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View Full Version : McCain: Hanoi Hilton Guards Taunted POWs With Kerry's Testimony



John Ashcroft
02-17-2004, 09:30 PM
These days, former Vietnam War POW Sen. John McCain has nothing but praise for his fellow Vietnam veteran Sen. John Kerry, the Democrats' current presidential front-runner.

But after he was released from the Hanoi Hilton in 1973, McCain publicly complained that testimony by Kerry and others before J. William Fulbright's Senate Foreign Relations Committee was "the most effective propaganda [my North Vietnamese captors] had to use against us."

"They used Senator Fulbright a great deal," McCain wrote in the May 14, 1973, issue of U.S. News & World Report. While he was languishing in a North Vietnamese prison cell, Kerry was telling the Fulbright committee that U.S. soldiers were committing war crimes in Vietnam as a matter of course.

Sen. Ted Kennedy, a key Kerry presidential backer, was "quoted again and again" by jailers at the Hanoi Hilton, McCain said.

"Clark Clifford was another [North Vietnamese] favorite," the ex-POW told U.S. News, "right after he had been Secretary of Defense under President Johnson."

"When Ramsey Clark came over [my jailers] thought that was a great coup for their cause," McCain recalled. Months earlier, Sen. Kerry had appeared with Clark at the April 1971 Washington, D.C., anti-war protest that showcased his testimony before the Fulbright Committee.

"All through this period," wrote McCain, his captors were "bombarding us with anti-war quotes from people in high places back in Washington. This was the most effective propaganda they had to use against us."

McCain biographer Paul Alexander chronicled the Arizona Republican's anger toward Kerry during their early careers in the Senate together.

"For many years McCain held Kerry's actions against him because, while McCain was a POW in the Hanoi Hilton, Kerry was organizing veterans back home in the U.S. to protest the war."

In his 2002 book, "Man of the People: The Life of John McCain," Alexander says that the two Vietnam vets finally reconciled in the early 1990s after having "a long - and at times emotional - conversation about Vietnam" during a mutual trip to Kuwait.

Later, Kerry sought to minimize the rift, telling Alexander: "Our differences occurred when we were kids, or at least close to being kids. It was a long time ago, and we both came back and realized that there were a lot of difficulties in the prosecution of that war."

NewsMax gratefully acknowledges the help of U.S. Veteran Dispatch editor Ted Sampley for supplying McCain's revealing 1973 account in U.S. News.

Link: here (http://www.newsmax.com/archives/ic/2004/2/17/124410.shtml)

FORD
02-17-2004, 09:42 PM
Sounds like McCain got over it, and he was there. Maybe it's time some others took notice.

I don't want Judas to be President either, but dwelling on this shit is ridiculous. If more people had protested the war in the years before, it's possible that McCain and many others would never have been shot down, imprisoned, or killed - in the case of 58,000 others.

I don't feel any guilt over the 500 + troops killed in Iraq, because I did all I could do to prevent it from happening. I do feel a shitload of anger about it though, especially since it was all based on a FUCKING LIE.

A lie which Kerry should have questioned, but did not. And THAT should be the issue. Not what he said in 1972.

BigBadBrian
02-17-2004, 10:08 PM
Originally posted by FORD


I don't feel any guilt over the 500 + troops killed in Iraq, because I did all I could do to prevent it from happening. I do feel a shitload of anger about it though, especially since it was all based on a FUCKING LIE.



Whose lie? Wild Bill's?


"Earlier today I ordered America's armed forces to strike military and security targets in Iraq. They are joined by British forces," Clinton said.

"Their mission is to attack Iraq's nuclear, chemical and biological weapons programs and its military capacity to threaten its neighbors," said Clinton.

You've stated previously FORD that Iraq hasn't had any WMD since Gulf War 1. Guess that makes President Molestor and algore liars too, huh?

;)

FORD
02-18-2004, 12:10 AM
I don't think it's any big surprise that the BCE controlled CIA didn't exactly have the best relationship with the Clinton Administration. Whatever "bad intelligence" Clinton had came from the CIA. I seem to remember something about a Chinese embassy getting hit in a bombing strike (Kosovo?) because the CIA furnished the wrong maps

lucky wilbury
02-18-2004, 01:31 AM
who said it was a mistake? it was around the time of the chinese nuke scandel and someone tell me why those "chinese journalist" were a: in the embassy b: why were they there are night? i bet no one can answer those with a straight face.

John Ashcroft
02-18-2004, 08:13 AM
I don't know Lucky, I think Ford actually keeps a straight face while writing all of his other conspiracy theories down... I think he's up to the challenge.