I
was on Mr. Kerry's boat in Vietnam. He doesn't deserve to be commander
in chief.
BY
JOHN O'NEILL
Tuesday, May 4,
200412:01
a.m. EDT
HOUSTON--In
1971, I debated John Kerry, then a national spokesman for the Vietnam
Veterans Against the War, for 90 minutes on "The Dick Cavett Show."
The key issue in that debate was Mr. Kerry's claim that American
troops were committing war crimes in Vietnam "on a day-to-day basis
with the full awareness of officers at all levels of command." Now, as
Sen. Kerry emerges as the presumptive Democratic nominee for the
presidency, I've chosen to re-enter the fray.
Like John
Kerry, I served in Vietnam as a Swift Boat commander. Ironically, John
Kerry and I served much of our time, a full 12 months in my case and a
controversial four months in his, commanding the exact same six-man
boat, PCF-94, which I took over after he requested early departure.
Despite our shared experience, I still believe what I believed 33
years ago--that John Kerry slandered America's military by inventing
or repeating grossly exaggerated claims of atrocities and war crimes
in order to advance his own political career as an antiwar activist.
His misrepresentations played a significant role in creating the
negative and false image of Vietnam vets that has persisted for over
three decades.
Neither I, nor
any man I served with, ever committed any atrocity or war crime in
Vietnam. The opposite was the truth. Rather than use excessive force,
we suffered casualty after casualty because we chose to refrain from
firing rather than risk injuring civilians. More than once, I saw
friends die in areas we entered with loudspeakers rather than guns.
John Kerry's accusations then and now were an injustice that struck at
the soul of anyone who served there.
During my 1971
televised debate with John Kerry, I accused him of lying. I urged him
to come forth with affidavits from the soldiers who had claimed to
have committed or witnessed atrocities. To date no such affidavits
have been filed. Recently, Sen. Kerry has attempted to reframe his
comments as youthful or "over the top." Yet always there has been a
calculated coolness to the way he has sought to destroy the record of
our honorable service in the interest of promoting his political
ambitions of the moment.
John Kennedy's
book, "Profiles in Courage," and Dwight Eisenhower's "Crusade in
Europe" inspired generations. Not so John Kerry, who has suppressed
his book, "The New Soldier," prohibiting its reprinting. There is a
clear reason for this. The book repeats John Kerry's insults to the
American military, beginning with its front-cover image of the
American flag being carried upside down by a band of bearded renegades
in uniform--a clear slap at the brave Marines in their combat gear who
raised our flag at Iwo Jima. Allow me the reprint rights to your book,
Sen. Kerry, and I will make sure copies of "The New Soldier" are
available in bookstores throughout America.
Vietnam was a
long time ago. Why does it matter today? Since the days of the Roman
Empire, the concept of military loyalty up and down the chain of
command has been indispensable. The commander's loyalty to the troops
is the price a commander pays for the loyalty of the troops in return.
How can a man be commander in chief who for over 30 years has accused
his "Band of Brothers," as well as himself, of being war criminals? On
a practical basis, John Kerry's breach of loyalty is a prescription of
disaster for our armed forces.
John Kerry's
recent admissions caused me to realize that I was most likely in
Vietnam dodging enemy rockets on the very day he met in Paris with
Madame Binh, the representative of the Viet Cong to the Paris Peace
Conference. John Kerry returned to the U.S. to become a national
spokesperson for the Vietnam Veterans Against the War, a radical
fringe of the antiwar movement, an organization set upon propagating
the myth of war crimes through demonstrably false assertions. Who was
the last American POW to die languishing in a North Vietnamese prison
forced to listen to the recorded voice of John Kerry disgracing their
service by his dishonest testimony before the Senate?
Since 1971, I
have refused many offers from John Kerry's political opponents to
speak out against him. My reluctance to become involved once again in
politics is outweighed now by my profound conviction that John Kerry
is simply not fit to be America's commander in chief. Nobody has
recruited me to come forward. My decision is the inevitable result of
my own personal beliefs and life experience.
Today, America
is engaged in a new war, against the militant Islamist terrorists who
attacked us on our own soil. Reasonable people may differ about how
best to proceed, but I'm sure of one thing--John Kerry is the wrong
man to put in charge.
Mr. O'Neill
served in Coastal Division 11 in 1969-70, winning two Bronze Stars and
additional decorations for his service in Vietnam.
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