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After Decades, Renewed War on Old Conflict
WashPost ^
| 8/28/04
| Michael Dobbs
Posted on 08/28/2004 12:05:42 PM PDT by Timeout
This is a long article, but it's full of news I never thought I'd see printed in the Washington Post. It's devastating. It depicts Kerry as duplicitous and calculating.
Snip:
According to FBI records first released to Nicosia, Kerry sometimes expressed fairly radical points of view. For example, he described North Vietnamese Communist leader Ho Chi Minh as "the George Washington of Vietnam." He also noted with some bitterness that out "of 234 congressmen's sons eligible for service in Vietnam, only 24 went there, and only one of them was wounded." The FBI kept careful tabs on the protesters through a network of informers, who tracked Kerry's movements. The FBI records help to disprove a long-standing claim by Kerry that he resigned from the VVAW leadership in the summer of 1971, before the organization began to flirt with proposals for radical civil disobedience and even violence.
The FBI records show that Kerry was present for a particularly contentious meeting in Kansas City, Mo., in November 1971, at which plans were discussed for the assassination or kidnapping of government officials or the takeover of the Statue of Liberty....
It goes on to quote two vets who say it's not credible that Kerry wouldn't remember that day. Then comes Kerry boot licker Hurley to say it's totally understandable that he forgot about it (LOL!). All in all, an amazing article to see on the front page of the WaPO....even if it IS the slowest news day of the week. :(
(Excerpt) Read more at washingtonpost.com ...
TOPICS: News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: 1971; darkplot; fbifiles; kerry; michaeldobbs; nicosia; vvaw
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Read the whole thing. I could've been written by a Freeper!
1
posted on
08/28/2004 12:05:42 PM PDT
by
Timeout
To: Timeout
Well, darn.
I...IT could've been written by a Freeper.
2
posted on
08/28/2004 12:06:59 PM PDT
by
Timeout
(“If John Kerry loses, it will be the parade we never had.”--Anonymous Vietnam Vet)
To: Timeout
3
posted on
08/28/2004 12:08:37 PM PDT
by
VOA
To: Timeout
The WaCommiePost printed that?
Yikes! We need to be on the lookout for wing-ed swine! And they must be getting ready for hockey exhabition in Hades!
4
posted on
08/28/2004 12:08:40 PM PDT
by
Keith in Iowa
(Time's fun when you're having flies. -- Kermit the Frog)
To: Timeout
he described North Vietnamese Communist leader Ho Chi Minh as "the George Washington of Vietnam."Does the Washington Post reporter think there is anything wrong with this opinion? Lots of people on the left think our enemies are as good (or much better) than our founding fathers.
5
posted on
08/28/2004 12:15:10 PM PDT
by
68skylark
To: Timeout
the George Washington of VietnamThat would make John Kerry the Ho Chi Minh of the United States.
To: Timeout
> Read the whole thing. I could've been written by a Freeper!
Read it. I disagree about the "could have".
But it's not very complementary to Kerry.
I just finished reading UFC, and there are
errors and omissions in the article.
Nonethless, the WP is (as usual) sending a message to
the Dem core.
The message is: "uh oh, our boy has a problem"
7
posted on
08/28/2004 12:18:47 PM PDT
by
Boundless
To: Timeout
The debate ended without a decisive victory for either side. O'Neill accused Kerry of "the big lie," arguing that he had "murdered" the reputations of 2 1/2 million service members by accusing them of war crimes. Dressed in a well-cut blue suit, Kerry told the audience he had personally participated in "search-and-destroy missions in which the houses of noncombatants were burned to the ground" and asked O'Neill if he had ever "burned a village." *bump*
Thanks for posting the link, timeout. Good article. The heat is still on, and slowing increasing.
8
posted on
08/28/2004 12:19:26 PM PDT
by
Cboldt
To: Semper Paratus
"Hi, I'm John Kerry, the 'Ho Chi Minh' of the United States. My friends call me 'Che'."
9
posted on
08/28/2004 12:21:15 PM PDT
by
Steel Wolf
(Don't make me roll initiative...!)
