google it Larry, its full of info for ya

  "We resent very deeply the false war crimes charges he made coming back from 
Vietnam in 1971 and repeated in the book "Tour of Duty." We think those cast an 
aspersion on all those living and dead, from our unit and other units in 
Vietnam. We think that he knew he was lying when he made the charges, and we 
think that they're unsupportable. We intend to bring the truth about that to 
the American people. We believe, based on our experience with him, that he is 
totally unfit to be the Commander-in-Chief." 
-- John O'Neill, spokesman, Swift Boat Veterans for Truth 

"I do not believe John Kerry is fit to be Commander-in-Chief of the armed 
forces of the United States. This is not a political issue. It is a matter of 
his judgment, truthfulness, reliability, loyalty and trust -- all absolute 
tenets of command. His 
bio graphy, 'Tour of Duty,' by Douglas Brinkley, is replete with gross 
exaggerations, distortions of fact, contradictions and slanderous lies. His 
contempt for the military and authority is evident by even a most casual review 
of this biography. He arrived in-country with a strong anti-Vietnam War bias 
and a self-serving determination to build a foundation for his political 
future. He was aggressive, but vain and prone to impulsive judgment, often with 
disregard for specific tactical assignments. He was a 'loose cannon.' In an 
abbreviated tour of four months and 12 days, and with his specious medals 
secure, Lt.(jg) Kerry bugged out and began his infamous betrayal of all United 
States forces in the Vietnam War. That included our soldiers, our marines, our 
sailors, our coast guardsmen, our airmen, and our POWs. His leadership within 
the so-called Vietnam Veterans Against the War and testimony before Congress in 
1971 charging us with unspeakable atrocities remain an undocumented but nevert 
heless meticulous stain on the men and women who honorably stayed the course. 
Senator Kerry is not fit for command." 
-- Rear Admiral Roy Hoffman, USN (retired), chairman, Swift Boat Veterans for 
Truth 
..
"During Lt.(jg) Kerry's tour, he was under my command for two or three specific 
operations, before his rapid exit. Trust, loyalty and judgment are the key, 
operative words. His turncoat performance in 1971 in his grubby shirt and his 
medal-tossing escapade, coupled with his slanderous lines in the recent book 
portraying us that served, including all POWs and MIAs, as murderous war 
criminals, I believe, will have a lasting effect on all military veterans and 
their families. 
Kerry would be described as devious, self-absorbing, manipulative, disdain for 
authority, disruptive, but the most common phrase that you'd hear is 'requires 
constant supervision.'" 
-- Captain Charles Plumly, USN (retired) 
..
"Thirty-five years ago, many of us fell silent when we came back to the stain 
of sewage that Mr. Kerry had thrown on us, and all of our colleagues who served 
over there. I don't intend to be silent today or ever again. Our young men and 
women who are serving deserve no less." 
-- Andrew Horne 
..
"In my specific, personal experience in both coastal and river patrols over a 
12-month period, I never once saw or heard anything remotely resembling the 
atrocities described by Senator Kerry. If I had, it would have been my 
obligation to report them in writing to a higher authority, and I would 
certainly have done that. If Senator Kerry actually witnessed or participated 
in these atrocities or, as he described them, 'war crimes,' he was obligated to 
report them. That he did not until later when it suited his political purposes 
strikes me as opportunism of the worst kind. That he would malign my service 
and that of his fellow sailors with no regard for the truth makes him totally 
unqualified to serve as commander-in-Chief." 
-- Jeffrey Wainscott 
..
"I signed that letter because I, too felt a deep sense of betrayal that someone 
who took the same oath of loyalty as I did as an officer in the United States 
Navy would abandon his group here (points to group photo) to join this group 
here (points to VVAW protest photo), and come home and attempt to rally the 
American public against the effort that this group was so valiantly pursuing. 
It is a fact that in the entire Vietnam War we did not lose one major battle. 
We lost the war at home... and at home, John Kerry was the Field General." 
-- Robert Elder 
..
"My daughters and my wife have read portions of the book 'Tour of Duty.' They 
wanted to know if I took part in the atrocities described. I do not believe the 
things that are described happened. Let me give you an example. In Brinkley's 
book, on pages 170 to 171, about something called the 'Bo De massacre' on 
November 24th of 1968... In Kerry's description of the engagement, first he 
