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Purple Hearts: Three and Out
Insight ^ | April 12, 2004 | Stephen Crump

Posted on 04/12/2004 7:56:02 AM PDT by kennedy

Democratic presidential nominee in waiting Sen. John Kerry (D-Mass.) frequently speaks of courage, brotherhood and responsibility when he mentions his brief service in Vietnam. He took Super-8 home movies there in which he staged heroics in full-battle dress, so that later he might use them for campaign ads. Kerry has made so much of his Vietnam medals which he once pretended to throw away that critics have begun to wonder why he has been so cagey about the dubious circumstances surrounding the Purple Hearts that got him out of Vietnam after only four months of combat service. Under the rules, a serviceman had to be awarded three Purple Hearts to apply to go home. Not one or two, but three. And, say critics, there's the rub.

Kerry, who piloted Patrol Crafts Fast (PCFs) as a young Lt.(jg) in the Vietnam War, has always made much of those Purple Hearts. An award often pinned on the pillow of a combat warrior so badly wounded that he cannot sit up to receive it, the Purple Heart recognizes the sacrifices of combat when a soldier or officer has sustained a wound "from an outside force or agent" and received treatment from a medical officer. The records for such treatment "must have been made a matter of official record," according to the military definition of the award.

According to Kerry's own description in Douglas Brinkley's Tour of Duty, the Dec. 2, 1968, mission behind what he has claimed to be his first Purple Heart was "a half-assed action that hardly qualified as combat." Indeed. Kerry was stationed with Coastal Division 14 at Cam Ranh Bay. At that time he piloted a small foam-filled boat, known as a Boston Whaler, with two enlisted men in the darkness of early morning. The intent, apparently, was to patrol an area that was known for contraband trafficking, but it was an undocumented mission. Upon approaching the objective point, the crew noticed a sampan crossing the river. As it pulled to shore, Kerry and his little team opened fire, destroying the boat and whatever its cargo might have been.

In the confusion, Kerry claims to have received a "stinging piece of heat" in the arm, the result of a tiny piece of shrapnel. He was not incapacitated and continued with regular swiftboat-patrol duty. William Shachte, who oversaw this ad hoc mission, was quoted by the Boston Globe as saying Kerry's injury, from whatever source, "was not a serious wound at all."

But Kerry met with his immediate superior officer, Lt.Cmdr. Grant Hibbard, the next morning and requested a Purple Heart for his wound. Hibbard recalls that Kerry had a "minor scratch" on his arm and was holding in his hand what appeared to be a fragment of a U.S. M-79 grenade, the shrapnel that had caused the wound. "They didn't receive enemy fire," Hibbard tells Insight. Since this was an essential requirement for the award, the commander rejected Kerry's request. Hibbard does not remember that Kerry received medical attention of any kind and confirms that no one else on the mission suffered any injuries.

Shortly thereafter, Kerry was transferred to Coastal Division 11 at An Thoi. Apparently, Kerry petitioned to have his Purple Heart request reconsidered. Hibbard remembers getting correspondence from Kerry's new division, asking for his approval. In the hurried process of moving to a new command himself, Hibbard thinks he might have signed off on the award. If so, "it was to my chagrin," Hibbard remembers. Kerry's second commander, Lt.Cmdr. G.M. Elliott, says he has no recollection of such an event ever occurring.

There are no written records of Kerry's magical first Purple Heart on file at the Naval Historical Center in Washington, the nation's primary repository for such documentation. A Purple Heart normally is not requested but is awarded de facto for a wound inflicted by the enemy - a wound serious enough to require medical attention. The Naval Historical Center keeps all documents connected to such awards to U.S. Navy and Marine personnel. These typewritten "casualty cards" list the date, location and prognosis of the wound for which the Purple Heart is given, and they are produced by the medical facility that provides treatment for the combat wound at the hands of the enemy. There are two such cards for Kerry - for his slight wounds on Feb. 20 and March 13, 1969, but none for his December 1968 claim.

After receiving a Purple Heart for the March 13 scratch and bruise, Kerry sought an early pass out of combat duty, invoking the informal Navy "instruction" known as 1300.39. According to the Boston Globe, 1300.39 meant an officer could request a reassignment from his superior officer after receiving three Purple Hearts. The instruction states that, rather than being automatic, the reassignment would "be determined after consideration of his physical classification for duty and on an individual basis." Of the 138 servicemen and officers in Kerry's unit who received Purple Hearts during the time he was there, records indicate only two received more than two. These were Lt.(jg) Jim Galvin and a boatswain's mate named Stevens. When Insight reached Galvin he said all three of his Purple Hearts were the result of shrapnel or glass shards. Such minor injuries were common on PCF boats with their glass windows and thin steel hulls, and, like Kerry's, Galvin's injuries were not serious enough to take him out of combat for more than a few days.

