Skip to comments.
Kerry Postures as a War Hero
New American ^
| May 5, 2003
| John F. McManus
Posted on 05/23/2003 4:54:38 PM PDT by Rennes Templar
click here to read article
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first 1-20, 21-22 next last
To: Rennes Templar
Kerry Postures as a War Hero I didn't know bending over and sticking your head up your @$$ was considered an heroic posture.
Must be a Massachusetts thing.
To: Rennes Templar
Washington Times
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR December 6, 2002
John Kerry's war record As Sen. John Kerry, Massachusetts Democrat, considers a bid for the White House, Americans should know a few things about him that he might prefer go unmentioned - and I don't mean his $75 haircuts.
When Mr. Kerry pontificated at the Vietnam Veterans Memorial on Veterans Day, a group of veterans turned their backs on him and walked away. They remembered Mr. Kerry as the anti-war activist who testified before Congress during the war, accusing veterans of being war criminals. The dust jacket of Mr. Kerry's pro-Hanoi book, "The New Soldier," features a photograph of his ragged band of radicals mocking the U.S. Marine Corps Memorial, which depicts the flag-raising on Iwo Jima, with an upside-down American flag.
Retired Gen. George S. Patton III charged that Mr. Kerry's actions as an anti-war activist had "given aid and comfort to the enemy," as had the actions of Ramsey Clark and Jane Fonda. Also, Mr. Kerry lied when he threw what he claimed were his war medals over the White House fence; he later admitted they weren't his. Now they are displayed on his office wall. Long after he changed sides in congressional hearings, Mr. Kerry lobbied for renewed trade relations with Hanoi. At the same time, his cousin C. Stewart Forbes, chief executive for Colliers International, assisted in brokering a $905 million deal to develop a deep-sea port at Vung Tau, Vietnam - an odd coincidence.
As noted in the Inside Politics column of Nov. 14 (Nation), historian Douglas Brinkley is writing Mr. Kerry's biography. Hopefully, he'll include the senator's latest ignominious feat: preventing the Vietnam Human Rights Act (HR2833) from coming to a vote in the Senate, claiming human rights would deteriorate as a result. His actions sent a clear signal to Hanoi that Congress cares little about the human rights for which so many Americans fought and died.
The State Department ranked Vietnam among the 10 regimes worldwide least tolerant of religious freedom. Recently, 354 churches of the Montagnards, a Christian ethnic minority, were forcibly disbanded, and by mid-October, more than 50 Christian pastors and elders had been arrested in Dak Lak province alone. On Oct. 29, the secret police executed three Montagnards by lethal injection simply for protesting religious repression. The communists are conducting a pogrom against the Montagnards, forcing Christians to drink a mixture of goat's blood and alcohol and renounce Christianity. Thousands have been killed or imprisoned or have just "disappeared." The Montagnards lost one-half of their adult male population fighting for the United States, and without them, there might be thousands more American names on that somber black granite wall at the Vietnam memorial.
As Mr. Kerry contemplates a run for the presidency, people must remember that he has fought harder for Hanoi as an anti-war activist and a senator than he did against the Vietnamese communists while serving in the Navy in Vietnam.
MICHAEL BENGE Foreign Service officer and former Vietnam POW (1968 to 1973) Washington
Mr. war hero
3
posted on
05/23/2003 4:58:32 PM PDT
by
South40
To: South40
John Kerry is an expert on war because...
To: South40
Thanks for posting that information!
5
posted on
05/23/2003 6:22:13 PM PDT
by
PhiKapMom
(Bush/Cheney 2004)
To: Rennes Templar
Some freepers say they can remember seeing photos and or
a video of Kerry throwing his medals/ribbons/bridle over the White House fence.We need to find those pictures and get them front and center.
To: South40
Damn, that man is ugly.
Becki
7
posted on
05/23/2003 8:21:39 PM PDT
by
Becki
(Pray continually for our leaders and our troops!)
