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How Kerry Quit Veterans Group Amid Dark Plot
NY Sun ^ | 3/12/04 | THOMAS H. LIPSCOMB

Posted on 03/12/2004 5:29:50 AM PST by veronica

When Talk Turned To Assassination He Exited, Vet Says

The anti-war group that John Kerry was the principal spokesman for debated and voted on a plot to assassinate politicians who supported the Vietnam War.

Mr. Kerry denies being present at the November 12-15, 1971, meeting in Kansas City of Vietnam Veterans Against the War, and says he quit the group before the meeting. But according to the current head of Missouri Veterans for Kerry, Randy Barnes, Mr. Kerry,who was then 27,was at the meeting, voted against the plot, and then orally resigned from the organization.

Mr. Barnes was present as part of the Kansas City host chapter for the 1971 meeting and recounted the incident in a phone interview with The New York Sun this week.

In addition to Mr. Barnes’s recollection placing Mr. Kerry at the Kansas City meeting, another Vietnam veteran who attended the meeting, Terry Du-Bose, said that Mr. Kerry was there.

There are at least two other independent corroborations that the antiwar group Vietnam Veterans Against the War, of which Mr. Kerry was the most prominent national spokesman, considered assassinating American political leaders who favored the war.

Gerald Nicosia’s 2001 book “Home To War” reports that one of the key leaders of Vietnam Veterans Against the War, Scott Camil,“proposed the assassination of the most hard-core conservative members of Congress,as well as any other powerful, intractable opponents of the antiwar movement.”The book reports on the Kansas City meeting at which Mr.Camil’s plan was debated and then voted down.

Mr. Nicosia’s book was widely praised by reviewers as varied as General Harold Moore, author of “We Were Soldiers”; Gloria Emerson, who had been a New YorkTimes reporter during the Vietnam War, and leftist Howard Zinn. Mr. Kerry himself stated in a blurb on the cover that the book “ties together the many threads of a difficult period.” Mr. Kerry hosted a party for the book in the Hart Senate Office Building that was televised on C-SPAN.

Another source is an October 20,1992, oral history interview of Scott Camil on file at the University of Florida Oral History Archive.In it,Mr.Camil speaks of his plan for an alternative to Mr. Kerry’s idea of symbolically throwing veterans’ medals over the fence onto the steps of the Capitol during the Dewey Canyon III demonstration in Washington in April of 1971.

“My plan was that, on the last day we would go into the [congressional] offices we would schedule the most hardcore hawks for last — and we would shoot them all,” Mr. Camil told the Oral History interviewer. “I was serious.”

In a phone interview with the Sun this week, Mr. Camil did not dispute either the account in the Nicosia book or in the oral history. He said he plans to accept an offer by the Florida Kerry organization to become active in Mr. Kerry’s presidential campaign. Campaign aides to Mr. Kerry invited Mr.Camil to a meeting for the senator in Orlando last week, but they did not meet directly.

Mr. Camil was known to colleagues in the anti-war movement as “Scott the Assassin.” Mr. Camil told The New York Sun he got the name in Vietnam for “sneaking down to the Vietnamese villages at night and killing people.”

According to the Nicosia book and interviews with VVAW members who were involved, at theVietnamVeterans Against the War Kansas City leadership conference, Mr. Camil tried to put his plan into effect. He called together eight to 10 Marines to organize something he called “The Phoenix Project.” The original Phoenix Project during the Vietnam War was an attempt to destroy the Viet Cong leadership by assassination. Mr. Camil’s Phoenix Project planned to execute the Southern senatorial leadership that was financing the Vietnam War. Senators like John Stennis, Strom Thurmond, and John Tower were his targets, according to Mr. Camil. They were to be killed during the Senate Christmas recess the following month.

