Posted on 08/05/2004 9:37:54 PM PDT by Ears508
A new book written by the Swift Boat sailors who served with John Kerry in Vietnam offers a devastating critique of his military record.
According to DrudgeReport, "Unfit for Command: Swift Boat Veterans Speak Out Against John Kerry," written by John O'Neill and Jerome R. Corsi, adds new details to revelations about Kerry's record.
(Excerpt) Read more at view.exacttarget.com ...
#1 on Amazon.com right now.
THAT is GREAT NEWS! Susan Estrogenwitch, Dickhead Morris, and Bill O'Reilly sure poo-pooed the book tonight!
I'm really curious how it will do on Barnsandnoble.com as that store seems to be much more liberal. However, their website only giving rankings for books that are already available and not one that are only available for pre-ordering.
Just order my copy, should have bought two, one for family and one to give to the local library.
This is PERSONAL:
Among the bombshells Drudge reports:
All three of Kerry's Purple Hearts were for minor injuries, not requiring any hospitalization, and two were self-inflicted.
A "fanny wound" was the highlight of his Bronze Star.
Kerry filed a false report to exploit the death of a Vietnamese father and child as an act of "heroism."
He burned an abandoned Vietnamese village and slaughtered the civilians' livestock.
"Kerry's reckless behavior convinced his colleagues that he had to go - becoming the only Swift Boat veteran to serve only four months," Drudge reported.
...
O'Neill, who served with John Kerry in Vietnam and has been exposing the Massachusetts Democrat's military record ever since, has terrified Kerry's presidential campaign with the explosive new book.
As NewsMax has reported, O'Neill, a leader of Swift Boat Veterans for Truth, has:
Forced Kerry in 1971 to admit he never witnessed the war crimes he had accused U.S. troops of committing.
Stated at a news conference last month: "We resent very deeply the false war crimes charges he made coming back from Vietnam in 1971 and repeated in the book 'Tour of Duty.'
"We think those cast an aspersion on all those living and dead, from our unit and other units in Vietnam.
"We think that he knew he was lying when he made the charges, and we think that they're unsupportable. We intend to bring the truth about that to the American people.
"We believe, based on our experience with him, that he is totally unfit to be the Commander-in-Chief."
Pointed out that despite the show staged at the Democrat convention, most of the officers in Kerry's division have signed a public letter saying he's unfit to lead.
Accused Kerry of exaggerating and even faking his wounds. "He literally is a guy who parades around and pretends to be something he's not," O'Neill said.
"He was in Vietnam for four months; everyone else was there for a year. He obtained three Purple Hearts from self-inflicted wounds. And then he left."
Urged Kerry to stop exploiting photos of fellow soldiers, many of whom oppose his candidacy.
Revealed how Kerry's campaign has tried to muzzle Swift Boat Veterans for Truth.
Nothing like opening your mouth to insert your foot.......Real Smart! They should have reserved their comments until after they've atleast read it.
Just ordered my copy from amazon.com
I wasn't going to order it, but got so pissed off at the bitch estrich that I did.
I saw the piece with him and Morris and they just guffawed all over it saying its a bad move and it wont hurt Kerry
Are the movie rights for sale?
I've always wanted to make a documentary.
Is the actor who played Herman Munster available
for work?
Did you happen to catch her crocadile tears during the Rat convention about abortion? It doesn't take much from her to bring out the mean in people! LOL
Chapter 3 Unfit for Command: The Purple Heart Hunter
What really Happened
The truth is that at the time of this incident Kerry was an officer in command (OinC) under training, aboard the skimmer using the call sign Robin on the operation, with now-Rear Admiral William Schachte using the call sign Batman, who was also on the skimmer. After Kerrys M-16 jammed, Kerry picked up an M-79 grenade launcher and fired a grenade too close, causing a tiny piece of shrapnel (one to two centimeters) to barely stick in his arm. Schachte berated Kerry for almost putting someones eye out. There was no hostile fire of any kind, nor did Kerry on the way back mention to PCF OinC Mike Voss, who commanded the PCF that had towed the skimmer, that he was wounded. There was no report of any hostile fire that day (as would be required), nor do the records at Cam Ranh Bay reveal any such hostile fire. No other records reflect any hostile fire. There is also no casualty report, as would have been required had there actually been a casualty.
Following the most frightening night of his life, to the surprise of both Schachte and the treating doctor, Louis Letson, Kerry managed to keep the tiny hanging fragment barely embedded in his arm until he arrived at sickbay a number of miles away and a considerable time later, where he was examined by Dr. Letson. Dr. Letson, who has never forgotten the experience, reported it to his Democratic county chairman early in the 2004 primary campaign. When Kerry appeared at sickbay, Dr. Letson asked, Why are you here? in surprise, observing Kerrys unimpressive scratch. Kerry answered, Ive been wounded by hostile fire. Accompanying crewmen then told Dr. Letson that Kerry had wounded himself. Dr. Letson used tweezers to remove the tiny fragment, which he identified as shrapnel like that from an M-79 (not from a rifle bullet, etc.), and put a small bandage on Kerrys arm.
The following morning Kerry appeared at the office of Coastal Division 14 Commander Grant Hibbard and applied for the Purple Heart. Hibbard, who had learned from Schachte of the absence of hostile fire and self-infliction of the wound by Kerry himself, looked down at the tiny scratch (which he said was smaller than a rose thorn prick) and turned down the award since there was no hostile fire.
