Posted on 05/06/2005 11:57:57 AM PDT by jb6
Can someone give me a link to the LA Times article or some other major article discribing Al Gore's bodyguards in Vietnam. I'm battling some die hard liberals who claim this is all a lie.
All of the pictures I have seen of him in Vietnam with his cameras around his neck make him look dorky. However, if they are refusing evidence because of the source, I don't think you are dealing with honest people. A source may be suspect, but evidence stands on its own weight. Don't be surprised if you go to a lot of trouble to document what you say and they just shrug it off. People believe what they want to believe, often.
The Gore Lie
And I was shot at. . . . I spent most of my time in the field. (Al Gore, The Washington Post, 2/3/88)
I carried an M-16 . . . I pulled my turn on the perimeter at night and walked through the elephant grass, and I was fired upon. (Al Gore, Los Angeles Times, 10/15/99)
The Truth
Gore No Longer Mentions Combat Duty on the Campaign Trail.
On the campaign trail today, while he suggests no combat heroics, he nonetheless mentions his service in Vietnam proudly. (Los Angeles Times, 10/15/99)
Gore Had Bodyguards Assigned to Keep Him Out of Harms Way in Vietnam. In Vietnam, Alan Leo, a photographer in the press brigade office where Gore worked as a reporter, said he was summoned by Brig. Gen. K.B. Cooper, the 20th Engineer Brigades Commander, and told Leo that he, Cooper, had a great amount of respect for the senator. He asked Leo, the most experienced member of the press unit, to make sure that nothing happened to Gore. He requested that Gore not get into situations that were dangerous, said Leo, who did what he could to carry out Coopers directive. He described his half-dozen or so trips into the field with Gore as situations where I could have worn a tuxedo. (Newsweek, 12/6/99)
Courtesy:
Gore Got VIP Treatment in Vietnam, Army Buddy Tells NewsMax.com
NEWSMAX.COM - Al Gore's Vietnam tour of duty was cut in half because he was the son of a powerful U.S. senator, according to a Vietnam veteran who served with him.
In an exclusive interview with NewsMax.com Friday, Henry Alan Leo also claimed that he acted as Gore's "security escort" on the battlefield, but took issue with a Los Angeles Times characterization of him as Gore's Vietnam "bodyguard."
Still, even with that clarification, Gore's onetime army buddy left little doubt that the Washington VIP's son received special treatment while "in country" and challenged assertions that Gore was sent home early merely because his unit had been deactivated.
Gore served in Vietnam as a reporter with the 20th Engineers Brigade from Jan. 8 to May 24, 1971, when he was honorably discharged. His unit, headquartered in Bien Hoa, some 20 miles northeast of Saigon, was deactivated in April 1971 -- a development Vice President Gore's defenders have cited to justify his early departure.
The normal Army tour of duty in Vietnam was 12 months.
Henry Alan Leo was attached to the 20th Engineers as a photographer and, having been in country since October 1969, was one of the more senior members of the brigade when Gore arrived. When asked to explain how Gore got out more than six months early, Leo told NewsMax.com, "If your dad is a senator, you can do anything."
What about Gore's unit being deactivated?
"He could have come right back down and gone to Engineer Command Headquarters, which was the next command up," Leo said. "That's what the rest of us in the 20th Engineers did.
"He got out 'cause of his dad," the Vietnam veteran repeated without equivocation. Al Gore Sr. was U.S. senator from Tennessee at the time.
Leo said he was dismayed by the special handling Gore received in Vietnam, treatment that included a general's request that Leo look after Gore because he was the son of a powerful politician. "I was shocked that someone would get that kind of treatment over in a combat zone.
I thought we were all, you know, under the same flag. In my opinion, I thought nobody should be getting that kind of treatment." Leo said that he was never specifically assigned to be Gore's "bodyguard," as the Los Angeles Times had reported on Oct. 15. "I was never ordered to be a bodyguard. As far as I know, Gore never had any bodyguards," Leo told NewsMax.com.
"I was asked to be, more or less, a security escort, because I had a lot more time in country and I already had multiple tours over there."
The Times reported that at least one other soldier besides Leo was warned that a senator's son, whose safety would be a priority, was joining the 20th Engineers. Last week, NewsMax.com asked Michael O'Hara, described in press accounts as Gore's best friend in the unit, about reports that Gore had bodyguards while in Vietnam. O'Hara refused to confirm or deny the allegation.
