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The Inside Story Of The SwiftBoaters Finally Told
Democracy Project ^ | December 5, 2007 | Bruce Kesler

Posted on 12/05/2007 4:32:49 PM PST by Interesting Times

This is the most important book you’ll buy this year: To Set The Record Straight, How Swift Boat Veterans, POWs and the New Media Defeated John Kerry, by Scott Swett and Tim Ziegler, with Forward by John O'Neill.

Not only will you learn the inside details of the only book – Unfit For Command -- that ever decided a presidential election but, especially for those who have any doubts, you will learn about how the peoples' democracy can still work in the United States.

For those inclined toward political science, the book is an important contribution to understanding how political mobilization actually works and to seeing how the major media lost its Delphic grip on America's political fate to the remarkably democratic new media of the Internet. Vietnam veterans took it away.

As John O’Neill says in his Foreword to the book,

How the Swiftees, POWs and other Vietnam veterans circumvented the media and reached out to the public is a story that has profound implications for future political campaigns and news reporting….

…Honor, Loyalty and Patriotism…These values were able to rouse hundreds of Swifties and millions of other veterans from their deep political sleep of 35 years. The blindness of our opponents can be accounted for only because such values are rare and often considered laughable among Kerry’s operatives and media allies. These values are neither rare nor a subject of amusement among most Americans. In 2004, they changed the course of history.

Fellow blogger Lorie Byrd credits me with knowing more about the SwiftBoat story than any other blogger. She’s correct, as far as that goes. I founded the Vietnam veterans organization in 1971 that John O’Neill joined to confront John Kerry’s fabrications. I was very active in the 2004 Vietnam veterans campaign for truth. I’m friends with all the Vietnam veterans and others who led in the 2004 campaign, that in a post-election MSM op-ed I dubbed, “The Revolt of the Vietnam Veterans.” (These are described in the book.)

But, there’s someone else who knows more about the 2004 Revolt, Scott Swett. I learned much about the Revolt from this book that even I didn’t know. So will you.

The 389-page book is very well-written and documented, based on virtually every public source and on extensive exclusive interviews with all those involved. Footnotes abound, and there’s an excellent index.

This is not a partisan diatribe, though of definite views, but an invaluable basic resource to anyone regardless of their politics. It’s all true, and the truths – the depths to which the Kerry-aligned media stooped to try to squelch the Swiftees – are all here, and truly shocking when all pulled together in one place.

In early 2004, Swett, on his own, set up the website WinterSoldier.com. The site collected the various articles written over the years about John Kerry’s Vietnam service and his subsequent disservice – in support of the program of the North Vietnamese -- denouncing Vietnam veterans as bloodthirsty, out-of-control murderers of innocent Vietnamese.

Once Kerry’s nomination for president in 2004 seemed likely, WinterSoldier.com became a meeting place for many Vietnam veterans and others and provided a wealth of information that for the first time demonstrated how widespread were Kerry’s exaggerations and lies.

John Kerry’s hagiographic biography by courtesan Douglas Brinkley, Tour Of Duty, (A two-part historiographic review I wrote at the academic site H-War is here and here.) contained so many assertions known to be untrue by those actually there -- fellow SwiftBoaters in Vietnam -- that the Swiftees came together to document the falsehoods.

Unfit For Command followed. The destruction of Kerry’s invented heroic image followed.

Swett set up the Swiftees’ website, SwiftVets.com, and was present and involved in most of what occurred.

For the past two years, Swett and co-author former Marine Captain Tim Ziegler, have labored to produce this book. Some other, better known writers wanted to tackle the subject and approached various publishers. Once the 2004 election was settled, major publishers weren’t interested in documenting the Vietnam veterans revolt as key to a watershed election upset, nor in further distressing the liberal narrative of being treated poorly. (See this post about how substantiated the Swiftee’s charges were, compared to the repeated MSM use of the term “unsubstantiated.”) I’ve witnessed these disappointments and the persistence of Swett and Ziegler to tell the story.