Unlike Kerry, Galvin elected to stay with his men. Indeed, though a professional Navy officer, he never had heard of instruction 1300.39. It was not until early April of 1969, when Galvin noticed that Kerry was preparing to leave the officers' barracks at An Thoi that he learned about "three Purple Hearts and you're out." According to Galvin, it was Kerry who told him, "There's a rule that gets you out of here and I'm getting out. You ought to do the same." Galvin remembers, "He seemed to take care of everything pretty quickly," because that was the last time Galvin saw Kerry in Vietnam.

The three-times wounded Galvin stayed with his men, transferred to Cam Ranh Bay to get them a respite from the dicey Mekong Delta, and eventually left the swiftboats for destroyer school.

Insight: contacted many men who served in Coastal Division at the same time Kerry did to ask if any of them had heard of anyone leaving the combat zone by invoking three minor wounds. Of the 12 who replied, none had heard of anyone doing so but John Kerry."

Less than a month after having claimed three wounds for which he lost no more than a total of two days of duty, Kerry reported as an aide to a navy yard admiral in Brooklyn, New York, leaving his crew in Vietnam. Two years later, preparing for a congressional race in a left-wing Massachusetts district - where the seat eventually was won by the even more radical Rev. Robert Drinan - Kerry was working with Maoists and other radicals in Vietnam Veterans Against the War, saying of those he left behind who were being killed and wounded for real that they were committing crimes "on a day-to-day basis with the full awareness of officers at all levels."

Indeed, Kerry said, he knew men who in Vietnam "had personally raped, cut off ears, cut off heads, razed villages in fashion reminiscent of Genghis Khan, shot cattle and dogs for fun, poisoned food stocks and generally ravaged the countryside." Addressing the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on April 22, 1971, about these and other alleged war crimes, he called on the United States to pay "extensive reparations."


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Constitution/Conservatism; Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Extended News; Foreign Affairs; Front Page News; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; US: Massachusetts
KEYWORDS: 229; cowardice; fraud; kerry; militaryrecord; purpleheart; vietnam
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To: kennedy
ping
41 posted on 04/12/2004 10:22:11 AM PDT by jcb8199
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To: syriacus
Instead of giving Kerry flip-flop sandals at appearances, what about Band-Aids? They come in so many colors and styles. I would be proud to hand the Senator a goodly supply of Scooby-Doo, Sponge Bob, and Clifford glow-in-the-dark Band-Aids. Poor li'l Senator's got himself a boo-boo.
42 posted on 04/12/2004 10:22:23 AM PDT by Yaelle
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To: Yaelle
Applause for a great idea!

I want someone to ask Kerry who tipped him off to this regulation and whether he knew about it before he left for Viet Nam. Preplanned minor injuries? One does wonder.

Kerry cannot be allowed to run as a self-declared war hero casting aspersions on President Bush with the AWOL charge and not accept questions about his own service.

Furthermore, Kerry must not be allowed to get away with not explaining why he did not report the names and incidents of the war crimes he says he witness in front of Congress. He said his fellow troops were committing daily atrocities and that they were all murderers - he owes them no less that a complete repudiation of his charges.
43 posted on 04/12/2004 10:33:52 AM PDT by BlessedByLiberty (Respectfully submitted,)
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To: js1138
"It would take a miracle to win a Purple Heart at that place and time."

Well, one would hope it would take a miracle ANYWHERE to get a purple heart for a scratch on the arm. Apparently, Kerry had no respect for the guys who really got hurt.

44 posted on 04/12/2004 10:35:31 AM PDT by MEGoody (Kerry - isn't that a girl's name? (Conan O'Brian))
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To: stuartcr
"At least Kerry left CONUS, and was actually in-country."

As opposed to whom? Even Gore was "in country" for that matter.
45 posted on 04/12/2004 10:41:42 AM PDT by zygoat
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To: Dante3
...Kerry is obviously hiding something. It is time for the media to start asking him hard questions.

That made me laugh out loud.

46 posted on 04/12/2004 10:45:20 AM PDT by SGCOS
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To: zygoat
As opposed to those that did not.
47 posted on 04/12/2004 10:47:45 AM PDT by stuartcr
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To: kennedy
"But Kerry met with his immediate superior officer, Lt.Cmdr. Grant Hibbard, the next morning and requested a Purple Heart for his wound. Hibbard recalls that Kerry had a "minor scratch" on his arm and was holding in his hand what appeared to be a fragment of a U.S. M-79 grenade, the shrapnel that had caused the wound. "They didn't receive enemy fire," Hibbard tells Insight. Since this was an essential requirement for the award, the commander rejected Kerry's request. Hibbard does not remember that Kerry received medical attention of any kind and confirms that no one else on the mission suffered any injuries.

His subsequent appeal for the award should be in his official file, in the Army it was called a 201 file. I would love to know the basis for his appeal.