To: Rennes Templar
bump lest we forget during the campaign
To: Wild Irish Rogue; Rennes Templar; Texas Eagle; South40; Eric in the Ozarks; PhiKapMom; Becki; ...
Seeking election to the U.S. House in 1972, Kerry found it necessary to suppress reproduction of the cover picture appearing on his own book, The New Soldier. His political opponent pointed out that it depicted several unkempt youths crudely handling an American flag to mock the famous photo of the U.S. Marines at Iwo Jima. Suddenly, copies of the book became unavailable and even disappeared from libraries. But the Lowell (Mass.) Sun said of the type of person shown on its cover: "These people spit on the flag, they burn the flag, they carry the flag upside down, [and] they all but wipe their noses with it in their efforts to show their contempt for everything it still stands for."
by John F. Kerry and Vietnam Veterans Against The War New York: Collier Books.
When Mr. Kerry pontificated at the Vietnam Veterans Memorial on Veterans Day, a group of veterans turned their backs on him and walked away. They remembered Mr. Kerry as the anti-war activist who testified before Congress during the war, accusing veterans of being war criminals. The dust jacket of Mr. Kerry's pro-Hanoi book, "The New Soldier," features a photograph of his ragged band of radicals mocking the U.S. Marine Corps Memorial, which depicts the flag-raising on Iwo Jima, with an upside-down American flag.
A Gold Star mother returns the U.S. flag
He (John F Kerry) went to work organizing opposition in America against the efforts of his former buddies still ducking communist bullets back in Vietnam. Kerry gained national attention in April 1971, when he testified before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, then chaired by Sen. J. William Fulbright (D-AR), who led opposition in the Congress against U.S. participation in the war. During the course of his testimony, Kerry stated that the United States had a definite obligation to make extensive economic reparations to the people of Vietnam.
Kerry's testimony, it should be noted, occurred while some of his fellow Vietnam veterans were known by the world to be enduring terrible suffering as prisoners of war in North Vietnamese prisons. Kerry was a supporter of the "People's Peace Treaty," a supposed "people's" declaration to end the war, reportedly drawn up in communist East Germany. It included nine points, all of which were taken from Viet Cong peace proposals at the Paris peace talks as conditions for ending the war.
One of the provisions stated: "The Vietnamese pledge that as soon as the U.S. government publicly sets a date for total withdrawal [from Vietnam], they will enter discussion to secure the release of all American prisoners, including pilots captured while bombing North Vietnam." In other words, Kerry and his VVAW advocated the communist line to withdraw all U.S. troops from Vietnam first and then negotiate with Hanoi over the release of prisoners. Had the nine points of the "People's Peace Treaty" favored by Kerry been accepted by American negotiators, the United States would have totally lost all leverage to get the communists to release any POWs captured during the war years.
Kerry was fundamental in organizing antiwar activists to demonstrate in Washington, including the splattering of red paint, representing blood, on the Capitol steps. Several hundred of Kerry's VVAW demonstrators and supporters were allowed by Fulbright to jam into a Senate Foreign Relations Committee hearing in 1972 and to chant "Right on, brother!" as Sen. George McGovern (D-SD), then the only declared Democratic presidential candidate, accused U.S. troops of committing barbarisms in Vietnam.
Kerry became even more of a press celebrity during a highly publicized "anti-war" protest when he threw medals the press reported were his over a barricade and onto the steps of the Capitol. Kerry never mentioned that the medals he so gloriously tossed were not his own. The 1988 issue of Current Biography Yearbook explained: " . . . the ones he had discarded were not his own but had belonged to another veteran who asked him to make the gesture for him. When a 'Washington Post' reporter asked Kerry about the incident, he said: 'They're my medals. I'll do what I want with them. And there shouldn't be any expectations about them.'" Kerry's medals have reappeared, today hanging in his Senate office, now that it is "politically correct" for a U.S. Senator to be portrayed as a Vietnam War hero. Alas, so much for integrity.