When we interviewed Grant Hibbard for this book, he was equally emphatic that Kerrys slight injury, in his opinion, could not possibly merit the Purple Heart:
Q: When did you first meet John Kerry?
GH: Kerry reported to my division in November 1968. I didnt know him from Adam.
Q: Can you describe the mission in which Kerry got his first Purple Heart?
GH: Kerry requested permission to go on a skimmer operation with Lieutenant Schachte, my most senior and trusted lieutenant,using a Boston Whaler to try to interdict a Viet Cong movement of arms and munitions. The next morning at the briefing, I was informed that no enemy fire had been received on that mission. Our units had fired on some VC units running on the beach. We were all in my office, some of the crew members,I remember Schachte being there. This was thirty-six years ago; it really didnt seem all that important at the time. Here was this lieutenant, junior grade, who was saying I got wounded, and everybody else, the crew that were present were saying, We didnt get any fire. We dont know how he got the scratch. Kerry showed me the scratch on his arm. I hadnt been informed that he had any medical treatment. The scratch didnt look like much to me; Ive seen worse injuries from a rose thorn.
Q: Did Kerry want you to recommend him for a Purple Heart?
GH: Yes, that was his whole point. He had this little piece of shrapnel in his hand. It was tiny. I was told later that Kerry had fired an M-79 grenade and that he had misjudged it. He fired it too close to the shore, and it exploded on a rock or something. He got hit by a piece of shrapnel from a grenade that he had fired himself. The injury was self-inflicted, thats what made sense to me. I told Kerry to forget it. There was no hostile fire, the injury was self-inflicted for all I knew, besides it was nothing really more than a scratch. Kerry wasnt getting any Purple Heart recommendation from me.
Q: How did Kerry get a Purple Heart from the incident then?
GH: I dont know. It beats me. I know I didnt recommend him for a Purple Heart. Kerry probably wrote up the paperwork and recommended himself, thats all I can figure out. If it ever came across my desk, I dont have any recollection of it. Kerry didnt get my signature. I said no way and told him to get out of my office.
Amazingly, Kerry somehow gamed the system nearly three months later to obtain the Purple Heart that Hibbard had denied. How he obtained the award is unknown, since his refusal to execute Standard Form 180 means that whatever documents exist are known only to Kerry, the Department of Defense, and God. It is clear that there should be numerous other documents, but only a treatment record reflecting a scratch and a certificate signed three months later have been produced. There is, of course, no after-action hostile fire or casualty report, as occurred in the case of every other instance of hostile fire or casualty. This is because there was no hostile fire, casualty, or action on this most frightening night of Kerrys Vietnam experience. Dr. Louis Letson agreed with Grant Hibbard. Kerrys injury was minor and probably self-inflicted:
The incident that occasioned my meeting with Lieutenant Kerry began while he was patrolling the coast at night just north of Cam Ranh Bay where I was the only medical officer for a smallsupport base. Kerry returned from that night on patrol with an injury.
Kerry reported that he had observed suspicious activity on shore and fired a flare to illuminate the area. According to Kerry,they had been engaged in a firefight, receiving small arms fire from on shore. He said that his injury resulted from this enemy action.
The story he told was different from what his crewmen had to say about that night. Some of his crew confided that they did not receive any fire from shore, but that Kerry had fired a grenade round at close range to the shore. The crewman who related this story thought that the injury was from a fragment of the grenade shell that had ricocheted back from the rocks.
That seemed to fit the injury I treated.
What I saw was a small piece of metal sticking very superficially in the skin of Kerrys arm. The metal fragment measured about one centimeter in length and was about two or three milimeters in diameter. It certainly did not look like a round from a rifle. I simply removed the piece of metal by lifting it out of the skin with forceps. I doubt that it penetrated more than three or four millimeters. It did not require probing to find it, nor did it require any anesthesia to remove it. It did not require any sutures to close the wound. The wound was covered with a band-aid. No other injuries were reported and I do not recall that there was any injury to the boat.
Lieutentant Kerrys crew related that he had told them that he would be president one day. He liked to think of himself as the next JFK from Massachusetts. I remember that Jess Carreon was present at the time and he, in fact, made the entry into Lieutenant Kerrys medical record.
Both Hibbard and Letson wondered why Kerry had even bothered to go to the dispensary. Kerrys report of the injury as a combat injury seemed at best to be exaggerated. The crewmen present maintained that there was no evidence of enemy fire, and their conclusion was that Kerry had been hit by a fragment of his own grenade.
Kerrys proponents have also pointed to a fitness report for Kerry that was filed by Hibbard rating Kerry excellent as proof that Kerrys service in Cam Ranh was unusually good. In reality, the Kerry fitness report (which leaves fourteen of the eighteen categories, including integrity, marked unobserved) is a marginal report. Hibbard has stated that he wished to provide in the report a mediocre evaluation without permanently destroying Kerry, given his short four-week period of evaluation. At the time the report was made, Hibbard did not know of Kerrys later-finagled first Purple Heart.
Most Swiftees who were with Kerry at Cam Ranh Bay never knew until Kerry decided to run for president that he had somehow successfully maneuvered his way to this undeserved Purple Heart. But in Kerrys own unit, Coastal Division 14, his attempt to gain the award through fraud marked him as someone who could never be trusted. When Kerry was dispatched to go to An Thoi with Lieutenant Tedd Peck (now Captain, USNR, retired), Peck told him, Kerry, follow me no closer than a thousand yards. If you get any closer, Ill teach you what a real Purple Heart is.
I have my order in!
indeed
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