"While some of the stories have not been substantiated "
I have shown you proof that your statement is inoperable. So far all I have is your unsubstantiayed opinion. Until you show me evidence that supports the claims made by Kerry, I'll have to believe you are wrong......
.....Let's put things in perspective. Some three million men served in Vietnam. Since the logistics tail of U.S. forces is fairly large, only about 25 percent, or 750,000, served in combat units. If we add up all of the atrocities, both proven and alleged, and multiply them by two as a hedge against under-reporting, the percentage of American combat soldiers who might have committed atrocities is still less than 1 percent of the total. I doubt that many armies in history could match that record......
dev.siliconinvestor.com
....He became an antiwar activist. Sure, lots of Americans ended up opposing the Vietnam War, but Kerry did so by becoming the respectable face of Vietnam Veterans Against the War, a group whose stock in trade was accusations that American servicemen had committed war crimes. These claims came in the form of "confessions" from men, some of whom turned out not even to be veterans--and Kerry repeated them in sworn testimony before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee in April 1971.....
Message 20073837
Of much greater import is Kerry's eloquent Winter Soldier testimony before Congress in 1971, which launched his political career. Kerry based his testimony on the statements of about 150 supposedly highly-decorated veterans at the Winter Soldier Rally in Detroit, who made claims of committing horrible atrocities in Vietnam. He told Congress that the U.S. "murdered over 200,000 Vietnamese per year," a statement which the present Kerry campaign has gone to great lengths to distance itself from.
The Detroit claims were duly investigated and found wanting. It turned out that most of the claimants were phonies who had never been in the military. Some used stolen names of actual veterans; others refused to comply with investigators. So Kerry tarred his fellow vets as war criminals based on trumped up, unsubstantiated charges, in order to thrust his name into the spotlight.
Message 20050213
.....John Kerry was given a chance to take this course last Sunday by Tim Russert on Meet the Press, but the presidential candidate refused to seize it. Instead, Kerry tried to have matters both ways: He distanced himself from his 1971 statements regarding atrocities in the Vietnam War while insisting that his charges were essentially accurate.
It so happens, however, that they were not accurate or even remotely close to accurate, and the fact that Kerry still won't repudiate what he said means it remains a serious issue......
.....Kerry spoke at length before the committee, and his testimony is full of such lurid claims......
Russert: "But, senator, when you testified before the Senate, you talked about some of the hearings you had observed at the Winter Soldiers meeting and you said that people had personally raped, cut off ears, cut off heads, taped wires from portable telephones to human genitals and on and on. A lot of those stories have been discredited, and in hindsight was your testimony . . ."
Kerry: "Actually, a lot of them have been documented."
Russert: "So you stand by that?"
Kerry: "A lot of those stories have been documented. Have some been discredited? Sure they have, Tim......
In other words, Kerry believes his language in 1971 was "a little bit excessive," "a little bit over the top," and might have been phrased "more artfully." But on the other hand his statements were "honest," he's "proud" of his position at that time and he's "not going to walk away" from his fundamental thesis regarding the grotesque nature of U.S. conduct. Indeed, "a lot of those stories have been documented."
Actually, many of the atrocity stories that Kerry and many others peddled in the early '70s were discredited even at the time by such journalists as Neil Sheehan, James Reston and William Overend. Others were eventually debunked in such books as America in Vietnam, by well-known historian Guenter Lewy (1978) and Stolen Valor: How the Vietnam Generation Was Robbed of its Heroes and History, by B.G. Burkett and Glenna Whitley (1998).....
As Lewy points out, for example, when the Naval Investigative Service tried to probe allegations made at the Winter Soldier Investigation, "many of the veterans, though assured that they would not be questioned about atrocities they might have committed personally, refused to be interviewed. One of the active members of the VVAW told investigators that the leadership had directed the entire membership not to cooperate with military authorities."
"One of the stories told and retold was that of prisoners pushed out of helicopters in order to scare others into talking," Lewy writes. "It is, of course, possible that some American interrogators engaged in this criminal practice, though not a single instance has been confirmed . . . But the most damaging finding consisted of the sworn statements of several veterans, corroborated by witnesses, that they had in fact not attended the hearing in Detroit. One of them had never been to Detroit in all his life. He did not know, he stated, who might have used his name."
Lewy does not deny that "incidents similar to some of those described at the VVAW hearing" occurred. They do in every war, and Lewy carefully discusses a number of them. "We know that hamlets were destroyed, prisoners tortured, and corpses mutilated," he writes, "Yet these incidents either (as in the destruction of hamlets) did not violate the law of war or took place in breach of existing regulations. In either case, they were not, as alleged, part of a 'criminal policy.' The VVAW's use of fake witnesses and the failure to cooperate with military authorities and to provide crucial details of the incidents further cast serious doubt on the professed desire to serve the causes of justice and humanity."
And he adds: "Most soldiers in Vietnam did not kill prisoners or intentionally shoot unarmed villagers. Violations of the law of war in this regard were committed by individuals in violation of existing policy. With the exception of rare cases, no orders were issued to commit atrocities . . ."
Message 20065808
Kerry-Linked Anti-War Group Can't Bury Deceit
....While many former Vietnam veterans support the candidacy of Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry, there is no sign of the man who appeared with Kerry on a nationally televised news program in 1971 to allege widespread atrocities by U.S. soldiers in Vietnam.
That man, Al Hubbard, remains out of the spotlight, perhaps because the war record he touted in directing a prominent anti-war group that included Kerry, was fabricated. Hubbard's deceit, which he later admitted.....
...Meet the Press host Lawrence Spivak introduced Hubbard as a former decorated Air Force captain who had spent two years in Vietnam and was wounded in the process.....
....Hubbard's falsehoods were not confined to his military rank, Overend told CNSNews.com . Hubbard "had no record of any service in Vietnam ..." Overend said.....
....B. G. Burkett, author of Stolen Valor and a military researcher, told CNSNews.com that Hubbard's type of deceit was widespread among people associated with VVAW.
Burkett's book documents false testimonies and reveals that many of the men who worked with VVAW and other anti- war groups who had alleged war atrocities during the Vietnam War had either lied about their background or had claims that were unverifiable.
According to Burkett, the Pentagon investigated the VVAW's Winter Soldier allegations and discovered that some of the U.S. Marines listed by VVAW as having testified in Detroit, "could prove that they had never been in Detroit and did not testify at that event."
Burkett is critical of Kerry for never having addressed the issue of whether VVAW and the anti-war movement relied on impostors or phony servicemen. "He presented this ragtag bunch of bums as your standard honorably discharged Vietnam vet and I think nothing could be further from the truth. They weren't," Burkett said.....
CITIZEN KERRY
....This particular article, explains how much of the supposed atrocities were pure theatre.....
....all those horrific accounts of rape, torture, arson and slaughter that the VVAW had recorded in Detroit seemed to evaporate once the real investigation demanded by Senator Hatfield began. As recounted in Guenter Lewy's 1978 book “America in Vietnam,” few witnesses agreed to talk with military investigators, even after being assured that they would not be asked about their own crimes. Many of those who did permit interviews turned out never to have been in combat. Some of the most gruesome claims came from men who were imposters using the names of real Vietnam veterans. One Marine who had been in combat eventually told investigators that a member of the Nation of Islam had helped prepare his statement, and admitted that he had never witnessed any of the atrocities he had testified to in Detroit. In the end, the Navy was unable to verify any of the hundreds of war crimes alleged by the Winter Soldier Investigation. Neither has anyone else during the 33 years since, including journalists, historians, and military and Congressional investigators.....
Message 20089797 |