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John Kerry: The mission I found in Vietnam
Intl Herald Tribune/New York Times ^ | 3-3-04 | John Kerry

Posted on 03/03/2004 7:57:02 PM PST by SJackson

WASHINGTON The year 1968 was unlike any other I have known. I was 24 years old, a newly minted naval officer in a convoy headed for the Gulf of Tonkin.

I remember lazy moments standing watch on the U.S.S. Gridley - out on the fantail, the fo'c'sle, anywhere, looking at the sea, enjoying glorious sunsets and sunrises on the bridge.

Then, on the afternoon of Feb. 26, when we had left Midway Island, the reality of Vietnam hit me right between the eyes. Gridley's executive officer came to me and asked if I had a friend named Pershing - and I knew immediately why he was asking.

I fought to restrain an empty crying. I didn't even have to read the telegram; I knew that Dick Pershing, my childhood and college friend, was dead. For days on the empty Pacific I could barely stand the knowledge that I would never see him again. It was the loss of someone irreplaceable, a loss of innocence, a loss of the sense of invincibility and bravado that young men have as they go to war.

Soon after, off Vietnam, we learned that Senator Eugene McCarthy and a band of college students living on peanut butter and jelly sandwiches had rocked the foundations of the political world in the New Hampshire primary, sending the message to President Lyndon Johnson that he couldn't be president any more.

Weeks later we heard of the death of the Reverend Martin Luther King Jr., assassinated while campaigning for justice in America. We knew that cities across the country had exploded in riots and much of Washington itself was in flames. There was war all around us and war at home.

After a few months of search and rescue work in the Gulf of Tonkin, the ship was returning to California when the crackling radio picked up the end of Robert Kennedy's victory speech, the shots fired in the kitchen, the chaos. We docked early the next morning - June 6, 1968. Robert Kennedy died that day.

I spent a lost weekend in Long Beach glued to the television set. It was strange, leaving a place of violence to come home to violence - violence that shook our sense of the order of things. Later that summer I reported for Swift boat training in Coronado, California. We lived with the deep-throated roar of Phantom afterburners streaking out of the naval air station, carriers dominating the harbor, Marine recruits surviving basic training, and we watched the turmoil in our own country. I had been a participant and an observer, and my beliefs were challenged during that difficult time.

Soon I found myself back in Vietnam, on the front lines of a very different war from the one I had known on my first tour of duty. We were outsiders in a complex war among Vietnamese. Too many allies were corrupt. Adversaries were ruthless. Enemy territory was everywhere.

It is hard still to explain the clashing feelings. There were the deep and enduring bonds forged among crewmates, brothers in arms from all walks of life fighting each day to keep faith with one another on a tiny boat on the rivers of the Mekong Delta. And there was the anger I felt toward body-counting, face-saving leaders sitting safely in Washington sending to the killing fields troops who were often poor, black or brown. But that was Vietnam, where the children of America were pulled from front porches and living rooms and plunged almost overnight into a world of sniper fire, ambushes, rockets, booby traps, body bags, explosions, sleeplessness and the confusion created by an enemy who was sometimes invisible and firing at us and sometimes right next to us and smiling.

I found understanding only in the shared experience of those for whom the war was personal, who had lost friends and seen brothers lose arms and legs, who had seen all around them human beings fight and curse, weep and die.

At times it seemed that we were the only ones who really understood that the faults in Vietnam were those of the war, not the warriors.

I returned home to America and moved to New York City, prepared to serve out the remainder of my naval duty in Brooklyn. Part of me wanted to forget Vietnam and get on with my life, but part of me felt compelled to tell the story. I was unsure how.

Then, in April 1969, I received news so eerily similar to what had happened on that first voyage to Vietnam. Another close friend - Don Droz - had been killed in a swift boat ambush in the Duong Keo River.

At that moment I knew I couldn't wait. There was no further thinking to do. It was time. That's the day I decided to give all my energy and strength to one more mission: to end the war in which I'd fought.

John Kerry, a U.S. senator from Massachusetts, is candidate for the Democratic presidential nomination.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: 2004; kerry; vvaw
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To: Balata
Thank you for serving and know that even those of us who did not serve (I'm a woman)feel the same way you do about Hanoi Jane.
41 posted on 03/03/2004 8:56:38 PM PST by nopardons
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To: Balata
What do you think about my #33? Could that have happened?
42 posted on 03/03/2004 8:57:39 PM PST by Howlin (Just another unrepentant Bush supporter.)
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To: Howlin
I remember lazy moments standing watch on the U.S.S. Gridley - out on the fantail, the fo'c'sle, anywhere, looking at the sea, enjoying glorious sunsets and sunrises on the bridge.