If this article is accurate, it raises several questions. Like where is the after action report of this "mission"? What was in the Sampan and what was the fate of its occupants?

48 posted on 04/12/2004 10:50:55 AM PDT by There's millions of'em (Kerry sold the POWs to NVN for $2 million each, plus a "non-finder's" fee.)
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To: js1138
My Great-Uncle received 3 purple hearts and was nominated for 2 more while serving in the south pacific in WWII. Two were in the same battle. He refused to be sent home after the 3rd (due to ripped sutures). His command tried to send him home not due to a 3 times rule, but because he had kids and a wife and everyone thought he didnt have much luck left. I cant imagine him putting himself in for an award but then again he was a real man and a real American.
49 posted on 04/12/2004 10:51:43 AM PDT by Docbarleypop (Navy Doc)
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To: kennedy

http://www.stolenvalor.com/

50 posted on 04/12/2004 11:00:19 AM PDT by SkyPilot
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To: kennedy
Whenever I receive a "stinging piece of heat", I usually peal the bee off my skin, with stinger, and put balm on it.
51 posted on 04/12/2004 11:03:25 AM PDT by mabelkitty (A tuning, a Vote in the topic package to the starting US presidency election fight)
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To: Yaelle
AHAHAHA! Band-Aids with little broken purple hearts on them. Just a purple heart would be too insulting to all of those wonderful, beloved, patriots who were truly injured in service for our freedom...but a BROKEN purple heart...or a broken LAVANDER heart...would hold the insult well!
52 posted on 04/12/2004 11:08:04 AM PDT by bannie (The government which robs Peter to pay Paul can always depend upon the support of Paul.)
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To: kellynla
"I have never heard of anyone going to their superior officer "requesting" a Purple Heart! Ridiculous!"

And when he didn't get the answer he wanted, he went to his next commander to pursue his quest. His behavior sounds like the convicts I used to have to deal with. When they couldn't get their way from one officer or piece of brass, they'd continue on down the line until they got the response they wanted.

I'd like to know if Kerry's transfer after Hibbard's denial was as a result of a personal request or if it was an internal move. I'd bet Kerry requested it because he couldn't get cooperation from Hibbard on the Purple Heart. I read in one of these Kerry stories that he got the first injury within his first 24 hours in Vietnam. What a snake.

53 posted on 04/12/2004 11:12:15 AM PDT by mass55th
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To: stuartcr
Parse, parse, parse. If you break it into short enough sentences, you may be able to convince yourself that what you are claiming is legitimate.

Remember billyblythe's word game: "I did not have sex with that woman.(period) Ms. Lewinski."

OR

"I did not have sex with that woman (as he looks to Madeline Albright), Ms. Lewinski." (as he imagines himself to be simply speaking TO--not ABOUT--Ms. Lewinski)

Liberal parsing games are transparent: They only work to convince the parser that he is, somehow, succeeding in his trickery.

Lawyer trickery and crap. Scheisters in the German sense of the word.
54 posted on 04/12/2004 11:16:51 AM PDT by bannie (The government which robs Peter to pay Paul can always depend upon the support of Paul.)
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To: stuartcr
Had a couple of relatives killed Nam. I was too old besides I was in the Korean conflict.

I had a young relative who was the one of the best physical therapists in the Army.... he never went to Nam. He never left CONUS but he worked real hard to rehabiltate some pretty banged up soldiers. He gave 100% and then some!!! He was a real expert on helping guys with missing legs.

Are you saying or inferring that IF you didn't leave the CONUS that you did NOT contribute to the USA war effort? 'Cause if you are, hoss, you are full of______!!

55 posted on 04/12/2004 11:17:55 AM PDT by Lion in Winter (I ain't no pussy cat... don't mess with me... ya hear! GRRRRRRrrr)
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To: kennedy
Outstanding Article! Thanks for posting

President Bush should produce a campaign commercial quoting the above article while showing footage of the President delivering his Iraq War Victory speech from the Carrier Lincoln.

56 posted on 04/12/2004 11:18:37 AM PDT by pete anderson
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To: bannie
What I did say, was legitimate. Nothing more, nothing less. No claims to anything being made.
57 posted on 04/12/2004 11:18:37 AM PDT by stuartcr
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To: bannie
BTTT... well said!!
58 posted on 04/12/2004 11:19:09 AM PDT by Lion in Winter (I ain't no pussy cat... don't mess with me... ya hear! GRRRRRRrrr)
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To: bannie
Could just be that he is a mere dim bulb on the billboard of life. : ^ )
59 posted on 04/12/2004 11:20:28 AM PDT by Lion in Winter (I ain't no pussy cat... don't mess with me... ya hear! GRRRRRRrrr)
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To: kennedy
The story's starting to get legs.
60 posted on 04/12/2004 11:21:12 AM PDT by Tribune7 (Arlen Specter supports the International Crime Court having jurisdiction over US soldiers)
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