After an attempt to parcel out the hit jobs required to kill the senators, Mr. Camil’s plan was presented to all the chapter coordinators present and the VVAW leadership. Mr. Nicosia’s book recounts, “What Camil sketched was so explosive that the coordinators feared lest government agents even hear of it. So they decamped to a church on the outskirts of town with the intention of debating the plan in complete privacy.When they got to the church, however, they found that the government was already on to them; their ‘debugging expert’ uncovered microphones hidden all over the place. An instantaneous decision was made to move again to Common Ground, a Mennonite hall used by homeless vets as a ‘crash pad.’”

“Camil was deadly serious, brilliant, and highly logical,” Mr. Nicosia told the Sun.

The plan was voted down. There’s a difference of opinion as to how narrow the margin was.

The claims of Mr. Kerry’s involvement in the assassination discussions in Kansas City have apparently not been previously reported.

The most recent book that focuses on Mr. Kerry’s relations with his fellow Vietnam veterans, Douglas Brinkley’s “Tour of Duty,” reports the events as follows: “In a November 10 letter housed at the VVAW papers in Madison,Wisconsin, Kerry quit, politely noting he had been proud to serve in the national organization. His reason was straightforward: ‘personality conflicts and differences in political philosophy.’ In two days,VVAW was meeting in Kansas City and he would be a noshow.”

But in a footnote, Mr. Brinkley acknowledges,“I could not locate Kerry’s November 10 VVAW resignation letter supposedly housed at the Wisconsin archives. The quote I used comes directly from Andrew E. Hunt’s essential ‘The Turning: A History of Vietnam Veterans Against the War (1999).”

When asked by the Sun who told him Mr. Kerry was “no-show” at Kansas City, Mr. Brinkley replied, “Senator Kerry.” Mr. Brinkley also stated that Mr. Kerry did not have a personal copy of the resignation letter either.

But in an interview with the Sun, the “essential” historian Mr. Brinkley relied on as his source, Andrew E. Hunt, said “I never stated that there was a letter of resignation, or even implied in my book that I saw one. I never could find one in the archives in Wisconsin. I don’t know how Brinkley got the idea that I had. I never could figure out when Kerry resigned.” When asked about Mr. Brinkley’s statement that Mr. Kerry didn’t have a copy of the resignation letter either, Mr. Hunt said, “I don’t know about that. I never could get an interview with Senator Kerry. But I never saw anyone who saves things the way Kerry does.”

Whether or not there was a letter of resignation dated November 10 is obviously important, since it predates the Kansas City assassination discussions by two days.

Mr. Camil said he did not recall whether Mr. Kerry was at the Kansas City meeting nor did he recall whether he had discussed his assassination plan with Mr. Kerry.

But Mr. Barnes, the head of the Missouri Veterans for Kerry, said, “I don’t think there was a letter of resignation. He just said he was resigning after the vote.”

Clearly there is considerable confusion about the time of Mr. Kerry’s resignation.According to Mr. Nicosia,“He resigned from the executive committee” after a spectacular argument with VVAW leader Al Hubbard at the July national leadership meeting in St Louis.

But on behalf of the John Kerry campaign, spokesman David Wade told the Sun yesterday that Mr. Kerry resigned from Vietnam Veterans Against the War “sometime in the summer of 1971 after the August meeting in St. Louis, which Kerry did not attend.”

Mr.Wade also said,“Kerry was not at the Kansas City meeting.”

Two-thirds of the American troops in Vietnam at the height of American commitment in 1969 had already been withdrawn in the “Vietnamization” policy in effect at the time of the VVAW Kansas City conference in November 1971. When asked recently by the Sun why the assassinations still seemed necessary, Mr. Camil replied: “The war was still going on. We had to stop it.”


TOPICS: Extended News; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: 1971; 2004; assassination; brownshirtsforkerry; coup; darkplot; johhnfkerry; johnkerry; kerry; kerryrecord; kerryscoupattempt; phoenixproject; scottcamil; sedition; senate; vvaw
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To: All
Was VVAW Involved In Plans To Murder 7 US Senators In 1971? What Did Kerry Know?
"Winter Soldiers"/ "Home To War" | March 11, 2004 | Various

Posted on 03/10/2004 10:29:58 PM EST by Hon

As I posted on a thread a couple of weeks ago, Kerry's group the VVAW had discussing the assassination of pro-war US Senators.

