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To: Cincinatus' Wife
Kerry is best advised to duck the press this week. After all he confessed to committing war crimes in 1971 (he claimed he lied when asked about it in 2001).

If this groundhog pokes his head out of his hole he may be asked "What did you do during the war?"

2 posted on 05/10/2004 12:19:38 AM PDT by weegee (NO BLOOD FOR RATINGS. CNN ignored torture & murder in Saddam's Iraq to keep their Baghdad Bureau.)
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To: weegee
His wife isn't helping him either. Too bad, so sad.

It seems Kerry can't formulate a position or think his way out of a paper bag without direction.

March 3, 2004 - Franklin Foer, CBS News Kerry's World: Father Knows Best*** "Americans," he [Richard Kerry] writes, "are inclined to see the world and foreign affairs in black and white." They celebrate their own form of government and denigrate all others, making them guilty of what he calls "ethnocentric accommodation -- everyone ought to be like us." As a result, America has committed the "fatal error" of "propagating democracy" and fallen prey to "the siren's song of promoting human rights," falsely assuming that our values and institutions are a good fit in the Third World. And, just as Americans exaggerate their own goodness, they exaggerate their enemies' badness. The Soviet Union wasn't nearly as imperialistic as American politicians warned, Kerry argues. "Seeing the Soviet Union as the aggressor in every instance, and the U.S. as only reacting defensively, relieves an American observer from the need to see any parallel between our use of military power in distant parts of the world, and the Soviet use of military power outside the Soviet Union," he writes. He further claims that "Third world Marxist movements were autonomous national movements" -- outside Moscow's orbit. The book culminates in a plea for a hardheaded, realist foreign policy that removes any pretense of U.S. moral superiority.

Despite its blunt arguments, The Star-Spangled Mirror received little attention. Foreign Affairs greeted it with a 90-word summation in its review section. But the work of Richard Kerry, who passed away in 2000, will soon experience posthumous reconsideration. It won't be because of the renewed relevance of his arguments (although his book does read like a contemporary brief against neoconservatism). It will be because his son is a leading candidate to run U.S. foreign policy.

According to the conventional telling of John Kerry's biography, largely told by Kerry himself, his foreign policy views were forged in the Mekong Delta. During his disillusioning four-month combat stint on a Navy Swift Boat, the limits of U.S. power were revealed to him. As Newsweek argued in a cover story last month, "Kerry's policy views, as well as his politics, were profoundly shaped by the war." But, for all the neatness this narrative provides, it overlooks an entire chapter in Kerry's intellectual history: his childhood. In fact, Kerry's foreign policy worldview, characterized by a steadfast belief in international institutions and a suspicion of U.S. hard power, had fallen into place long before he ever enlisted. As Kerry's biographer, the historian Douglas Brinkley, told me, "So much of his foreign policy worldview comes straight from Richard Kerry." ***

3 posted on 05/10/2004 12:24:25 AM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife
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To: Cincinatus' Wife; weegee
"Kerry is best advised to duck the press this week. After all he confessed to committing war crimes in 1971 (he claimed he lied when asked about it in 2001)."

Kerry indeed confessed to committing war crimes in 1971 and continues to sputter when he is asked about this. In the 1971 period, he wantonly, in a national setting of high-visibility, and for sheer political ambition, accused his fellow soldiers of routinely committing war crimes. The direct implication by Kerry: all Vietnam service men and women were and are the same as those low-lifes in the now infamous Iraqi prison who have so wracked havoc on our mission there. Moreover: if he observed and participated in all this (in his three months there, before slithering out via at least one contrived Purple Heart to do lies and slander back in the U.S.) why did he not report it and attempt to stop it - a MOST pertinent question in the present situation.
10 posted on 05/10/2004 3:18:08 AM PDT by mtntop3 ("Those who must know before they believe will never come to full knowledge.")
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