Our children may wonder what we did in the war, and what we did in 2004 to set the record straight. The first narrative will have to be done privately. (Actually, Swett shared with me this diary of his father’s year in Vietnam in 1970, as a C-123 navigator and Civic Action Coordinator at Phan Rang. Here’s the letters sent by a young Marine about his feelings and experiences. One among 58,000 who didn’t make it home alive, 2004’s Vietnam veterans revolt was about honoring their sacrifices.) The second narrative, this book, belongs on everyone’s bookshelf. Otherwise, they won’t get it, how we set the record straight, if they depend on the MSM.

This book is an extraordinarily comprehensive, documented telling of the Kerry-aligned media’s losing efforts to squelch the Swiftees (as a Kerry campaign insider said, “The senior staff believes the media is committed to seeing us win this thing…”) and how they were foiled (Kerry partisan Susan Estrich admitted “they’re shell-shocked” at the implosion of Kerry’s mythical self-glorification).

Moreover, this book is an important tale of personal and political heroism, a tale that bears remembering and passing on by anyone who cares for the US and for peoples democracy.

For those who depended upon the MSM-Kerry narrative, there is a big surprise: There was no vast right wing conspiracy, nor was there a Rovian one. Those who need to believe there was such a conspiracy need to believe that in order to avoid the truth.

There was a grounds-up revolt by Vietnam veterans who knew better than the ersatz heroism that Kerry and friends tried to peddle. The facts and details are in this book. Sure, it took big bucks to get the message across. That came from some big donors and 150,000+ other individuals who believed it should be heard and not smothered or ignored. Polls and the election proved them correct. Indicative of who was listening: 80,000 copies of Kerry’s self-glorifying Tour Of Duty sold; over 800,000 copies of Unfit For Command sold. Very curiously, the pollsters didn’t bother to survey Vietnam veterans, but polls of veterans generally – there are over 25-million, plus their families who support them -- found strong opposition to Kerry.

I hope that To Set The Record Straight sells as well. You can get your copy direct from the authors at their website. www.ToSetTheRecordStraight.com. (It won’t be up at Amazon for a few months, so the authors don’t have to prematurely split their needed earnings from two-years’ work.) There, you can also preview the contents, view excerpts and sources, and more.

For those Vietnam veterans, journalists and bloggers who joined in the battle, your contributions are described. Those of us who served in Vietnam needed your support, and are thankful. It took heroism on many’s part for this victory – yours no less than the Swiftees.

The old media, however, is not grateful. The continuing decline of their reading and viewing audiences is partly due to Americans turning away from their repeatedly exposed sloppy and biased reporting.

The Vietnam veterans revolt, so well-documented here as it overcame MSM obstacle after obstacle, awakened millions of Americans to the MSM at its crudest and energized the new media to new heights. If Watergate spurred young journalists to be “investigative” to demand honesty from those in government, today’s young journalists will hopefully find in To Set The Record Straight a new spur to demand honesty from those in the media.

John O’Neill and I had a better experience in 1971 with the major media than in 2004, which highlights how the major media has changed, and not for the better. As O’Neill is quoted from an interview:

The big difference is that, in 1971, while the media would spin facts on occasion and spin them very favorably to Kerry and his group, they wouldn’t actually suppress the news….That is really a brave new world that did not exist in the 1970’s.

For example, on May 13, 1971, I had an op-ed in the New York Times disputing Kerry’s maligning of Vietnam veterans. By contrast, in 2004, as Kerry campaign insiders at Newsweek exposed, the New York Times acted as a conduit for Kerry releases. (So did the Boston Globe and Los Angeles Times, perhaps leading to both being exclusive post-election recipients from Kerry of what he purported to be his military records, which they refused to publish for public scrutiny, even on their no-cost websites.) Otherwise, the major media ignored the Swiftees’ evidence or maligned it while almost without exception refusing to actually investigate the charges and evidence. (See, for example, my correspondence with the New York Times’ ombudsman.)

As “Captain” Ed Morrissey sardonically notes, “The Boston Globe has put a lot more effort and resources into staking out the house of Mitt Romney [to investigate illegal aliens mowing the lawn] than they ever did on resolving the controversy over John Kerry's Christmas in Cambodia fables.”