Attorney General Ramsey Clark, photo by George Butler.
Another perspective:
9
posted on
05/24/2003 12:16:13 AM PDT
by
Wolverine
To: Wolverine
Bump
To: Wolverine
11
posted on
05/24/2003 12:46:00 AM PDT
by
ALS
(ConservaBabes.com - Home of ConservaBotâ„¢)
To: Wild Irish Rogue
Some freepers say they can remember seeing photos and or a video of Kerry throwing his medals/ribbons/bridle over the White House fence.We need to find those pictures and get them front and center.They may be thinking of this. You have to scroll down a little more than half-way to get to this interesting section:
Kerry Turned War Protester And Politician
After Kerry was awarded the Silver Star, he found it advantageous to quit the Navy, and become a leader organizing opposition in America against the Vietnam War.
He was fundamental in organizing antiwar activists to demonstrate in Washington, including the splattering of red paint, representing blood, on the Capitol steps.
Kerry became even more of a press celebrity during a highly publicized "antiwar" protest when he threw medals the press reported were his over a barricade and onto the steps of the Capitol.
Kerry never mentioned that the medals he so gloriously tossed were not his own.
The 1988 issue of Current Biography Yearbook explained:
" . . . the ones he had discarded were not his own but had belonged to another veteran who asked him to make the gesture for him. When a `Washington Post' reporter asked Kerry about the incident, he said: `They're my medals. I'll do what I want with them. And there shouldn't be any expectations about them.'"
Kerry's medals have reappeared, today hanging in his Senate office, now that it is "politically correct" for an U.S. Senator to be portrayed as a Vietnam War hero.
In 1991, the United States Senate created the Senate Select Committee on POW/MIA Affairs to examine the possibility that U.S. POW/MIAs might still be held by the Vietnamese.
Caption: Sen. John Kerry (D-MA), left, gestures under a bust of Ho Chi Minh, during a Nov. 1994 meeting in Hanoi with Do Muoi, general secretary of the Communist Party of Vietnam. In 1955, as a leader in the communist land reform movement, Muoi helped annihilate Vietnam's middle-class landowners. Over 50,000 Vietnamese landowners were murdered that year, making it one of the bloodiest periods in Vietnam's history.
[story continues]
-PJ
To: Rennes Templar
I think Kerry's posturing as being soldierly will go about as well as it did for Dukakis. Behold...
What'd I tell ya??
-Jay
13
posted on
05/24/2003 1:56:39 AM PDT
by
Jay D. Dyson
(When the smoke cleared, the terrorist was over there...and over there...and over there...)
To: Wolverine
How can a dirtbag with this much antimilitary baggage,think he can skate by and no one will notice??? The book and the cover alone,should be sending his PR flacks for the Maalox.We need to keep this front and center.
To: Rennes Templar
bump
15
posted on
09/02/2003 4:36:33 PM PDT
by
John Lenin
(Cowards die many times before their deaths, The valiant never taste of death but once.)
To: Rennes Templar
bttt
To: Becki
These pictures remind me of our young Tal-i-ban John, now in prison. Could his reading material have been JFKerry's book the "THE NEW SOLDIER"?
To: Wolverine
18
posted on
02/12/2004 4:43:11 AM PST
by
RottiBiz
To: Just mythoughts
I have been trying to find a copy of the New Soldier, but it seems the Kerry Anti-Defamation League has burned every copy... Is that true?
Does anyone have a copy they can publish (illegally) on the web so that everyone can get a preview of what this Traitor is all about?
Thanks
To: Rennes Templar
Did he burn the flag? I've heard that he did.
20
posted on
08/15/2004 6:53:05 PM PDT
by
narses
(If you want ON or OFF my Catholic Ping List email me. +)
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first 1-20, 21-22 next last
Disclaimer:
Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual
posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its
management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the
exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson