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Politics : Don't Blame Me, I Voted For Kerry -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: American Spirit who wrote (41052)8/6/2004 4:16:52 PM
From: Ann CorriganRespond to of 81568
 
What's sauce for the goose.....those swift boat vets were awarded medals as well. You've been crowing for mos about military heroes receiving their due respect. That should apply to ALL medal recipents, not just someone who manipulated the system like John Kerry:

First look
American Thinker

Unfit for Command, the blockbuster book critiquing John F. Kerry’s Viet Nam service, will not be released until next week. But a chapter is available for preview on the web. Military historian John. B. Dwyer previews it for American Thinker readers.

Summing up the first section of Ch. 3 "The Purple Heart Hunter" in his book Unfit For Command, John O'Neill and John Corsi write:

"To cheat by getting a Purple Heart from a self-inflicted wound would be regarded as befitting the lowest levels of military conduct. To use such a faked award to leave a combat sector early would be lower yet... to make or use faked awards as the basis for running for president... while faulting one's political opponents for not having similar military decorations, would represent unbelievable hypocrisy and the truly bottom rung of human conduct."

You just might get the idea that the majority of Swift Boat veterans, the officers and men who served with Kerry, or knew him during his brief Vietnam tour, are extremely angry at the Democrats’ presidential candidate. This book documents the many reasons for that justifiable anger, which include his bogus Purple Hearts.

The Purple Heart carries with it a special, almost reverential meaning and import. Established as the Badge of Military Merit by Gen. George Washington during the Revolutionary War, it was revived in the 20th century as the Purple Heart, which carries a likeness of Washington. To earn it, a service member must sustain a "wound necessitating medical treatment received in action with the enemy..."

As O'Neill documents in Chapter 3, these criteria were not met in the case of Kerry's first, and subsequent, Purple Heart actions. Even his website seems to fudge regarding the incident:

"December 2, 1968 - Kerry experiences first intense combat, receives first combat related injury."

Intense combat? In the introduction to Doug Brinkley's Tour of Duty Kerry himself refers to it as "a half-assed action that hardly qualified as combat." But such grudging kernels of truth are not the clay which can be molded later for political purposes.

LT (j.g.) Kerry was an Officer-in-Command Under Training in early December when he asked to go on a mission commanded by LT (now Rear Admiral retired) William Schachte. Both of them were aboard a Boston Whaler, along with William Zaladonis and Pat Runyon, offshore along the coast north of Cam Ranh Bay. Presumed enemy activity was seen ashore. Zaladonis opened up with his .30 caliber M-60 machine gun. Runyon busied himself with the engine. Kerry tried to fire his M-16. It jammed. He picked up an M-79 grenade launcher and fired a round too close so that it it exploded near the boat, causing a tiny piece of shrapnel to nick his arm. As O'Neill states:

"Schachte berated Kerry for almost putting someone's eye out. There was not hostile fire of any kind, nor did Kerry mention to PCF OIC Mike Voss (whose Swiftboat towed the Whaler across the bay) that he was wounded."

Kerry managed to keep the teeny bit of shrapnel in his arm so Dr. Louis Letson had something to remove.

"When Kerry appeared at sickbay," writes O'Neill, "Dr. Letson asked 'Why are you here?' in surprise, observing Kerry's unimpressive scratch. Kerry answered 'I've been wounded by hostile fire.' Accompanying crewmen then told Dr. Letson that Kerry had wounded himself."

Dr. Letson removed the itty-bitty shrapnel piece, applied antiseptic and a band-aid.

Concludes O'Neill:

"Amazingly, somehow Kerry 'gamed the system' nearly three months later to obtain the Purple Heart that (Cmdr. Grant) Hibbard (his commanding officer) had denied. How he obtained that award is unknown, since his refusal to execute Standard Form 180 means that whatever documents exist are known only to Kerry, the Dept. of Defense, and God.”

Most Swiftees who were there with Kerry at Cam Ranh Bay never knew until Kerry decided to run for president that he had somehow successfully maneuvered his way to this undeserved Purple Heart."

And so, the self-absorbed, self-aggrandizing naval miles gloriosus persona LT (j.g.) Kerry had manufactured for himself had been launched upon a sea of faux heroism that he now hopes will see him safely into presidential harbor.

John B. Dwyer is a military historian who frequently writes for The American Thinker



To: American Spirit who wrote (41052)8/6/2004 4:42:16 PM
From: Ann CorriganRead Replies (1) | Respond to of 81568
 
Get your copy from Barnes & Noble--not Amazon. The latter uses outsourced sales reps in India. Barnes & Noble is still all American. The book is already #3 bestseller at B&N although not available until Sept 1:

UNFIT FOR COMMAND: Swift Boat Veterans Speak Out against John Kerry
John E. O'Neill, Jerome R. Corsi

Hardcover, September 2004

List Price: $27.95
Our Price: $19.56 (Save 30%)
Barnes & Noble Member Price: $18.58

Product Details:

ISBN: 0895260174
Format: Hardcover, 208pp
Pub. Date: September 2004 Publisher: Regnery Publishing, Inc., An Eagle Publishing Company
Barnes & Noble Sales Rank: 3

Not Yet Released: Pre-Order Now.

This item will be available on September 1. Place your order now and we will ship the item when it arrives. Your credit card will not be charged until your order ships. Pre-ordered items do not qualify for Faster Delivery.

ABOUT THE BOOK
From the Publisher

UNFIT FOR COMMAND: Swift Boat Veterans Speak Out against John Kerry

From the Publisher:
In 1971 John O’Neill—the officer who took over John Kerry’s Swift Boat in Vietnam— returned home from Vietnam only to realize that the man he served with, John Kerry, had become a leader of the radical group, Vietnam Veterans Against the War and was slandering his fellow veterans as war criminals. O’Neill debated John Kerry on the Dick Cavett show in 1971, successfully demolishing Kerry’s accusations against his fellow troops in Vietnam. In his new book, Unfit for Command, O’Neill and co-author Jerome Corsi bring together the voices of more than two hundred Navy veterans who served with Kerry, and who feel it their duty to tell why John Kerry is unworthy of the presidency.



To: American Spirit who wrote (41052)8/6/2004 5:08:12 PM
From: KLPRead Replies (2) | Respond to of 81568
 
I've heard the EXACT words of KERRY, in KERRY's own voice. He said exactly that his fellow service members had done all sorts of "atrocities", and that HE himself had as well....Look up on SI, I've posted the 1971 testimony of Kerry's talk to the US Senate as well. You can see for yourself.

They distort what he said and why he said it. Kerry would never blame soldiers