Kerry's Group The VVAW Discussed Assassinating Seven Pro-War Senators In December 1971

The following is an excerpt from a book, "Winter Soldiers," by Richard Staciewicz, pp 294-295:

In the fall of 1971, tensions over the direction in which the organization was heading, as it spread out into various community activities and took on a more consciously anti-imperialist position, were becoming more evident. In November, an emergency meeting of the steering committee was held in Kansas City. This meeting was a result of the growing friction among members of the steering committee, and between new members and the old leadership.

[snip]

[Terry DuBose] TDB: That was also where there was actually some discussion of assassinating some senators during the Christmas holidays. They were people who I knew from the organization with hotheaded rhetoric.

They had a list of six senators ... Helms, John Tower, and I can't remember the others, who they wanted to assassinate when they adjourned for Christmas. They were the ones voting to fund the war. They approached me about assassinating John Tower because he was from Texas. The logic made a certain amount of sense because there's thousands of people dying in southeast Asia. We can shoot these six people and probably stop it. Some of us were willing to sabotage materials, but when it came to people ... I mean, there were a lot of angry people...

The following is from Gerald Nicosia's book, "Home To War," pp 221-223:

[Scott] Camil proposed VVAW return in force to Washington, D.C., and there apply pressure in every conceivable way to the legislators who were still voting to fund the war. After the assembly of coordinators defeated the plan, he was told it was “a closed issue at this point." Camil replied that such a tactic was "never a closed issue." He then made known an even more radical proposal, which he intended to submit to the coordinators for their approval. If undertaken, he claimed, it would guarantee the end of congressional support for the war. It was this proposal that nearly blew the Kansas City convention wide open, and which branded Camil as both dangerous and crazy for the remainder of his time in the organization.

What Camil sketched was so explosive that the coordinators feared lest government agents even hear of it. So they decamped to a church on the outskirts of town with the intention of debating the plan in complete privacy. When they got the church, however, they found that the government was already on to them; their "debugging expert" uncovered microphones hidden all over the place. An instantaneous decision was made to move again - to Common Ground, a Mennonite hall used by homeless vets as a "crash pad," on 77th Terrace. This time a vote was taken to exclude anyone but regional coordinators and members the national office. The rest of the members, even trusted leaders such as Randy Barnes and John Upton (who had earned their credibility in the mud and tears of Dewey Canvon III), were forced to wait outside on the grass, where messeng­ers brought frequent word of what was going on inside. According to Barnes, everybody knew that the discussion in that hall "was grounds for criminal indictment of conspiracy."

Discussion was not exactly the word for it. John Upton recalls it being "a knock-down-drag-out [fight] at times." Randy Barnes remembers "people standing up on the tables yelling and screaming at one another." The proposal that fired so much anger was called the "Phoenix plan," in mockery of the U.S. government's similar program in Vietnam. There was, in fact, good evidence that the United States Studies and Observation Group (SOG) - known to those inside it as the Special Operations Group - had used its own Special Forces, those of South Vietnam, and even South Vietnamese mercenaries to murder various Communist and Communist-sympathizing village chiefs, political leaders,­ and other influential citizens in South Vietnam. Some say as many as 10,000 were assassinated, in order (theoretically) to rebuild a more democratic infrastructure in the south. Hence the name "Phoenix": a better, stronger Vietnam was supposed to rise from the ashes of the Communist-tainted one. Similarly, Camil now proposed the assassination of the most hard-core conservative members of Congress, as well as any other powerful, intractable opponents of the antiwar movement - the ones who would rather die than see America suffer a military defeat in Vietnam. Fine, let them die, suggested Camil - in fact, help them along in that direction and once they were cleared out of the way, a truly democratic America could arise, one that would choose to be at peace with the rest of the world.

