August 10, 2004
Fisking Rassman's WSJ op-ed in today's Wall Street Journal
From his op-ed in today's Wall Street Journal, Vietnam veteran Jim Rassman, who spoke eloquently for Sen. Kerry at the Democratic National Convention, now argues passionately against the SwiftVets who believe Sen. Kerry is unfit to be Commander in Chief:
This smear campaign has been launched by people without decency, people who don't understand the bond of those who serve in combat.
I see. None of the 250+ SwiftVets understand that bond. You and the small handful of other vets who travel from campaign appearance to campaign appearance with Sen. Kerry do, however exclusively. Those 250+ guys were just kind of standing around in Vietnam, and didn't really form any bonds, care about their wounded, care about their fellows who died. They don't understand. You and the veterans who do support Sen. Kerry have a monopoly on decency. Right.
Their new charges are false; their stories are fabricated, made up by people who did not serve with Kerry in Vietnam.
Again, I see. Your own quality time spent with John Kerry in Vietnam should instead be persuasive to us. And you tell us how much time that was, quite candidly:
I was not part of John Kerry's command. I was a Special Forces officer who happened to be on his boat at that time.
In fairness, you also say that you "worked with him on many operations and saw firsthand his leadership, courage and decision-making ability under fire." But you suggest that we should discount to zero, however, the views of the gunner from Kerry's own boat; everyone else on the boat "served with Kerry," as, apparently, did you, Mr. Rassmunn. But not that guy!
And we should likewise ignore the views of John Kerry's fellow officers-in-charge of the swift boats that accompanied him on the same day you say he earned his Bronze Star. Precisely one out of twenty-three of the OICs in Coastal Division 11 who served fought worked ummm, did whatever they did at the same time Kerry was in Coastal Division 11 the officers who actually lived with him, who trained and briefed with him, and whose boats accompanied Kerry's own on the other missions he undertook during his four-month in-country tour (which they, and most of us, might consider "serving with" him) now supports Sen. Kerry. However, you, Mr. Rassman who abhor "smears" apparently value their service, their word, and their opinions, at zero. They, you say, "should hang their heads in shame."
For his actions that day, I recommended John for the Silver Star, our country's third highest award for bravery under fire. I learned only this past January that the Navy awarded John the Bronze Star with Combat V for his valor.
Ah! Okay, from these two sentences, we learn precisely how well you knew John Kerry in Vietnam, and how strongly indebted you felt to him at the time, and how closely you've followed his career ever after. You neither knew of his medal when it was awarded, nor followed up what had happened with your own medal recommendation, nor paid sufficient attention to any of Kerry's multiple election campaigns over the last 30+ years (including the entirety of his presidential campaign before January 2004) to hear of his Bronze Star. John Kerry made national headlines for throwing his/someone's medals/ribbons over a Capitol fence, but it never occurred to you to wonder if one of those medals/ribbons came from saving your life. You couldn't be bothered we can only presume because of your "passion for orchids." Yes, sir, clearly you are the man to whom America should turn now for a comprehensive assessment of John Kerry's military career!
Mr. Rassman, in the unlikely event that you're reading this: I do honor your service, just as I do John Kerry's (however much or little it was). I don't doubt that you're genuinely grateful to him as no doubt was Licorice the Unlucky Hamster, whom he also saved from a watery death many years later. (All snark aside, Mr. Rassman, I don't seriously mean to compare you to a hampster. Snark is as intrinsic to fisking as bullets are to combat, but no one would suggest that snark be taken as seriously as bullets or combat, least of all me.)
But those of us who are trying to sort out the differences between your version of events and those of the SwiftVets who were also there on-scene at the time, like Larry Thurlow, are still wondering about the answer to the very specific question that Mr. Thurlow put to you for which you offered no answer during your and his recent joint interview on CNN:
interesting Rassman didn't know about Kerry's medals but apparently he wrote him a letter in 1984 that went unanswered:
Except for a letter that went unanswered in 1984, just after Kerry was elected to the U.S. Senate, Rassman made no further attempt to contact Kerry.
http://news.statesmanjournal.com/article.cfm?i=84021
The report that Kerry's boat hit a mine seems ridiculous on its face. The #3 boat was severely damaged by the mine it hit. There is no report of any damage to PCF-94 at all. In fact it was one of the boats that towed #3 to safety.
interesting from this article rassman was a news junkie and followed Kerry's career...almost like a sleeper he comes out of the woodwork to boost Kerry's nomination...
James Rassman had retired to Oregon and devoted himself to growing orchids. A news junkie, he followed Kerry's Senate career and the launch of his drive for the White House. He was unaware that journalists and historians were eager to talk to him, that he, Rassman, was a missing piece of the biographical puzzle of a man who wants to be president.
http://www.boston.com/news/nation/articles/2004/01/18/veterans_bond_is_boost_for_kerry/
A google search brings up the Rassmann spelling.