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John Kerry's 80 day Tour of Duty
The American Thinker ^ | 8/24/2004 | Geoffrey P. Hunt

Posted on 08/24/2004 9:01:48 PM PDT by x1stcav

John Kerry’s 80 Day Cook’s Tour August 24th, 2004

The proper duration of individual front line troop deployments in wartime has been debated since the Revolutionary War without any clear conclusion. Our nation’s first Commander-In-Chief frequently despaired over perilously anemic troop strengths as enlistment contracts expired. Sometimes, battle plans were hastily drawn up and launched just in time before waves of militiamen and continentals were to shoulder their rucksacks and head home.

WWII deployments, for all practical purposes, were for the duration. US Army troops, Marines and sailors posted virtually anywhere, but especially on the line, could look forward to coming home in only one of three ways: dead, disabled or dishonored. Rotations were available only for combat aircrews who could go home after 35 missions; but fewer than 50% of US airmen ever made it past their 25th. Victory coinciding with an Axis unconditional surrender was the only way to get home in one piece.

My father, a WWII combat medic, reminds me that only with the benefit of hindsight and history can we make any sense of the daily blur, fatigue and anxiety. Virtually no one on the ground had any concept of strategies, theatre operations, campaigns or battle plans. What would tomorrow bring? What would be the outcome? You simply followed the order of the day. No one then knew if the end would be in a day, a week, a month, a year or five years.

In Vietnam, troop rotations were of two types— US Army tours were 12 months and the US Marines 13 months. James R. Ebert in his book about American Infantrymen in Vietnam A Life in a Year talks about the rise and fall of combat efficiency, troop morale and especially “short timers’ fever”: “The first three months were new and strange and efficiency was therefore low; the middle six months were filled with bustle and activity and efficiency was therefore high ; the final three months were preoccupied with home and family and staying alive.”

Further, Ebert recounts an observation from a British journalist concerning commanders in the Korean War who disliked individual rotations because “men became increasingly cautious and reluctant to accept risks as they grew “short” and approached their release date”. WWII veterans had the same feeling when the end was finally in sight. From a Marine who recounted his thoughts while assaulting a ridge on Okinawa in June of 1945, “We all knew it was the last big fight before the Japanese were wiped out…having made it that far in the war, I knew my luck would run out…” Ebert continues, “Soldiers in Vietnam, already reluctant to expose themselves to danger as their individual tours came to an end, became increasingly aware after 1968 that the war would end sooner than later”.

We now know from being reminded with every daily news cycle, ad nauseam, that John Kerry’s central theme for his candidacy, the unique qualification for him to be elected as Commander-In-Chief, is his tour of duty in Vietnam. But Kerry’s tour of duty was less than four months -- barely a third of the time endured by millions of other Vietnam veterans. Most likely it was no more than 80 days when you tally the actual time he was available for combat river patrols and not consumed by billeting, orientation, redeployment and out-bound processing. Kerry has stated repeatedly that his time at the front in Vietnam not only gives him an exalted status, but most important, the experience and perspective to make him the best judge about where, when and how to deploy American servicemen into combat in the future. How would he know the full extent of a combat serviceman’s perspective? He barely got started.

Perhaps if John Kerry had experienced the last third of a regular tour instead of only the first third, he might not now be so quick to abandon our soldiers and Marines in Iraq and publicly pledge a plan to “bring the troops home” while the war is unfinished. It’s unfortunate that John Kerry didn’t have “short timer’s fever” seared into his brain instead of that vivid imaginary tale about spending Christmas in Cambodia. He might not be so careless in announcing his convenient cut-and-run strategies -- but that’s what you get from believing in your own inflated resume.

We also have learned that John Kerry’s customized whirlwind rotation plan -- the 80 Day Cook’s Tour -- was made possible by his three Purple Hearts, most or all having been bestowed under apparently dubious circumstances. Even by his own belatedly forced admissions, John Kerry’s wounds were little more than superficial lacerations, barely drawing attention, if not derision, from corpsmen at aid stations, while he did not lose even one day of available duty. Can you imagine the scene if John Kerry had encountered General George S. Patton while he was lobbying for a Purple Heart, after having a 1 X 3 centimeter metal sliver plucked then topped off with Bacitracin and a Band Aid?

The mainstream press, so far, doesn’t want to understand or concede why Kerry’s critics are pre-occupied with his Vietnam War record. Well, simply put, because John Kerry is preoccupied with it. Why is his 80 Day Tour like some sacred ritual, an off-limits holy of holies where only John Kerry is pure enough to possess and interpret the ancient scrolls? Shouldn’t John Kerry’s obsession with his Vietnam experience invite obvious scrutiny not unlike one-time Presidential hopeful Senator Gary Hart’s challenge to reporters and photographers to “prove” the liaisons with his mistress Donna Rice on the motor yacht Monkey Business?

Over 2.5 million men (and women) served honorably, and many heroically, in Vietnam; all but the dead and disabled for at least 12 months, and some far longer. Only one, with an abbreviated version at that, has used his service in a brazen attempt to ascend the top of the political hill. Would someone tell us again how John Kerry’s 80 DayCook’s Tour makes him uniquely qualified to be the 44th President of the United States?