claimed there were 17 servicemen that were wounded. Three of us were wounded. I 
was the first..." -- Joseph Ponder 
..
"While in Cam Rahn Bay, he trained on several 24-hour indoctrination missions, 
and one special skimmer operation with my most senior and trusted Lieutenant. 
The briefing from some members of that crew the morning after revealed that 
they had not received any enemy fire, and yet Lt.(jg) Kerry informed me of a 
wound -- he showed me a scratch on his arm and a piece of shrapnel in his hand 
that appeared to be from one of our own M-79s. It was later reported to me that 
Lt.(jg) Kerry had fired an M-79, and it had exploded off the adjacent 
shoreline. I do not recall being advised of any medical treatment, and probably 
said something like 'Forget it.' He later received a Purple Heart for that 
scratch, and I have no information as to how or whom. Lt.(jg) Kerry was allowed 
to return to the good old USA after 4 months and a few days in-country, and 
then he proceeded to betray his forme r shipmates, calling them criminals who 
were committing atrocities. Today we are here to tell you that just the 
opposite is true. Our rules of engagement were quite strict, and the officers 
and men of Swift often did not even return fire when they were under fire if 
there was a possibility that innocent people -- fishermen, in a lot of cases -- 
might be hurt or injured. The rules and the good intentions of the men 
increased the possibility that we might take friendly casualties." 
-- Commander Grant Hibbard, USN (retired) 
..
"Lt. Kerry returned home from the war to make some outrageous statements and 
allegations... of numerous criminal acts in violation of the law of war were 
cited by Kerry, disparaging those who had fought with honor in that conflict. 
Had war crimes been committed by US forces in Vietnam? Yes, but such acts were 
few and far between. Yet Lt. Kerry have numerous speeches and testimony before 
Congress inappropriately leading his audiences to believe tha t what was only 
an anomaly in the conduct of America's fighting men was an epidemic. 
Furthermore, he suggested that they were being encouraged to violated the law 
of war by those within the chain of command. Very specific orders, on file at 
the Vietnam archives at Texas Tech University, were issued by my father 
[Admiral Elmo Zumwalt] and others in his chain of command instructing 
subordinates to act responsibly in preserving the life and property of 
Vietnamese civilians." 
-- Lt. Col. James Zumwalt, USMC (retired) 
..
"We look at Vietnam... after all these years it is still languishing in 
isolated poverty and helplessness and tyranny. This is John Kerry's legacy. I 
deeply resent John Kerry's using his Swift boat experience, and his betrayal of 
those who fought there as a stepping-stone to his political ambitions." 
-- Barnard Wolff 
..
"In a whole year that I spent patrolling, I didn't see anything like a war 
crime, an atrocity, anything like that. Time and again I saw American fighting 
men put themselves in graver danger trying to avoid... collateral damage. When 
John Kerry returned to the country, he was sworn in front of Congress. And then 
he told my family -- my parents, my sister, my brother, my neighbors -- he told 
everyone I knew and everyone I'd ever know that I and my comrades had 
committed unspeakable atrocities." 
-- David Wallace 
..
"I served with these guys. I went on missions with them, and these men served 
honorably. Up and down the chain of command there was no acquiescence to 
atrocities. It was not condoned, it did not happen, and it was not reported to 
me verbally or in writing by any of these men including Lt.(jg) Kerry. In 1971, 
'72, for almost 18 months, he stood before the television audiences and claimed 
that the 500,000 men and women in Vietnam, and in combat, were all villains -- 
there were no heroes. In 2004, one hero from the Vietnam War has appeared, 
running for President of the United States and Commander-in-Chief. It just 
galls one to think about it." 
-- Captain George Elliott, USN (retired) 
..
"During the Vietnam War I was Task Force Commander at An Thoi, and my tour of 
duty was 13 months, from the end of Tet to the beginning of the vietnamization 
of the Navy units. Now when I went there right after Tet, I was restricted in 
my movements. I couldn't go much of anyplace because the Vietcong controlled 
most of the area. When I left, I could go anywhere I wanted, just about. 
Commerce was booming, the buses were running, trucks were going, the waterways 
were filled with sampans with goods going to market, but yet in Kerry's 
biography he says that our operations were a complete failure. He also mentions 
a formal conference with me, to try to get more air cover and so on. That 
conference never happened..." -- Captain Adrian Lonsdale, USCG (retired) .