Leo told NewsMax.com that O'Hara and Gore were fast friends but wasn't sure whether he was the other brigade member who was told to watch out for the senator's son.
Brig. Gen. Kenneth B. Cooper personally requested that Leo take precautions to see that no harm came to Gore during a one-on-one meeting.
"It was natural for Gen. Cooper to make the request. Once again, it was never a direct order, for me to keep an eye out for Al Gore -- just to make sure that he did not get into any situations that we might have difficulty extracting ourselves from."
Leo took pains to not to exaggerate his role. "I wasn't like a bodyguard where I was going to take a bullet for the guy. I wouldn't do that for anybody. But it was just a matter of not letting Gore get caught out there in a situation where something might happen."
Gen. Cooper's request that Leo protect Gore was an honor in Leo's view:
"Wow, I thought. Here the general thinks I have a good reputation. I lived on the edge. I liked being out in the field, but I used a lot of common sense. And I learned a lot while I was out there. So I was a natural survivor. And I believe that to be the real reason for my being asked to keep an eye out on Gore."
Leo said he was also the natural choice to be Gore's security escort because, as the unit photographer, he would have accompanied Gore on field interviews anyway. As it happened, they never found themselves in any close-call situations. "I'd say that most of the areas we went into were relatively secure already," Leo told NewsMax.com.
For Leo, Gore's special treatment was merely another example of Washington business as usual. "As a general rule, the military jumps when Congress requires it to do so. So it doesn't surprise me that a senator had enough power to pull strings to ease his son's way anywhere."
Still, the Vietnam veteran bears Gore no ill will today. Leo said that after he got to know him, the future vice president seemed like "just one of the guys." After a while, it became "second nature" for him to see that Gore was kept in "an OK situation."
Should the revelation that Gore got kid-gloves care in Vietnam while others had to take their chances be an issue in the upcoming presidential campaign? Leo doesn't think so.
"Yes, I think it was unfair that he got special treatment. But it wasn't like I was told to guard this guy with my life. It was a simple matter of wanting us to take special caution to make sure that Gore didn't get into situations that may require a combat effort."
Now, Henry Alan Leo looks back on the entire episode with a jaundiced view. "That was 30 years ago. It's not important to me now. I'm a native Washingtonian. Politics has always been a dirty word to me regardless of who the politicians are."
From: Newsmax.com
Gore Considered Fleeing to Canada to Avoid Vietnam
NEWSMAX.COM - Before he enlisted in the Army in 1969, Vice President Al Gore considered dodging the draft and fleeing his country.
According to a 1992 wire report reviewed by NewsMax.com: "Gore had just graduated from Harvard and shared an opposition to the war with much of his generation.
According to many accounts, Gore carefully weighed his options, and even briefly considered fleeing to Canada, as many did to avoid the draft." (Associated Press, July 29, 1992)
Rumors that Gore considered the Canada option have swirled since last Thursday, when a C-SPAN caller who identified himself only as a former Gore aide claimed to know the behind-the-scenes story of why the vice president changed his mind and decided to enlist.
According to the caller's account, Gore's father advised him that seeking asylum in Canada would destroy his political viability and promised that if he enlisted no harm would come to him.
Before President Carter granted amnesty to Vietnam draft-dodgers in 1978, those who fled the country were not allowed to return.
In a report that lends some credibility to another aspect of the caller's account, several of Gore's Vietnam colleagues told the Los Angeles Times last month that they were assigned to act as his "bodyguards." If true, the vice president's physical risk while in Vietnam was indeed minimized, just as his father had allegedly promised.
"It blew me away," H. Alan Leo told the Times. "I was to make sure he didn't get into a situation he could not get out of. They didn't want him to get into trouble. So we went into the field after the fact {after combat actions), and that limited his exposure to any hazards. (See: Al Gore Had Bodyguards Protecting Him in Vietnam -- NewsMax.com, Nov. 13)
Vietnam had an impact on political viability for both father and son.
At the time of Gore's enlistment, his father was in the fight of his political life. Sen. Gore had opposed the war early on, which had made him increasingly unpopular in conservative Tennessee. In an apparent attempt to compensate for his own antiwar position, the senator had his son appear in campaign ads wearing military fatigues after young Gore had enlisted.