When the Phoenix plan first came before the steering committee meeting, John Upton had been standing almost next to Camil, and he recalls that "at first it was laughed off. Then he [Camil] became really irate, and some other people that were supporting that got really irate, and it got down to a really hard discussion about it. There was a time, I'm not kidding you, I was almost one of them. Especially when we moved over to 77th Terrace, a lot of people were convinced that this was the way to do it. I thought it was a novel idea, but it was not something I would support. I looked on it as doing just what we were fighting against. It was killing people for no [good] reason. I remember saying this, and somebodv stood up and called me a 'moderate'! If I went an inch more crazier than I was, I could have endorsed it one hundred percent. Scott was pissed off just like I was. He was one of those people I really identified with ­ with the anger I saw there. My whole instinct here was, `Let's demonstrate and do these things against the fucking war, to get the word out. Let's talk in high schools. But let's do things legal. Let's get the right permits.' The Phoenix plan was like, that's what needs to be done, but, God, we can't really do that."

The Phoenix plan, like the rest of Camil's proposals, was voted down in Kansas City, but its specter had only begun to haunt the organization; and, ironically enough, among those whose imaginations it enflamed were those very agents who had been charged with finding a way to destroy VVAW.

Nicosia is unlcear as to whether Kerry was still involved with the VVAW at this time. At one point he says that Kerry left the VVAW leadership, after a public showdown with Al Hubbard in July 1971. But then at other times Nicosia seems to suggest that Kerry was not removed from the leadership until after the Kansas City meeting.

Even if Kerry was no longer involved in the VVAW's leadership at the time of this discussion, it still likely that he had heard about this discussion, since it was such a pivotal moment in his group's direction according to Nicosia--or more precisely, the VVAW members he quotes.

So if Kerry heard about this discussion did he report it to the proper authorities at the time? If not, why not?

101 posted on 03/12/2004 8:29:08 AM PST by Hon
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To: Kakaze
bump
102 posted on 03/12/2004 8:29:19 AM PST by Ditto ( No trees were killed in sending this message, but billions of electrons were inconvenienced.)
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To: ravingnutter
Skolnick is full of crap. I am an air traffic controller and was in the tower at the Philadelphia airport when the Heinz accident occurred. There was no conspiracy.

Please don't give the left any more ammuniton to fire at us. They already have McCain!

MoodyBlu


103 posted on 03/12/2004 8:34:08 AM PST by MoodyBlu
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To: Sabertooth
Why would anyone in Kerry's campaign want anything at all to do with Camill, given that he openly boasts of conspiring to assassinate US Senators?

Perhaps they actually work for Hillary....

104 posted on 03/12/2004 8:39:09 AM PST by Krodg ("My faith frees me"...G.W. Bush........'A Charge To Keep')
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To: Fresh Wind; veronica
I smell a preemptive action. Another one of Al-Qerry's closet skeletons is beginning to rattle its bones, perhaps?

I feel the same!

I am confused was he there and than resigned or is this a cover to defussed that he was in on the allege assassination?

I sometimes get the feeling if he don't get his way he is capable of anything!

I think he is a sociopath

105 posted on 03/12/2004 8:39:29 AM PST by restornu ( "Faith...is daring the soul to go beyond what the eyes refuse to see."J.R.R. Tolkien)
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To: veronica; JohnHuang2
Does it not make you wonder if he had a role in the Black Panthers?

Is there a paper/money trail?
106 posted on 03/12/2004 8:43:37 AM PST by restornu ( "Faith...is daring the soul to go beyond what the eyes refuse to see."J.R.R. Tolkien)
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To: auboy
Bump!
107 posted on 03/12/2004 8:47:58 AM PST by auboy
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To: veronica; Hon; jmstein7
You will be happy to know that I just spoke with an editor at MSNBC. They now have an email from me in which I used several sources to help create a roadmap for them. If John Kerry was at this meeting, his presidential run is over. Hello, Hillary.

I believe Hillary knows the truth and if she believes that polls look sufficiently favorable for the RATS at convention time, she will release the info and destroy Kerry.