"I was in An Thoi from June of '68 to June of '69, covering the whole period 
that John Kerry wa s there. I operated in every river, in every canal, and 
every off-shore patrol area in the 4th Corps area, from Cambodia all the way 
around to the Bo De River. I never saw, even heard of all of these so-called 
atrocities and things that we were supposed to have done. This is not true. 
We're not standing for it. We want to set the record straight." 
-- William Shumadine 

"In 1971, when John Kerry spoke out to America, labeling all Vietnam veterans 
as thugs and murderers, I was shocked and almost brought to my knees, because 
even though I had served at the same time and same unit, I had never witnessed 
or participated in any of the events that the Senator had accused us of. I 
strongly believe that the statements made by the Senator were not only false 
and inaccurate, but extremely harmful to the United States' efforts in 
Southeast Asia and the rest of the world. Tragically, some veterans, scorned by 
the antiwar movement and their allies, retreated to a life of despair and sui 
cide. Two of my crewmates were among them. For that there is no forgiveness. " 
-- Richard O'Meara 
..
"My name is Steve Gardner. I served in 1966 and 1967 on my first tour of duty 
in Vietnam on Swift boats, and I did my second tour in '68 and '69, involved 
with John Kerry in the last 2 1/2 months of my tour. The John Kerry that I know 
is not the John Kerry that everybody else is portraying. I served alongside him 
and behind him, five feet away from him in a gun tub, and watched as he made 
indecisive moves with our boat, put our boats in jeopardy, put our crews in 
jeopardy... if a man like that can't handle that 6-man crew boat, how can you 
expect him to be our Commander-in-Chief?" 
-- Steven Gardner 
..
"I served in Vietnam as a boat officer from June of 1968 to July of 1969. My 
service was three months in Coastal Division 13 out of Cat Lo, and nine months 
with Coastal Division 11 based in An Thoi. John Kerry was in An Thoi the same 
time I was. I'm here today to e xpress the anger I have harbored for over 33 
years, about being accused with my fellow shipmates of war atrocities. All I 
can say is when I leave here today, I'm going down to the Wall to tell my two 
crew members it's not true, and that they and the other 49 Swiftees who are on 
the Wall were then and are still now the best." 
-- Robert Brant 
..
"I never saw, heard of, or participated in any Swift boat crews killing cattle, 
poisoning crops, or raping and killing civilians as charged by John Kerry, both 
in his book and in public statements. Since we both operated at the same time, 
in the same general area, and on the same missions under the same commanders, 
it is hard to believe his claims of atrocities and poor planning of Sea Lord 
missions. I signed this letter because I feel that he used Swift boat sailors 
to proclaim his antiwar statements after the war, and now he uses the same 
Swift boat sailors to support his claims of being a war hero. He cannot have it 
both ways, an d we are here to ask for full disclosure of the proof of his 
claims." 
-- James Steffes 

----------------------------------------
From: "Larry C. Lyons" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Tuesday, April 12, 2005 8:41 AM
To: CF-Community <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: America's Insurgents 

So give some legitimate citations instead of personal insults. Wall
Street Journal, LA Herald, Seattle Times, Washington Post or the
Washington Times would be a good starter.

Otherwise for all we know Without an independent source how do we
know that you are not simply spewing bullshit.

On Apr 11, 2005 10:50 PM, dave  wrote:
> If it means that much to you, then I am sure you can google it and find it.
> 
> So anything you don't read or listen to must be a "propaganda" station?
> 
> 
> 



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