February 11, 2004

CAN'T WE ALL JUST GET ALONG (via John Resnick & ef brown):

Letters to the Editor: 'Bush and I were lieutenants' (COL. WILLIAM CAMPENNI (retired), U.S. Air Force/Air National Guard, Washington Times)

George Bush and I were lieutenants and pilots in the 111th Fighter Interceptor Squadron (FIS), Texas Air National Guard (ANG) from 1970 to 1971. We had the same flight and squadron commanders (Maj. William Harris and Lt. Col. Jerry Killian, both now deceased). While we were not part of the same social circle outside the base, we were in the same fraternity of fighter pilots, and proudly wore the same squadron patch.

It is quite frustrating to hear the daily cacophony from the left and Sen. John Kerry, Massachusetts Democrat, et al., about Lt. Bush escaping his military responsibilities by hiding in the Texas ANG. In the Air Guard during the Vietnam War, you were always subject to call-up, as many Air National Guardsmen are finding out today. If the 111th FIS and Lt. Bush did not go to Vietnam, blame President Johnson and Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara, not lowly Lt. Bush. They deliberately avoided use of the Guard and Reserves for domestic political calculations, knowing that a draftee only stirred up the concerns of one family, while a call-up got a whole community's attention.

The mission of the 147th Fighter Group and its subordinate 111th FIS, Texas ANG, and the airplane it possessed, the F-102, was air defense. It was focused on defending the continental United States from Soviet nuclear bombers. The F-102 could not drop bombs and would have been useless in Vietnam. A pilot program using ANG volunteer pilots in F-102s (called Palace Alert) was scrapped quickly after the airplane proved to be unsuitable to the war effort. Ironically, Lt. Bush did inquire about this program but was advised by an ANG supervisor (Maj. Maurice Udell, retired) that he did not have the desired experience (500 hours) at the time and that the program was winding down and not accepting more volunteers.

If you check the 111th FIS records of 1970-72 and any other ANG squadron, you will find other pilots excused for career obligations and conflicts. The Bush excusal in 1972 was further facilitated by a change in the unit's mission, from an operational fighter squadron to a training squadron with a new airplane, the F-101, which required that more pilots be available for full-time instructor duty rather than part-time traditional reservists with outside employment.

The winding down of the Vietnam War in 1971 provided a flood of exiting active-duty pilots for these instructor jobs, making part-timers like Lt. Bush and me somewhat superfluous. There was a huge glut of pilots in the Air Force in 1972, and with no cockpits available to put them in, many were shoved into nonflying desk jobs. Any pilot could have left the Air Force or the Air Guard with ease after 1972 before his commitment was up because there just wasn't room for all of them anymore.

Sadly, few of today's partisan pundits know anything about the environment of service in the Reserves in the 1970s.


Photo of Kerry with Fonda enrages Vietnam veterans (Stephen Dinan, February 11, 2004, THE WASHINGTON TIMES)
A photograph of John Kerry together with Jane Fonda at an anti-Vietnam War rally in 1970 in Pennsylvania has surfaced on the Internet, angering veterans who say his association with her 34 years ago is a slap in the faces of Vietnam War veterans.

The photograph, taken at a Labor Day rally at Valley Forge, has been circulating across the Internet, particularly among veterans. It was posted Monday on the NewsMax.com Web site.

Mr. Kerry spoke at the 1970 rally, the culmination of a three-day protest hike from Moorestown, N.J., to Valley Forge, which featured a speech by Miss Fonda and a reading by Hollywood actor Donald Sutherland.


Couldn't we all just agree that Mr. Bush's service was less edifying than Mr. Kerry's in the 60s and Mr. Kerry's foreign policy since that time has been disgraceful?


MORE:
John Kerry: A Navy Dove Runs for Congress (SAMUEL Z. GOLDHABER, February 18, 1970, Harvard Crimson)

At Yale, Kerry was chairman of the Political Union and later, as Commencement speaker, urged the United States to withdraw from Vietnam and to scale down foreign military operations. And this was way back in 1966.

When he approached his draft board for permission to study for a year in Paris, the draft board refused and Kerry decided to enlist in the Navy. The Navy assigned him to the USS Gridley which between December 1966 and July 1968 saw four months of action off the Vietnam coast. In August through November, 1968, Kerry was trained to be the skipper of a patrol boat for Vietnamese rivers. For the next five months, until April of 1969, Kerry was the commanding Lieutenant of a patrol boat in the Mekong Delta. He was wounded slightly on three different occasions and received a Silver Star for bravery. His patrol boat took part in Operation Sealords, mostly scouting out Viet Cong villages and transporting South Vietnamese marines to various destinations up and down narrow rivers covered with heavy foliage on either side. One time Kerry was ordered to destroy a Viet Cong village but disobeyed orders and suggested that the Navy Command simply send in a Psychological Warfare team to be friend the villagers with food, hospital supplies, and better educational facilities.