To: Timeout
10
posted on
08/28/2004 12:23:14 PM PDT
by
tuesday afternoon
(Everything happens for a reason. - 40 and 43)
To: Timeout
Dobbs was very milquetoast in his last news-breaking article. I and many Freepers I am sure emailed him about his failure to interview the Swiftvets before his column.
Very happy to see an article from him slamming Kerry harder.
To: Timeout
-------------------------------- To print out and wear as a Campaign Button, go
HERE. Over 2,500 hits as of 8/28! Feel free to reuse this anywhere you wish...
Donate to Swift Boat Vets for the Truth
HERE.
12
posted on
08/28/2004 12:32:26 PM PDT
by
sonofatpatcher2
(Texas, Love & a .45-- What more could you want, campers? };^)
To: Boundless
The "could have" was tongue-on-cheek. But this article leads me to think the WaPo is bulldogging this story. Who knows what else Dobbs is on to...he may just have Woodward/Bernstein visions dancing in his head.
Given the scrutiny, Kerry's cooked. His records won't sustain a thorough airing. Though the MediaCrats still haven't cried out for him to release everything, they certainly seem to be building up to it.
13
posted on
08/28/2004 12:40:06 PM PDT
by
Timeout
(“If John Kerry loses, it will be the parade we never had.”--Anonymous Vietnam Vet)
To: Timeout
Did read the article, but you left out a very important piece related to the most significant snip you did. While I think the article was somewhat disparaging of Kerry, it was not anything the your "snips" showed, unfortunately.
The FBI records show that Kerry was present for a particularly contentious meeting in Kansas City, Mo., in November 1971, at which plans were discussed for the assassination or kidnapping of government officials or the takeover of the Statue of Liberty. The proposal was overwhelmingly voted down, and the files record that Kerry wanted VVAW "to stay strictly non-violent." According to the FBI files, he resigned from the organization in Kansas City after an angry showdown with radicals led by a firebrand named Al Hubbard.
To: MACVSOG68
I don't get what you're saying.
The point isn't that the proposal was voted down. It's that Kerry lied for years when he said he'd resigned before the KC meeting and didn't attend it. His campaign only changed their story after the FBI reports came out.
15
posted on
08/28/2004 12:57:31 PM PDT
by
Timeout
(“If John Kerry loses, it will be the parade we never had.”--Anonymous Vietnam Vet)
As stated in "Unfit For Command", pages 141-2: "...Close inspection of the FBI reports indicates that Kerry was present at the Kansas City meeting as a member of the VVAW executive committee. The FBI reported that Kerry told the steering committee that he planned to resign from the executive committee, but that he would continue to speak for the VVAW and that his resignation from the executive committee would not take effect until a replacement for him had been selected. The FBI file was clear that Kerry was resigning only from the executive comittee, not from the VVAW itself." Kerry has used the old Hellary trick of "not recalling" his being at the KC meeting.
16
posted on
08/28/2004 1:01:28 PM PDT
by
Zman516
(No retreat, baby, no surrender.)
To: Timeout
I don't get what you're saying. The point isn't that the proposal was voted down. It's that Kerry lied for years when he said he'd resigned before the KC meeting and didn't attend it. His campaign only changed their story after the FBI reports came outThe point is that the wording you showed would give a reader the impression that the Washington Post was showing that Kerry was part of the planning for violence, but the rest of the sentence shows that the WP seems to be clearing him of any part of that.
If only the part you printed is the end of that statement, then your point about Kerry's forgetfulness is significant. If the part left out is included, then it makes Kerry look like some kind of principled, non-violent dissident who resigned rather than continue. Unfortunately it works in Kerry's favor, and his forgetfulness is not that important.
It's more in keeping with the Washington Post and its traditional sympathies.
To: MACVSOG68
The proposal was overwhelmingly voted down, and the files record that Kerry wanted VVAW "to stay strictly non-violent." According to the FBI files, he resigned from the organization in Kansas City after an angry showdown with radicals led by a firebrand named Al Hubbard.