His family has always insisted that Gore's decision to volunteer for the Army had nothing to do with political considerations.
Still, young Albert was scheduled to ship out by Election Day, which couldn't hurt with voters who viewed Vietnam service as the ultimate patriotic act.
But Gore's orders were delayed. In a 1988 Washington Post interview, Gore family members said they suspected that President Nixon had delayed a 1969 Vietnam call-up solely to deny Gore's father any benefit at the polls from having a son at the battlefront.
Gore himself told the Post, "All I know is I was not allowed to go until the first departure date after the November election." Gore's father lost the election.
DING DING DING!! WE HAVE A WINNER!!
It ain't the cameras........
Mr. Gore has stooped to his most amazing lows by lying about his tobacco connection in the wake of his sister's 1984 smoking-related death. During his 1996 speech at the Democratic National Convention, Mr.Gore said, "That is why until I draw my last breath I will pour my heart and soul into the cause of protecting our children from the dangers of smoking." The truth: Mr. Gore and his family grew tobacco on the family farm for years after his sister's death. In 1988, four years after her tragic death, he even bragged to North Carolina tobacco growers that he relished growing and fostering tobacco.
".....his cameras around his neck make him look dorky.
It ain't the cameras........"
It's those THIGHS!
It's Newsmax quoting the LA Times though.
I'm literally howling at that. What a great line!
Nice work, Howlin.
The Village Voice article scored it though. A leftist source slamming Gore...priceless.
Sounds like the band from El Cerrito High School had Al Gore in mind.
I just love posting that Gore lies stuff.......LOL. It really makes me mad when I got back to a bookmark and the article is gone off FR because of this damn copyright stuff.
As I am sure you know, a good Freeper NEVER loses a bookmark they might be able to use later to cream somebody. :-)
What band would that be?.........
My favorite part...
Gore was a journalist in Vietnam.
He did not engage in combat, nor did he witness any. That's because, even as a journalist, special instructions had been given to keep him out of harm's way. That is why bodyguards were assigned to him. That is why Brig. Gen. K.B. Cooper instructed Alan Leo, a photographer in the press brigade office where Gore worked, to make sure that Gore did not go near any dangerous situations. And that is why Leo ended up describing his half-dozen trips outside of the press brigade office with Gore as situations where 'I could have worn a tuxedo."
Oh, excellent! They can't argue with The Village Voice!
Here's CNN (you know they will accept that!)
Sen. Gore's political career was over; his son's military service had not helped. And then Gore received orders to go to Vietnam: Report after Christmas. Before Gore arrived in Vietnam, the men in his unit knew someone with connections was coming.
"He says, 'Look, I just want you to know we're getting a replacement - his name is Al Gore. He's the son of a senator," says Mike O'Hara, a friend from the army. "And I thought, 'So? So what? What difference does it make?'"
Once in Southeast Asia, Gore served an army journalist, writing about other soldiers for military and hometown papers. Friends say he never traded on his family name. But others say he was treated with care.
"The general said that it was not an order, but that he requested that we keep a very close eye on this individual and that we try to keep him out of harm's way," says Alan Leo, then an army photographer.
Leo says the officers did not want Gore in situations where he might be wounded, or worse.
"I actually had some negative feelings toward him before I even met him, for the simple reason that he was getting special treatment," says Leo. "Once I got into the field with him, I just treated him like anybody else."
Like most army journalists, Gore stayed in relatively secure areas. Gore sent some of his articles home. His father, in turn, shared them with the Nashville Tennessean.
"Our first byline from Al Gore came while he was in Vietnam," says Frank Sutherland, an editor for the Tennessean. "He sent a story that he had written about a fire base being overrun to his father."
Gore served in Vietnam less than five months. His total time in the Army amounted to one year and nine months. He was discharged early to go to graduate school.
http://64.233.161.104/search?q=cache:xIgh67fRXAUJ:www.cnn.com/SPECIALS/2000/democracy/gore/stories/gore/+Alan+Leo++al+gore&hl=en
Don't miss 20 and 22; chocked FULL of lies.
The Village Voice and CNN: a direct hit.
And to help old man Gore in his reeelction!
O/T, what on earth will we ever do with all these "tidbits of knowledge" we have packed in our brains? I mean, can we bring this up at cocktail parties or basketball games? :-)
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