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Sen. Kerry: Where Were You on the Night of September 10th, 2001?
www.crushkerry.com ^ | 4/9/04 | www.crushkerry.com

Posted on 04/09/2004 12:28:12 PM PDT by crushkerry

Senator John Kerry has made much of President George W. Bush’s August, 2001 vacation in Crawford, TX, implying he could have prevented the 9-11 attacks if he was in Washington. However, August is traditionally recess time in our national Capitol, a time during which most politicians head home to get some rest or politic among the locals.

Indeed, we find John Kerry’s attack on President Bush oddly ironic, considering the liberal Senator from Massachusetts’ movements during the weeks before that tragic day.

For example, on September 10th, 2001, John Kerry was in Boston, MA receiving something called the Christian Herter Award. Upon receiving the award, Kerry gave a speech that, though containing numerous references to foreign policy, said little to nothing about terrorism. It’s important to remember Sen. Holier-Than-Thou served on the Senate Intelligence committee at the time and presumably had access to the various threatening documents being bandied about these days by the 9-11 Commission.

Instead of alerting the American people to what he may well have known about terrorist threats, Kerry instead droned on about “greenhouse gasses,” the Bush administration’s “isolationism” and warned darkly (surprise!) about Saddam Hussein.

Ironically, Kerry also talked about his own father’s prescience with respect to World War II. “My father saw World War II coming before many of the policy makers in Washington, and he was proud throughout his life that he'd volunteered to fly DC-3's in the Army Air Corps,” he said. This as he was actively ignorant of the clues many in his own party now claim were as plain as the nose on his face, or in Sen. Kerry’s case, his jaw.

Kerry did make a passing reference to terrorism in his speech, though. Toward the end, he implies if we were just nicer to China and Russia, we wouldn’t have to worry about it.

Later that night, Kerry was the honored guest at a dinner honoring KEVRIC Company’s founder David Allen in New Bedford, MA. Again, Kerry’s address was devoid of any mention of al Qaida terror threats, which were by that time only hours away.

And what about that August recess? We know President Bush was in Crawford, TX, presumably picking lint out of his belly button, cleaning his ear out with a pen cap and generally ignoring threats of terrorism. Where was Senator Everyone-Is-Stupid-Except-Me? Why he was gallivanting with the Clintons on Martha’s Vineyard . Were the former President and high-level Democrat on the Senate Intelligence Committee devising a plan to thwart the evildoers? Um, no. They were discussing John Kerry’s future plans to run for President of the United States.

Here at Crushkerry.com, we don’t really blame John Kerry for the terror strikes on September 11th, 2001. We don’t blame George W. Bush, either. Rather, we blame the terrorists. Did our intelligence apparatus break down? Of course. But playing the blame game could easily backfire against the Democrat nominee for President.


TOPICS: Editorial; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: 2004; kerry; kerryrecord
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1 posted on 04/09/2004 12:28:13 PM PDT by crushkerry
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To: crushkerry
Kerry no doubt is also worthy of the "Christian Hurter" award.
2 posted on 04/09/2004 12:29:52 PM PDT by Petronski (I'm not always cranky.)
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To: crushkerry
Kerry thought CO2 was more dangerous in the short run than al Qaeda. Not too smart.



3 posted on 04/09/2004 12:31:51 PM PDT by Diogenesis (If you mess with one of us, you mess with all of us)
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4 posted on 04/09/2004 12:32:17 PM PDT by Support Free Republic (Your support keeps Free Republic going strong!)
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To: crushkerry
bump.
5 posted on 04/09/2004 12:36:44 PM PDT by js1138 (In a minute there is time, for decisions and revisions which a minute will reverse. J Forbes Kerry)
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To: crushkerry
Instead of alerting the American people to what he may well have known about terrorist threats, Kerry instead droned on about ?greenhouse gasses,?

I think he was expelling "greenhouse gasses".

6 posted on 04/09/2004 12:43:54 PM PDT by Paleo Conservative (Do not remove this tag under penalty of law.)
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To: crushkerry
It's important to remember Sen. Holier-Than-Thou served on the Senate Intelligence committee at the time and presumably had access to the various threatening documents being bandied about these days by the 9-11 Commission.