I truly don't know where this information comes from, because I read the VVAW surveillance document, a de-classified FBI document available at
WinterSoldier.com. In that document, it describes the November 1971 meeting in Kansas City, and nowhere in it does it say
"The proposal was overwhelmingly voted down" nor does it say anything about an
"angry showdown with radicals". In fact, in both cases it says just the opposite. The document says that the proposal to create
"Phoenix type" groups (political assassination groups) was "favorably received". And instead of any mention of Kerry having a showdown with radicals, it says nothing, except it goes on to describe subsequent VVAW meetings where Kerry continued to attend, including one where a huge block of marijuana was consumed by attendees. Here is a transcript of this section from the FBI document:
Page 191
November 1971 Meeting in Kansas City, Missouri (Kerry attended)
November 12 party at one of the members house
(transcript begins)
At the party, SCOT CAMIL, VVAW Regional Coordinator for (blacked out) and (blacked out) from Gainesville, Florida, bragged that he had a training range in either Florida or Georgia but would not divulge the location. CAMIL proposed the establishment of readiness groups of the Phoenix type. This proposal was made in the presence of (blacked out) VVAW Arkansas organizer (blacked out), all from Arkansas, (blacked out) the VVAW Regional Coordinator for Missouri and Kansas, and a delegate from Montana, and three delegates from St. Louis, names unknown. When asked if CAMIL meant Phoenix type in the same context as understood by military personnel, CAMIL answered in the affirmative and outlined a plan for political elimination of the government chain of command. The Phoenix type is a military term given to groups with specific assassination assignments and the delegates knew that CAMIL meant political assassinations rather than political eliminations. CAMIL said the activities would depend upon the men being devoted enough to carry out their assignments. CAMIL said that even talking and planning such activities was against the law and therefore the Phoenix type groups should carry out their assignments. CAMIL said he had training ranges for rifle, pistol and mortar practice. He claimed he had rifles, pistols and rifle grenades, but no mortars. CAMILs proposal for the readiness squads and the training was favorably received by many of the persons present and was thereafter quietly disseminated to those at the party. CAMIL indicated he was already conducting his own training program.(transcript ends)
To: AaronInCarolina
I truly don't know where this information comes from, because I read the VVAW surveillance document, a de-classified FBI document available at WinterSoldier.com. In that document, it describes the November 1971 meeting in Kansas City, and nowhere in it does it say "The proposal was overwhelmingly voted down" nor does it say anything about an "angry showdown with radicals". I'm not arguing that at all. I merely pointed out that the Washington Post article from which the post you reference was taken, was used to paint a favorable picture of Kerry. When I first read this thread, I thought, as did others, that the Washington Post was, for once, showing a bit of balance. After reading the full article however, it looks more like their traditional spin than anything resembling balance.
Having said that, it does appear that Kerry's post Vietnam activities are now coming to light even in the MSM, and that is good, balance or no balance.
To: MACVSOG68
I'm not arguing that at all. I merely pointed out that the Washington Post article from which the post you reference was taken, was used to paint a favorable picture of Kerry. When I first read this thread, I thought, as did others, that the Washington Post was, for once, showing a bit of balance. After reading the full article however, it looks more like their traditional spin than anything resembling balance.
Having said that, it does appear that Kerry's post Vietnam activities are now coming to light even in the MSM, and that is good, balance or no balance.
I'm sorry if my post came off sounding like I was disputing anything you had posted. My whole point was to challenge the apparent reference in the WaPo article to the proposal being "overwhelmingly voted down", when the parts of the document I read don't indicate that. In the past few minutes, I have gone back and began scouring the document again to see if there was something in it that I missed. It is a rather large document, and is a compilation of a lot of reports that are not always in chronological order. I did find a page that talked about how in December of 1971, Scott Camil (who was the main proponent of the assassination plot) was basically told to not associate with national VVAW group anymore, although apparently he then planned on continuing with his own splinter VVAW local group. I still have not found where the proposal was overwhelmingly voted down or where Kerry had "an angry showdown" with radicals (presumably Scott Camil. I'll keep looking.
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