108 posted on 03/12/2004 8:48:04 AM PST by doug from upland (Don't wait until it is too late to stop Hillary -- do something today!)
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To: veronica
BTTT
109 posted on 03/12/2004 8:48:29 AM PST by sr4402
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To: doug from upland
BUMP!
110 posted on 03/12/2004 8:53:10 AM PST by jmstein7 (Real Men Don't Need Chunks of Government Metal on Their Chests to be Heroes)
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To: MoodyBlu
Maybe I will, then again, maybe not.

See posts above, from others.
111 posted on 03/12/2004 8:54:49 AM PST by Judith Anne (Is life a paradox? Well, yes and no...)
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To: Hon
So if Kerry heard about this discussion did he report it to the proper authorities at the time? If not, why not?

It is impossible to believe that Kerry did not hear about this. Removing my tinfoil hat for a moment, it is reasonable to believe that those involved considered this a moment of blowing off steam, and that no actual plans were ever made. I hat to think of some of the things said on this forum in the heat of the moment.

112 posted on 03/12/2004 8:55:08 AM PST by js1138
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To: MoodyBlu
Please don't give the left any more ammuniton to fire at us.

I say let them demand an investigation so we prove once again that they are nutcases. I did mention that the reader should consider the source. On the other hand, it is odd that the two Senators died within 1 day of each other, both in small plane crashes.

113 posted on 03/12/2004 8:57:56 AM PST by ravingnutter
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To: Hon
Thanks for posting these links.
114 posted on 03/12/2004 9:01:04 AM PST by Grampa Dave (Even if $oreA$$ pays, America can't afford a 9/10 John F'onda Kerry after 9/11.)
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To: Just mythoughts
Try a google search.

Of course if the stories aren't anywhere, this is another example of why we need to post these entire stories on Free Republic. If we don't the great DNC disk eraser will strike.
115 posted on 03/12/2004 9:03:46 AM PST by Grampa Dave (Even if $oreA$$ pays, America can't afford a 9/10 John F'onda Kerry after 9/11.)
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To: ravingnutter; Mo1
I'm with you, and I DON'T feel that an open inquiry NOW is in any giving ammunition to the left.
116 posted on 03/12/2004 9:03:55 AM PST by Judith Anne (Is life a paradox? Well, yes and no...)
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To: Hon; Sabertooth
Thanks for reposting this very scary article.
117 posted on 03/12/2004 9:05:55 AM PST by Grampa Dave (Even if $oreA$$ pays, America can't afford a 9/10 John F'onda Kerry after 9/11.)
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To: nuconvert
My guess is that Kerry joined the VVAW as means of justifying to himself his getting out of Vietnam on the excuse of phoney injuries and leaving behind someone else to take his place and perhaps die in his place. Kerry used the the group to assuage his own guilt and at the same time gain national political recognition. When it became obvious that his association with the group was no longer beneficial and perhaps detrimental to his future ambitions, he quit. It would serve no purpose for Kerry to publicly disclose what a bunch of head cases these men were. I have to wonder how many of the real veterans in this group were suffering from PTSD.
118 posted on 03/12/2004 9:10:05 AM PST by Eva
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To: All
Everyone must realize that this plot is not so far-fetched as we may think. These things were going on at the time.

The Weatherman (who later changed their name to the Weather Underground) DID set off a bomb in the Senate washroom during the night of Feb. 28, 1971.

According to published reports, the VVAW and the Weathermen were in close communication at this time and each knew what the other was up to.
119 posted on 03/12/2004 9:11:36 AM PST by Hon
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To: restornu
The communist Daily World delightedly published photos of him [Kerry] speaking to demonstrators and boasted that the marchers displayed a banner depicting a portrait of Communist Party leader Angela Davis, on record stating, “I am dedicated to the overthrow of your system of government and your society,” the New American recalled in May 2003.

NewsMax

A good read.

120 posted on 03/12/2004 9:13:17 AM PST by ravingnutter
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