William Westmoreland (born March 26, 1914, Spartanburg county, South Carolina, U.S.—died July 18, 2005, Charleston, South Carolina) was a U.S. Army officer who commanded U.S. forces in the Vietnam War from 1964 to 1968.
After a year at The Citadel, Westmoreland entered the United States Military Academy at West Point, New York, where he was made first captain of his class. Upon graduating in 1936, he was commissioned a second lieutenant and assigned to the 18th Field Artillery at Fort Sill, Oklahoma. After duty in Hawaii he joined the 9th Infantry Division at Fort Bragg, North Carolina, and he would serve in that unit throughout World War II.
In 1942 Westmoreland took command of the 34th Field Artillery, a battalion of 155mm towed howitzers. He led that unit during early fighting in Tunisia, where, after a long forced march under adverse weather conditions, it went into battle against elements of Erwin Rommel’s Afrika Korps. Westmoreland’s battalion was awarded the Presidential Unit Citation for its role in preventing a German breakthrough following the American defeat at Kasserine Pass. His next major action came in Sicily, where his battalion supported the 82nd Airborne Division and Westmoreland gained an important patron in Gen. Maxwell Taylor. As the 9th Division moved on to England and then through Normandy and beyond, Westmoreland was promoted to colonel and became division chief of staff.
After World War II Westmoreland was given command of the 504th Parachute Infantry regiment, and from 1947 to 1950 he served as the chief of staff of the 82nd Airborne Division. He next commanded the 187th Airborne Regimental Combat Team, a unit in the Eighth Army reserve stationed in Japan and periodically deployed to Korea during the fighting there. Promoted to brigadier general, he was assigned to the Pentagon, where he served as director of the army’s manpower control office (1953–55) and as secretary of the general staff under Taylor, who was then army chief of staff (1955–58). In December 1956 he was promoted to major general; at 42 years old, he was then the youngest person holding that rank in the U.S. Army. After commanding the 101st Airborne Division from 1958 to 1960, he was made superintendent at West Point.
When the war in Vietnam escalated, Westmoreland briefly led the XVIII Airborne Corps, gaining a third star, and then in January 1964 he became deputy to Gen. Paul Harkins, commander of U.S. forces in Vietnam. In June 1964 Westmoreland replaced Harkins, and he would hold the top post in Vietnam for the next four years. When, in the spring and summer of 1965, Pres. Lyndon B. Johnson began sending U.S. ground forces to Vietnam, Westmoreland’s attention turned from advisory matters to the employment of those forces. Time magazine named him its 1965 “Man of the Year.”
Westmoreland decided on a war of attrition, one in which the enemy body count was the key measure of merit, and “search and destroy” was the dominant tactical approach. In response to repeated requests from Westmoreland for more forces, the American commitment eventually grew to well over a half million troops. Despite inflicting very heavy casualties on communist forces, that approach faltered as the enemy was more than able to make up the losses. Meanwhile, support for the South Vietnamese and attention to pacification efforts suffered from Westmoreland’s intense interest in combat operations. Domestic support for the war in the United States also declined precipitously as casualties mounted with little apparent payoff. The antiwar movement gained strength, bringing intense political pressure to bear.
During 1967 Westmoreland was active in the Johnson administration’s Progress Offensive, a public-relations campaign designed to persuade an increasingly restive public that the United States was winning the war. On three trips to the United States, Westmoreland made very optimistic comments about how the war was going before such audiences as the National Press Club and a joint session of the U.S. Congress. In a yearlong controversy over enemy “order of battle” assessments (intelligence estimates of the strength and organization of enemy forces), he put an arbitrary ceiling on the numbers that his intelligence officers could report and omitted certain categories of irregular forces that had long been included. That was done despite evidence obtained by Westmoreland’s own headquarters staff that showed significantly higher troop-strength figures.
After the Tet Offensive of January 1968, Westmoreland faced a number of challenges, both in Vietnam and at home. The surprise attacks by North Vietnamese and Viet Cong forces in South Vietnam on dozens of towns, cities, airfields, and military bases, including Westmoreland’s headquarters and the U.S. embassy in Saigon, shocked the American public. Although the offensive was an unqualified failure from a strictly military standpoint—in part because a general uprising in support of the communists failed to materialize—news and images of the attacks completely undermined the assurances by Johnson and Westmoreland that the war was being won. In the wake of the attacks, Westmoreland was sent home to become army chief of staff. In that post (1968–72), he opposed Pres. Richard M. Nixon’s plans for an all-volunteer force, and he retired in 1972.
In retirement Westmoreland remained active on the speaking circuit, especially to veterans’ groups; campaigned unsuccessfully for the governorship of his native state of South Carolina in 1974; and penned the memoir A Soldier Reports (1976). In 1982 he sued the CBS television network for libel after it aired a documentary that revisited the order-of-battle controversy. After some 18 weeks of the trial, and only days before the case would have gone to a jury, Westmoreland withdrew his suit.
After living with Alzheimer disease for at least a decade, Westmoreland died and was buried at West Point.