Should read:

It's important to remember Sen. Holier-Than-Thou served in Vietnam for four short months, wrote his own purple heart awards citations so he could get out of Nam early, departed Nam early and joined his pal, Hanoi Jane Fonda, in making false, malicious, treasonous, lying statements regarding his fellow soldiers, marines, sailors, and airmen in Vietnam. Sen. Holier-Than-Thou is a lying piece of s***, but you know that already. Oh, and remember, he is a Vietnam vet!

7 posted on 04/09/2004 12:47:10 PM PDT by RetiredArmy (We'll put a boot in your ass, it's the American Way! Toby Keith)
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To: Petronski
Christian Hurter.
Dang, you beat me to it!
8 posted on 04/09/2004 12:56:57 PM PDT by Redbob
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To: RetiredArmy; crushkerry; Diogenesis; js1138
Oh, and remember, he is a Vietnam vet!

Oh yes he was a member of the antiwar organization Vietnam Veterans Against the Vietnamese.

9 posted on 04/09/2004 12:58:25 PM PDT by Paleo Conservative (Do not remove this tag under penalty of law.)
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To: crushkerry
Gee. I didn't know that the Army Air Corps in WWII flew DC-3's, as John Kerry say's his dad did. I could've sworn they flew C-47's like my dad did in the CBI(China Burma India). Maybe his anti-military votes are because his daddy did'nt teach him aircraft identification.
10 posted on 04/09/2004 1:04:57 PM PDT by sitkaspruce
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To: crushkerry
"Christian Herter's lifetime reputation was as an internationalist, especially interested in improving political and economic relations with Europe."

"In 1968, the American Foreign Service Association established its Christian A. Herter Award to honor senior diplomats who speak out or otherwise challenge the status quo."

Well I see why Kerry won the award then. An award for diplomats who protest American status quo and suck up to Europe. BTW, the link to Kerry's speech from your article, where he was warning against Saddam Hussein on 9/10, has been deleted from the Kerry website. How convenient.

11 posted on 04/09/2004 1:17:34 PM PDT by Sender (Support Free Republic...become a monthly donor!)
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To: Paleo Conservative
if only his mother had believed in abortion
12 posted on 04/09/2004 1:22:51 PM PDT by kcamtx
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To: Paleo Conservative; RetiredArmy
John Kerry was in Vietnam?!
13 posted on 04/09/2004 1:23:24 PM PDT by Sloth (We cannot defeat foreign enemies of the Constitution if we yield to the domestic ones.)
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To: Petronski
Is the Christian Herter Award named for a PERSON or an ACT??
14 posted on 04/09/2004 1:30:25 PM PDT by Ann Archy (Abortion: The Human Sacrifice to the god of Convenience.)
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To: sitkaspruce
Dang you beat me. How about those DC 10 Tankers we have now and the old Boeing 707 tankers too? Wonder what Kerry thinks about them.
15 posted on 04/09/2004 1:31:36 PM PDT by Conspiracy Guy (I have joined the "More Than a Dollar Per Day Donor Club.")
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To: Sloth
He won the Viet Nam War in 3 months and came back home.
16 posted on 04/09/2004 1:32:20 PM PDT by Conspiracy Guy (I have joined the "More Than a Dollar Per Day Donor Club.")
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To: Conspiracy Guy
"He won the Viet Nam War in 3 months and came back home."

Was this before or after the tree invented the internet?

17 posted on 04/09/2004 1:50:47 PM PDT by knarf (A place where anyone can learn anything ... especially that which promotes clear thinking.)
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To: crushkerry
I heard an interesting rumor that he was buying plane tickets and box knives for some Saudi travelers and assisting them in transferring the funds to pay for these things.

It's just a rumor, there's no proof, but it's an interesting idea, isn't it? I think perhaps the man should answer the question straight out and quit evading the issue--did he or did he not do this? Until he presents some proof we can't know he didn't.
18 posted on 04/09/2004 1:52:20 PM PDT by Triple Word Score (Meretriciousness Everywhere.)
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To: knarf
The information dirt road was later.

