McCain and Rolling Thunder 
War Hero or War Criminal?
_http://www.counterphttp://ww_ (http://www.counterpunch.org/) 

By ROBERT RICHTER 

As character assassination attacks on Sen. Barack Obama have now taken  over 
Sen. John McCain's campaign, and because McCain cites his military  experience 
as of prime importance, now is the time to focus closer attention on  a facet 
of the Arizona Senator's own character. This is related to his 23 combat  
missions for Operation Rolling Thunder - the Pentagon's name for U.S. bombing 
of  
North Vietnam.

I will never forget how stunned I was when Gen.  Telford Taylor, a chief U.S. 
prosecutor at the Nuremberg trials after World War  Two, told me that he 
strongly supported the idea of trying the U.S. pilots  captured in North 
Vietnam 
as war criminals - and that he would be proud to lead  in their prosecution. 

An ardent opponent of the Vietnam conflict,  Taylor spoke with me in the fall 
of 1966 when I was looking into producing a  documentary on this controversy 
for CBS News, where I was their National  Political Editor. While he did not 
mention any pilot's name, then U.S. Navy  Lieut. Commander John McCain who was 
captured a year later, would have been  among the group Taylor wanted to 
prosecute.

Why would anyone have  wanted to prosecute McCain and the other captured 
pilots? Taylor's argument was  that their actions were in violation of the 
Geneva 
conventions that specifically  forbid indiscriminate bombing that could cause 
incidental loss of civilian life  or damage to civilian objects. Adding to the 
Geneva code, he noted, was the  decision at the Nuremberg trials after World 
War Two: military personnel cannot  defend themselves against such a charge 
with a claim that they were simply  following orders. 

There were questions raised about whether the  Geneva conventions applied to 
the pilots, since there had been no formal  declaration of war by the U.S. 
against the Hanoi regime - and the Geneva rules  presumably are only in force 
in 
a “declared” war.

Anti-war critics  at the time claimed that despite the Pentagon's assertion 
that only military  targets were bombed, U.S. pilots also had bombed hospitals 
and other civilian  targets, a charge that turned out to be correct and was 
confirmed by the New  York Times' chief foreign correspondent, Harrison 
Salisbury. 

In  late 1966 Salisbury described the widespread devastation of civilian  
neighborhoods around Hanoi by American bombs: "Bomb damage...extends over an  
area of probably a mile or so on both sides of the highway...small villages and 
 
hamlets along the route [were] almost obliterated.In  lat 

Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara conceded some years later  that more 
than a million deaths and injuries occurred in northern Vietnam each  year from 
1965 to 1968, as a result of the 800 tons of bombs a day dropped by  our pilots.

In one of his autobiographies McCain wrote that he was  going to bomb a power 
station in “a heavily populated part of Hanoi” when he was  shot down.
If Gen. Taylor tried McCain, would he have defended himself as  “just 
following orders” despite the Geneva conventions barring that kind of  bombing 
and 
the Nuremberg principles negating “just following orders?“  

The targets McCain and his fellow pilots actually bombed in  Vietnam and his 
justification then or now for the actions that led to his  capture, are no 
longer simply old news. They are part of what must be taken into  account 
today, 
as voters weigh support for him or Obama to be the next President  of the 
United States. 

This is not about the hugely unpopular war  in Vietnam. It is about the 
character of a man who seeks to be U.S. President,  who perhaps was not simply 
a 
brave warrior, but a warrior who by his own  admission, bombed and was ready to 
bomb targets in violation of the Geneva  conventions and Nuremberg principles.
_____
When I passed along Gen.  Taylor's comments to my network superiors the 
program was scrapped: too hot to  handle. Instead Air War Over the North was 
telecast, about “precision bombing”  North Vietnam military targets by U.S. 
pilots. 
A few years after that broadcast,  a Pentagon public information executive 
gleefully told Roger Mudd in The Selling  of the Pentagon that he, the Pentagon 
official, not only had persuaded CBS to  produce Air War Over the North, he 
even chose those to be interviewed and  coached them about what they should 
say. 
This unethical collaboration and  intercession by the Pentagon in the news 
media is sadly all too familiar a  tactic repeated in the Bush-Cheney years.

Robert Richter was  political director for CBS News from 1965 to 1968. 
_http://www.counterphttp://ww_ (http://www.counterpunch.org/) 






**************New MapQuest Local shows what's happening at your destination.  
Dining, Movies, Events, News & more. Try it out 
(http://local.mapquest.com/?ncid=emlcntnew00000002)

--~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Black Focus Inc." group.
To post to this group, send email to [email protected]
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/Black-Focus-Inc?hl=en
-~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---

Reply via email to