Immediate withdrawal from Vietnam, Kerry said, would take about seven months due to complex logistics problems. During that interval he would allow only "self-defense return of fire." "Logistic suport is now what Nixon is talking about leaving there and I don't want to see that. I don't think we should leave support troops there and I don't think we should give Vietnam any more than the foreign aid given any other one country." He does not feel there would be a massive slaughter of American, sympathizers once the United States pulled out.

In America, "everybody who's against the war is suddenly considered anti-American," Kerry said. "But I don't think they can turn to me and say I don't know what's going on or I'm a draft dodger." Referring to the House Armed Services Committee, chaired by L. Mendel Rivers (D-S.C.), Kerry said, "I want to go down to Washington and confront Medel Rivers, who never fought in a war.

"I as effectively as anyone else in the country, can address myself to the issue of Vietnam," Kerry said. "I'm very realistic, though. I'm just going to be one man adding to the work of men like Lowenstein."

Kerry is a pilot, and on October 14 and 15 he flew Ted Kennedy's advisor Adam Walinsky by private plane throughout the State of New York so that Walinsky could give speeches against the Vietnam War. But Kerry was smart enough not to put down "Moratorium" on the Navy signout sheet for that Tuesday and Wednesday. The following month, Kerry was sick and did not engage in the November moratorium activities.

He supports a volunteer Army, "if and only if we can create the controls for it. You're going to have to prepare for the possibility of a national emergency, however." Kerry said that the United Nations should have control over most of our foreign military operations. "I'm an internationalist. I'd like to see our troops dispersed through the world only at the directive of the United Nations."

On other issues, Kerry wants "to almost eliminate CIA activity. The CIA is fighting its own war in Laos and nobody seems to care." He also favors a negative income tax and keeping unemployment at a very low level, "even if it means selective economic controls." [...]

Kerry's style can turn people off at first because he gives the initial impression of being too good to be true, of being just a little bit insincere.

Posted by Orrin Judd at February 11, 2004 5:49 PM
Comments

Let me just get this straight: is the rule of law optional when it comes to a popular Republican president? Because Exhibit A in your case against Kerry's "disgraceful" foreign policy seems to be his opposing illegal arms shipments to the Contras, and vigorously investigating willful lawbreaking on the part of the executive branch.

But this is of a part with your support for Bush's unprincipled acts, e.g. exaggerating about Iraqi WMDs, as well as your forgiveness of his inability to articulate policy goals in a way that actually draws popular support. (Much like Reagan -- if the American people were so pro-Contra, why couldn't Reagan get Congress to untie his hands?) The ends apparently do justify the means.

Posted by: Charlie Murtaugh at February 11, 2004 8:01 PM

Charles:

Read Jeffrey Toobin's book about his stint with Lawrence Walsh--even they considered the Boland Amendment to be unconstitutional. In fact, no one was ever so much as accused of illegally supplying the contras because it was not illegal.

But I was referring to his entire record--Vietnam, Cambodia, Grenada, Nicaragua, the freeze, SDI, Iraq--he's always on the side of the totalitarians.

Posted by: oj at February 11, 2004 8:05 PM

And just think -- someday both those crazy kids in that photo would grow up and marry billionaires...

Posted by: John at February 11, 2004 8:42 PM

This whole issue makes my head spin. Are the Democrats and the media serious? I thought they rather conclusively established with Clinton that having served in the military wasn't relevant. Even Kerry said so, and I have heard from somewhere that he served in Vietnam.

Posted by: brian at February 11, 2004 11:50 PM

Speaking of relevance, didn't we learn from the media in the Clinton years that truth is, frankly, not that relevant? (" I did not have ..... ") And this irrelevance didn't need thirty years distance to warrant its status, less than 12 months would appear to suffice.

As such, we can expect Kerry's complete flip-flop within the last 2 years on (so-called) gay marriage will be . . . um . . . irrelevant.

Posted by: John Resnick at February 12, 2004 12:37 AM

"one time Kerry was ordered to destroy a Viet Cong village but disobeyed orders"

Punk! The other Kerry (one from Nebraska) followed orders. If this anecdote is accurate (OK it's probably not true) then you get a glimmer of the low morale that existed in the military at that time.

Posted by: h-man at February 12, 2004 6:46 AM
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