Wheh Johnny Kerry came marching home from winning the Viet Nam War, desktops were mostly made of wood.
19 posted on 04/09/2004 1:53:36 PM PDT by Conspiracy Guy (I have joined the "More Than a Dollar Per Day Donor Club.")
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To: Sender
Address of Senator John F. Kerry Acceptance of Christian Herter Award Honoring Sen. John F. Kerry and Sen. John S. McCain
World Affairs Council
Boston, Massachusetts
September 10, 2001


It is a special privilege to be able to join you, and humbling for John and I to be - even in some small way -- connected to the memory of Christian Herter. A son of Massachusetts, Christian Herter was a committed internationalist who helped to shape a delicate balance from Versailles to the Marshall Plan and hold it together through what could have been so many breaking points in West Berlin, Cuba, and the Congo. He served so many presidents so ably, and succeeded because his mission never changed even as the men he served did. That mission was seared into him: at 25, on the day he enlisted in the foreign service, he learned that his brother Everett - one year his senior - had been killed by German shrapnel in WWI. Rather than shrink from that loss, rather than turn inward, Herter committed his life to the real work of making peace.

I learned a thing or two about that mission as I was growing up. Christian Herter saw his country in much the same light and lived his life in a manner much like my father. My father saw World War II coming before many of the policy makers in Washington, and he was proud throughout his life that he'd volunteered to fly DC-3's in the Army Air Corps. When he was diagnosed with tuberculosis at the end of 1943 the army sent him out west to Fitzjimmons Army base in Colorado to get well, and after the war my Dad joined the foreign service. I still remember walking the beaches of Normandy with him, and as a boy riding my bike through the Brandenburg Gates and from my surroundings coming to understand the difference between East and West., freedom and deprivation. I've thought a lot about those years and my father's generation a lot lately - I thought about it last year when he passed away after a long and courageous fight with cancer. I thought about the way my father saw this country - his sense of patriotism, his convictions about what defines us as Americans - his abiding conviction that a country worth fighting for in times of war is worth improving in times of peace -- and that creating peace can be as difficult as making war.

I am grateful for the way in which this award honors that legacy, that commitment to internationalism, and it's particularly a special privilege to share this honor with one of the most courageous men I know, John McCain. John and I took different paths to arrive at a common point - and together we've learned a lot of lessons about reconciliation, about our country, and about each other. We were just two of the young men who volunteered and put on the uniform to go across the ocean to Vietnam to fight for freedom, for human rights, and who hoped for democracy. We wanted to beat back communism and give the Vietnamese a chance to choose for themselves how they wanted to live.

Make no mistake, American intentions were noble, and no soldiers have ever fought with more bravery or selflessness for their country. But somewhere along the line, many of us came to believe that effort somehow twisted -- and that the lives of our fellow warriors were being wasted so that Cold Warriors in Washington would never have to admit their mistakes.

For those of us who were lucky, we returned home greeted not by parades, but with indifference and hostility. And as more of our brothers suffered and died in Vietnam, those on the left and right in this country and the communists in Vietnam tried to pit those who had worn the uniform and now opposed the war, against those who still supported it and who, on the battlefields and in prison cells in Hanoi, continued to serve with the greatest of valor. John McCain and I were caught up in that crossfire; put there by those who wanted the differences over the War to become the differences between two soldiers.

And when years later we came to the Senate, joining with our fellow vets to push our nation to confront the war's surplus of sad legacies-- PTSD, Agent Orange, Amer-Asian orphans, honor at last for those who returned from Vietnam and those who did not -- John and I found that in making peace with the war - we were making peace with each other.

When we began our work on the POW/MIA Committee, there was no permanent POW/MIA office in Hanoi or in Vietnam. No American servicemen were assigned to Vietnam on a permanent basis to search for remains and for answers to questions about American POWs. There was no archival research. There were precious few oral histories or interviews with key individuals in the military and none from those in the prison system. There was no access to the provinces, or the tradition houses and military museums in the villages. We could not visit their military headquarters or their military camps or their prisons.

That has all changed. Today, there is a permanent office in Hanoi. We have visited every tradition house and museum in the country. We have been in the prisons. We have followed up on every live sighting report, with no evidence that any of them are true. We have a full-time archive in Hanoi where Americans and Vietnamese are working side by side to resolve remaining questions. We have received millions of artifacts, photographs, and documents. American soldiers travel the countryside unaccompanied; we have permanent access to their defense library and archive; we have a formal program of debriefing Vietnamese wartime leaders. Young American soldiers have lived in the jungles, climbed up mountainsides, exposed themselves to danger to find remains. And we have found them - and we will not stop until that last mission is complete.

