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To: spanalot

Ha! You fall for all of the crackpots. Would you like a look at one of the authors of the book - a despicable person who PRETENDED to be a POW (a felony, btw):

"Here is an example of one individual who is a phony POW: "Dr." Larry Pistilli. Pistilli is one of the principal sources in a book by Mark Sauter and James Sanders, Soldiers of Misfortune. This book is touted by the MIA cult as telling the truth about the abandonment of US POWs from WWII and Vietnam. In fact, it is a collection of nonsense. Pistilli claims that he was assigned to I Corps in 1965 "working on special classified missions." He claims that he was captured, taken to a Vietnamese prison camp near the Chinese border where he observed Chinese and Soviet interrogators selecting US POWs for transport to China and the Soviet Union. There is one problem with this story. Pistilli never served in Vietnam, was never a POW. Pistilli was in the Army from August 3, 1964 to July 31, 1967. He was with the 57th Signal company in Korea. The rest of these clowns have equally phony stories."


371 posted on 05/08/2006 4:43:44 PM PDT by Romanov
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To: Romanov; lizol

"Ha! You fall for all of the crackpots. Would you like a look at one of the authors of the book - a despicable person who PRETENDED to be a POW (a felony, btw):

"Here is an example of one individual who is a phony POW: "Dr." Larry Pistilli. Pistilli "

Sorry - the book is written by Sanders, Sauter, and Kirkwood. - no Pistilli.

But don't let me get in your way . Everyone has to eat.

And while your googling another ad hominem, its a good opportunity for the rest of us to read another excerpt of this fine book:

This horrible tale is well documented in Soldiers of Misfortune . Much of the evidence involves the eyewitness accounts of American POWs who barely missed being "liberated" by Stalin's forces. For example, the authors detail the story of three Americans held in a German POW camp — John L. Connolly, Carmen Gomez, and Joseph Friedl. One morning in 1945, they woke to find their German captives gone. Connolly and Gomez decided to head west in search of American forces. Friedl decided to wait for Russian "liberators." Their story will chill you:

But when the men tried to cross a bridge to the tantalizingly close American line, Red Army troops stopped them at gun point. "The Russians herded us into a bombed-out building. . . . When there were several hundred of us [Americans], they began to march back into Germany."

Wisely refusing to march away from their own lines, Connolly and about a dozen others ducked out of the column as it passed through town. Hours later, they ran across a team of American scout cars under the command of a brigadier general. "The Soviets are taking a column of American POWs back east," Connolly told the general. Flying into a rage, the American officer sped off to catch the column. But the POWs had vanished.

Joseph Friedl was taken back to the Soviet Union. He was one of the fortunate ones — he was released in 1946.

Another American soldier, Technical Sergeant D.C. Wimberly, was straggling back to American lines and found himself in the German town of Luckenwalde. The Germans were herding back a column of German POWs to the Soviet Union, but when a few men near the end of the column saw Wimberly's American flag on his uniform, they called out: "Hey! You American? We're American. I'm from Philadelphia . . . Boston . . . Chicago. Help me!"

Americans also compared German army records of how many Americans were held in the camps. It was not difficult to see that the Soviets had failed to return all of them.

So, why has all of this been kept secret from the American people? World War II has been billed as the "good war" — the war that justifies all subsequent foreign wars. And every student in every public school across America is taught that FDR was one of our country's greatest presidents.

How could the U.S. government tell the truth about what happened to American servicemen? To tell the truth would mean exposing American complicity in the murder of over a million innocent Russian people. It would entail a closer examination of the Allied alliance with one of the most brutal political regimes in all of history. And it would expose all the scheming and machinations that resulted in the abandonment of over 50,000 Allied soldiers to our communist "friends."


375 posted on 05/08/2006 5:08:40 PM PDT by spanalot
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