Geoffrey P. Hunt is an executive of a multinational electrical and electronics manufacturing company

Geoffrey P. Hunt


TOPICS: Front Page News; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: 2004election; geoffreyhunt; johnkerry; kerry; militaryrecord; shortimer; swiftboats; swiftboatvets; theamericanthinker; tour; tourofduty; trooprotation; vietnam

1 posted on 08/24/2004 9:01:51 PM PDT by x1stcav
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To: x1stcav

Print out and wear as a Campaign Button or go HERE to print.

Feel free to reuse this anywhere you wish...

2 posted on 08/24/2004 9:03:47 PM PDT by sonofatpatcher2 (Texas, Love & a .45-- What more could you want, campers? };^)
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To: sonofatpatcher2
Freeper N. Theknow says:
"It’s faster than a checkbook, more powerful than a Democratic demagogue, able to lay waste to a liar Kerry with the single click of a mouse. It's a little bird of truth, it's plain to see Kerry's unfit... it's... it's...SuperFReep!

Want to join in the fun?
Click the logo to donate to Swift Boat Veterans for Truth!

3 posted on 08/24/2004 9:04:40 PM PDT by Chieftain (Support the Swift Boat Veterans for Truth and expose Hanoi John's FRAUD!)
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To: x1stcav

My guess is that Mr. Hunt has probably had experience leading troops. His comments echo my experience exactly.

About Kerry? he's a turd.


4 posted on 08/24/2004 9:04:40 PM PDT by x1stcav (John Kerry was the only hero from Vietnam; the rest of us were war criminals.)
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To: x1stcav

5 posted on 08/24/2004 9:06:47 PM PDT by HawkeyeLonewolf (Christian First, American Second (Conservative Anti-Smoker))
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To: x1stcav

At this point, Gilligan has more credibility than Kerry.


6 posted on 08/24/2004 9:09:42 PM PDT by Mad_Tom_Rackham
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To: HawkeyeLonewolf

Very clever! hahaha


7 posted on 08/24/2004 9:12:14 PM PDT by Jen (John Kerry - Benedict Arnold: Both were war "heroes" before they became traitors!)
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bookmark


8 posted on 08/24/2004 9:13:52 PM PDT by P H Lewis ("I wish somebody would tell me what diddy-wah-diddy means." - Blind Arthur Blake)
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To: x1stcav

Can you imagine the scene if John Kerry had encountered General George S. Patton while he was lobbying for a Purple Heart, after having a 1 X 3 centimeter metal sliver plucked then topped off with Bacitracin and a Band Aid?


LOL


9 posted on 08/24/2004 9:19:20 PM PDT by TeleStraightShooter (Kerry plans to graff post-Vietnam policy on Iraq: Cut funding and let the Syrian Baathists take over)
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To: x1stcav
Ramsey Clark to Join Panel for Saddam’s Defense
Wednesday, 25, August, 2004



People can get
Kerry's real book here,
right now,
online FREE!!

From Kerry's "The New Soldier":
Al Hubbard Sgt., 22 Troop Carrier Squadron Aug. ’65-June ’66

Emotions: Walking down the flight line at Saigon past stacks of aluminum cases containing American bodies and past stacks of aluminum luggage containing American currency. Seeing the tight, sad face of an Airman loading the bodies aboard a dirty Air Force Transport and the wide smiling face of a stewardess greeting the passengers aboard a clean Pan American Clipper Jet. Hearing a Vietnamese beg you to leave his country and an American colonel tells you to bomb his country. Hearing a Vietnamese invite you to live in his home, after the war and an American explain why you can’t live in his block, after the war. Flying over barren, brown, safe American held terrain and over lush, green unsafe enemy terrain. Feeling happy to be leaving a country in which you do not belong and sad to be returning to a country in which you are not allowed to belong. Sacrificing a portion of your consciousness so you won’t have to deal with being there and building mental blocks so you won’t have to deal with having been there.

- Al Hubbard, proven fraud who never set foot in Viet Nam. The only Vietnamese he ever met was when he was collaborating with the North Vietnamese in Paris
on the American Communist Party's nickel.
John Kerry's explanation: "He (Hubbard) simply exaggarated his particular position.
But nobody knew it at the time. And those things happen."

The New Soldier,
By John Kerry
and Vietnam Veterans
Against the War

PART I

PART II
PART III

Kerry hopes everyone
in the USA gets this book!

10 posted on 08/24/2004 9:49:08 PM PDT by 68-69TonkinGulfYachtClub (Hanoi Jane and Hanoi Kerry sitting in a tree, sitting in a tree F-R-E-N-C-H-I-N-G)
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To: 68-69TonkinGulfYachtClub

Thank you.


11 posted on 08/24/2004 10:13:08 PM PDT by Robert A Cook PE (I can only donate monthly, but Kerry's ABBCNNBCBS continue to lie every day!))
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To: x1stcav
John Kerry's 80 day Tour of Duty

Oooooo. I like that!

It may be months, but when put in days it sounds like a very short visit!

We gotta use that one more often!!!! It has impact!!

12 posted on 08/24/2004 11:26:00 PM PDT by concerned about politics ( Liberals are still stuck at the bottom of Maslow's Hierarchy)
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