What? Was he on the Titanic? I see the movie, The Titanic. I wonder if he threw a really big diamond over the side too...

43 posted on 03/03/2004 8:58:50 PM PST by abner (FREE THE MIRANDA MEMOS! http://www.intelmemo.com or http://www.wintersoldier.com)
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To: Howlin
I'm in dire need of something right now...just saw her thighness on Lou Dobbs solving the jobs problem.
44 posted on 03/03/2004 8:58:55 PM PST by Carolinamom
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To: Howlin
If the Libertarians had their way, I'd suggest laudanum...LOL

But seriously,I spent a goodly portion of last night countering Dem lies and hysterics. I won with facts. Yes, another one down and a newly minted no longer a Dem going to vote for President Bush. :-)

45 posted on 03/03/2004 8:59:32 PM PST by nopardons
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To: Carolinamom
What.....you watched and listened to the monster? Why didn't you change channels?
46 posted on 03/03/2004 9:01:14 PM PST by nopardons
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To: JennysCool
Why, I didn't know that! I'll take a fresh look at his bright vision for America! Decorated combat veterans always come #1 in my book.

Whiny, socialist, two-faced b-turd.
47 posted on 03/03/2004 9:02:51 PM PST by IGOTMINE (We are being incrementally criminalized by a government that does not trust us with firearms.)
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To: abner
Hey, I found a picture of him on that ship!


49 posted on 03/03/2004 9:03:54 PM PST by Howlin (Just another unrepentant Bush supporter.)
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To: Howlin
Sedated?....Im planning on a self induced coma until after the election......
50 posted on 03/03/2004 9:04:27 PM PST by mystery-ak (*The cause of freedom is in good hands*....you betcha, Mr. President!)
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To: nopardons
I saw her mouth moving, heard "jobs" and changed channels. Do you think plexiglass will be strong enough to withstand my hurls during this political season....which already seems to have been yearlong?
51 posted on 03/03/2004 9:08:24 PM PST by Carolinamom
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To: Howlin
#49 Check to see if that is "on the fantail".
52 posted on 03/03/2004 9:10:26 PM PST by Carolinamom
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To: Howlin
I seriously doubt it. He was probably in his bunk in never never land. With his stilted and flowery language he wants the reader to assume he was standing watch on the radio as the event happened. That's BS. He probably saw it on TV like the rest of us, only he saw it a day later.
53 posted on 03/03/2004 9:10:32 PM PST by Balata
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To: nopardons
Thanks for your reply, nopardons. What Jane Fonda did is definitly personal with me and many others who were there.

Many of us vowed to outlive her just to do you know what to her grave.
54 posted on 03/03/2004 9:14:15 PM PST by Balata
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To: Carolinamom
Nope, not even the bulletproof kind.

The months until November are going to be painful and endless. :-(

55 posted on 03/03/2004 9:16:04 PM PST by nopardons
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To: Balata
I know exactly what you mean. :-)

If it helps you any, I was one of those few, who along with the hardhats, yelled back at, fought with, and I spat upon the damned hippies/Yippies/old anti-nuke nuts/antiwar protesters.I may have been young, but I wasn't an idiot Liberal.

56 posted on 03/03/2004 9:21:01 PM PST by nopardons
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To: SJackson
Now that I see things from Kerry's perspective, I realize what a hero he really is. He is a man of conviction. Someone you can really trust.

LOL. I see from this thread that Freepers are already finding all sorts of holes in his fabrication. After watching Algore get caught in lies over and over again, you would think this guy would be smarter than that. But then, he's a Democrat.
57 posted on 03/03/2004 9:27:04 PM PST by Rocky
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To: SJackson
bttt
58 posted on 03/03/2004 9:28:36 PM PST by lainde (Heads up...We're coming and we've got tongue blades!!)
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To: SJackson
Kerry is stuck in a warped time warp. We have men and women fighting terrorist scum all over the planet and all he can think of is John Kerry in 1969.

I suppose thats a good thing for our side but it is damn sad.

59 posted on 03/03/2004 9:30:19 PM PST by jwalsh07
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To: Howlin
LOL!
60 posted on 03/03/2004 9:38:27 PM PST by abner (FREE THE MIRANDA MEMOS! http://www.intelmemo.com or http://www.wintersoldier.com)
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