For nearly 20 years after American troops were lifted out of Saigon, the Vietnam War took a less bloody but equally hostile form. The U.S. and Vietnam had no diplomatic relations. Vietnamese assets were frozen. Trade was embargoed. Lingering bitterness and divisions precluded any initiatives that would change the status quo.

That too has all changed. Thanks to the courage of Presidents Reagan and Bush and Clinton, we lifted the trade embargo and normalized diplomatic relations with Vietnam in 1995; last week the House passed and we in the Senate will soon ratify a bilateral trade agreement that will one day help bring precious freedom and free markets to Vietnam. Vietnam is becoming a popular tourist stop for Americans. Vietnamese citizens study at U.S. universities, and American professors teach economics in Vietnam. Veterans take the emotional journey back to Vietnam. More than a third of the Vietnamese population is under the age of 14; 60% of their population under the age of 30; and last November I traveled to Vietnam with Bill Clinton as he became the first American President to return to Vietnam since the end of the War. I watched as Vietnamese citizens in crowds lining the streets of Hanoi five rows deep - reached out to touch the President of the United States, the living embodiment of freedom and democracy. Change will come in their lifetimes.

We say the word Vietnam today, and mean not just a war, but, a country -- at long last, a place where - as I hoped thirty years ago - "America turned and veterans helped in the turning" - and no veteran contributed more to that change than Captain John McCain.

That is why John is so deserving a recipient of an award named for a man who knew that the world is not fixed place - that differences can be bridged, that change -- change for the betterment of mankind - is not just a goal, it is a responsibility that must be pursued even when it's not popular. Herter learned that at Versailles when he tried to build a League of Nations. He learned it again when he worked with George Marshall to pass an unpopular plan to rebuild Europe. He understood that government has a responsibility to do something more than just cut taxes and that political capital exists to be spent on noble causes; that public office isn't an platform to brag that you don't have a passport, it brings with it a responsibility to use that passport and be America's eyes and ears around the globe; American leadership is more than a slogan, it is an ability to make the world better if you're willing to work at it.

Too few people in public life today understand that - and as a result the United States finds itself increasingly at odds with our closest friends and allies on a range of issues. In the last six months, the United States has walked away from a global effort to lead on greenhouse gas emissions where environmental leadership is needed; has abandoned efforts to stem the global flow of small arms, squandered an opportunity to convince North Korea to freeze their missile program, and has said no to formal negotiations with Russia in hopes of preserving the ABM Treaty.

There is no question that turning away from our allies and walking away will, over the long run, undermine our ability to promote our broad range of national interests. If we are unwilling to take into account the deep concerns of our friends and allies on critical issues including missile defense, it is foolish for us to continue to expect their support on issues where we can not go it alone. Efforts to contain Saddam Hussein and topple his regime in Baghdad, prevent the proliferation of weapons technology to hostile states, combat terrorism and stem the illegal flow of narcotics all require the close cooperation of our friends and allies in conjunction with key players including Russia and China. Before it's too late, we must take a hard look at whether our current path subverts our national interest to a rigid isolationism - and at what cost? The World Affairs Council performs an invaluable service in asking those questions - in promoting that dialogue -- and in preserving Christian Herter's legacy. But ultimately the real test of whether Herter's legacy will live on lies in the leadership we choose for our nation.

As for John McCain and I, we now live in a very different world than when we left for Vietnam, different still than when we returned home. But some things stay with you forever. We shared a journey of friendship that broke down the barriers between us and came to a special place when, together, I stood with John McCain in his prison cell in Hanoi. I have had no greater privilege in all my life than finding and then standing on common ground with John McCain.

When I was in the Navy I learned about brotherhood -- the promises soldiers make to each other. Those lessons were seared into me on a Swift Boat, beaten into John in a prison cell -- and together -- in unlikely places -- in the United States Senate and in Hanoi -- John McCain and I rediscovered that sense of brotherhood.

The Army says they never leave their wounded. The marines say they never leave even their dead. John McCain was a soldier under the toughest of circumstances; after his release from captivity, he found it in his heart to be a Citizen Soldier for his country -- and serving with him is a day after day reminder more powerful than words of why as Americans we must never leave each other behind.

Anyone count how many times Vietnam was mentioned in this speach?
20 posted on 04/09/2004 1:58:56 PM PDT by frankenMonkey
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