A notable MSM exception was Thomas Lipscomb, formerly founder and president of Times Books, who managed – with difficulty – to publish several devastating investigative columns on Kerry’s mendaciousness in newspapers other than the New York Times, Boston Globe or Los Angeles Times. Lipscomb succinctly summed up Kerry’s mode of defense:

[W]henever one of Kerry’s lies is under attack, he attacks everyone else – as liars. And there is a pattern to his responses as well. When the lie becomes undeniable, the sources are attacked.

The book takes us step-by-step from 1971 to the present in a level of detail that most readers under the age of 60 probably never saw before. The “Aftermath” chapter is worth reading in and of itself, if only for bringing us up to date from 2004 to now. As Scott Swett wrote me thanking me for my help, “On reflection, I think the best thing about this book is the happy ending.” The book concludes:

Though politicians, the media and Hollywood had freely smeared and denigrated America’s Vietnam veterans for more than thirty years, something had changed in the wake of the 2004 campaign. Every post-election attempt to slander the U.S. military had sparked widespread resentment and active opposition. Trashing the troops was no longer the ticket to fame and success it had been in that long-ago spring of 1971.

As someone who has been there from the beginning, fighting every step of the way for this day, I say Amen.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: bookreview; brucekesler; johnkerry; kerrydefeat; nogooddeed; pages; settherecordstraight; swiftboatveterans; swiftboatvets; swiftees; swifties; truthtellers; unfitforcommand
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To: Interesting Times
GOOD!

free dixie,sw

161 posted on 12/06/2007 8:00:46 AM PST by stand watie (Resistance to tyrants is OBEDIENCE to God. Thomas Jefferson, 1804)
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To: TruthShallSetYouFree

I now know one of the things that I’m getting for my dad for Christmas, and I’ll be able to read it when he’s finished!

I admire these men so much!!! Lord only knows what they saved us from.


162 posted on 12/06/2007 8:01:06 AM PST by Lorraine
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To: abner
I just ordered 5 copies for Christmas gift giving...

A fine idea. You know, maybe we should send a copy to Kerry with a ribbon around it...

163 posted on 12/06/2007 8:31:18 AM PST by Interesting Times (ABCNNBCBS -- yesterday's news.)
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To: The Shrew
TS,

I can tell you very little in this world (outside of cruelty to children and animals) gets me as riled up as much as lying to the American people. I see the MSM as the single greatest threat to the America our forefathers - to the America they all worked so hard to build and far too many died to defend.

The lesson of Nazi Germany are not to be ignored, the power of propaganda and those that control the media to manipulate the public.

I get very emotional about people like Col Bud Day, when I see scum like John Kerry dare attack one of America’s real true heroes. To me the Swift Boat Vets was one of the few great victories of the people in the last few decades. They stood up against the tyranny of the MSM and more than anything probably kept Kerry from winning. I simply love those guys !

On a personal note, one of my friends when growing up in Miami, an older kid who everyone looked up to, was killed in Nam and these guys did him proud. They were not going to let John Kerry’s record in Nam and what he did for his own political ambitions after returning, go unchallenged.

They stood up for everyone who served, everyone who died and I will forever be in their debt, as we should all be.

164 posted on 12/06/2007 8:32:29 AM PST by Beatthedrum
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To: Interesting Times

Thanks for the post.


165 posted on 12/06/2007 8:35:10 AM PST by bmwcyle (BOMB, BOMB, BOMB,.......BOMB, BOMB IRAN)
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To: Interesting Times
You know, maybe we should send a copy to Kerry with a ribbon around it...

Excellent idea. You could wrap it with 180 forms!

166 posted on 12/06/2007 8:36:51 AM PST by abner (I have no tagline, therefore no identity.)
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To: Interesting Times; Kathy in Alaska

Excellent ~ Tonkin (Brian) is smiling down from Heaven!


167 posted on 12/06/2007 11:41:22 AM PST by blackie (Be Well~Be Armed~Be Safe~Molon Labe!)
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To: Interesting Times

Thank you Swift Boat Veterans for Truth


168 posted on 12/06/2007 2:16:53 PM PST by Freee-dame
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To: Interesting Times

Bump to the top.


