are too much to be verified, what are we to make of the vitriol in this article? I suppose one could conclude that the author has a chip on his shoulder and would rather attack someone over imagined disagreements than rely on truth.
The 20 or so questions are a clever attempt to discredit the article – which was on-time and accurate despite a few glitches in the reporting. 40 years makes accuracy nearly impossible since most of the folks around then are dead. Like the near 50,000 soldiers who gave their lives padding the wallet of LBJs wife Lady Bird who owned a majority share in the Brown Root company who were the go-to, no bid contractor for the military. WHy win a war when you can profit from one? WHere was Wackadoodle Walter then? He was equivocating on the moral significance of collateral damage. Prosecute any war and kill as few civilians as possible is the reason why AMerica has difficulty winning these days. They love their fighters, they provide them support and a place to duck and cover when the military has them on the ropes. They feed them, hide weapons for them, and in everyway do what they can to help. To allow them unfettered access to aid and abet their family members (enemy) leaving them alive is the surest way to lose a war. The rules of engagement need be left to the soldier. It’s his life at risk. Had they US military had a few more Mi Lai incidents, I’ll wager the war ends sooner, and not due to public opinion. That public opinion is the issue here and Cronkite was the face on the war. NO matter what else, he used his position to influence the outcome. Had he and his ilk championed the men fighting and dying to preserve his freedoms and limit the spread of leftist garbage, instead of turning on them once he had helped create the atmosphere of despair, the outcome is undoubtably different. A grain of truth makes the lies believeable and that’s what Walter knew. Plowing the ground for seeds of discontent takes a while. The prep work re-enforces credebility. Cronkite wanted a different America and more… he worked to create it. It was in his own selfish interest to so do. He selectively reported on the “news” that best served his purposes. He ignored, withheld, covered up, the rest. And that my dear friend is a fact.
Leave your response!
Top Chicago Cop in Demented Rant
Archives
Recent Posts
Tags
Subscribe
Most Commented
about cdo