169 posted on 12/06/2007 2:59:23 PM PST by zot
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To: Tammy8
I was in Newport Naval Hospital in April-May 1971 while Kerry was pulling his antics in Washington. It was very, very bad for the morale of returning troop. The media was at its peak of blaming the war on the American GI.
170 posted on 12/06/2007 2:59:36 PM PST by oyez (Justa' another high minded lowlife.)
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To: Interesting Times
By the way, you are getting awfully close to your name;

"May you live in interesting times, and come to the attention of important people." -- 'ancient Chinese curse'

171 posted on 12/06/2007 5:28:29 PM PST by abner (I have no tagline, therefore no identity.)
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To: abner
Hey, I just work here...
172 posted on 12/06/2007 5:44:23 PM PST by Interesting Times (ABCNNBCBS -- yesterday's news.)
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To: Bubba_Leroy
I am proud to say that I am one of the 150,000.

There are well over 2 million Vietnam Vets, and among those those who know what Kerry did to them, seeing his slimy ass shot down in flames was a great satisfaction.

173 posted on 12/06/2007 6:35:35 PM PST by Ditto (Global Warming: The 21st Century's Snake Oil)
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To: rlmorel

In post 59, that is me, second from the right at Walter Reed. That was a cold and nasty night but was so proud of the people on the corners supporting our troops. I was also proud of the men and women that were wounded that we had the priviledge to meet. Pictured L to R
Boats Turley, Ken Briggs, Mark OMara and Terry Boone.


174 posted on 12/06/2007 6:56:14 PM PST by mtboone
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To: mtboone

I must tell you, it was an honor and a privilege to be able to shake your hand and those of your compatriots and thank you in person. As an American, it meant a great deal to me to see you and the other Swifties standing in that nasty weather to do your part to make sure those injured soldiers inside Walter Reed would KNOW that there ARE grateful people who respect the service they rendered and wish them a speedy recovery (as opposed to the people up the street with their “Enlist Here to Die for Halliburton” signs)

I know you guys didn’t come out to gain fame or money. I have always felt you guys did it for three reasons (tell me if I hit on any of them):

1.) You knew there were men and women in uniform who would have to serve under that scum if he were to win the election.

2.) A Kerry presidency would be detrimental to the health of our republic, and as Americans, anything you could do to prevent it would be a service to your country. (Again)

3.) Revenge for his slanderous, traitorous words and deeds.

In any case, that Gathering of Eagles weekend was one of the most memorable of my life, and meeting you guys and being able to express my genuine gratitude in person only made it more so.

Thanks again.


175 posted on 12/06/2007 7:16:35 PM PST by rlmorel (Liberals: If the Truth would help them, they would use it.)
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To: Old Sarge

Tonk would surely be proud!


176 posted on 12/07/2007 9:42:45 AM PST by SuziQ
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To: Bubba_Leroy

I only wish that any of the other political contributions that I have ever made were as well spent.


I feel the same way. I’ve never felt as much pride and sense of purpose when giving to the SBV. I’ve also contributed to the defense fund and it has probably changed the direction that my future contributions will go.


177 posted on 12/07/2007 10:02:39 AM PST by Joan Kerrey (Believe nothing of what you hear or read and half of what you see.)
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To: mtboone
Hello Mtboone, I was the other guy holding the flag (lower left) that night at Walter Reed.

Thank you again for your service to our nation and your group’s efforts in defeating Kerry. It was a great privilege to meet you Swiftys that night in support of our patriots mending at WR.

178 posted on 12/07/2007 10:48:23 AM PST by Veeram ("Any fool (Liberal) can criticize, condemn and complain and most fools do." ---Benjamin Franklin)
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To: prairiebreeze
RE: "I was a proud contributor to the Swifties. Would do it again in a heartbeat."

Yes!   ...BUMP!



Oh... and where's that '180', John???


179 posted on 12/08/2007 3:02:41 AM PST by Seadog Bytes (OPM - The Liberal 'solution' to every societal problem. (Other People's Money))
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To: Grampa Dave

180 posted on 12/08/2007 3:08:17 AM PST by Seadog Bytes (OPM - The Liberal 'solution' to every societal problem. (Other People's Money))
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