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VIETNAM INSERTED INTO CAMPAIGN (John Kerry, Senate - February 27, 1992)
NRO ^ | Feb 27, 1992 | John F'n Kerry

Posted on 02/04/2004 9:16:12 AM PST by William McKinley

VIETNAM INSERTED INTO CAMPAIGN (Senate - February 27, 1992)

[Page: S2479]

Mr. KERRY.

Mr. President, I also rise today--and I want to say that I rise reluctantly, but I rise feeling driven by personal reasons of necessity--to express my very deep disappointment over yesterday's turn of events in the Democratic primary in Georgia.

I am saddened by the fact that Vietnam has yet again been inserted into the campaign, and that it has been inserted in what I feel to be the worst possible way. By that I mean that yesterday, during this Presidential campaign, and even throughout recent times, Vietnam has been discussed and written about without an adequate statement of its full meaning.

What is ignored is the way in which our experience during that period reflected in part a positive affirmation of American values and history, not simply the more obvious negatives of loss and confusion.

What is missing is a recognition that there exists today a generation that has come into its own with powerful lessons learned, with a voice that has been grounded in experiences both of those who went to Vietnam and those who did not.

What is missing and what cries out to be said is that neither one group nor the other from that difficult period of time has cornered the market on virtue or rectitude or love of country.

What saddens me most is that Democrats, above all those who shared the agonies of that generation, should now be refighting the many conflicts of Vietnam in order to win the current political conflict of a Presidential primary.

The race for the White House should be about leadership, and leadership requires that one help heal the wounds of Vietnam, not reopen them; that one help identify the positive things that we learned about ourselves and about our Nation, not play to the divisions and differences of that crucible of our generation.

We do not need to divide America over who served and how. I have personally always believed that many served in many different ways. Someone who was deeply against the war in 1969 or 1970 may well have served their country with equal passion and patriotism by opposing the war as by fighting in it. Are we now, 20 years or 30 years later, to forget the difficulties of that time, of families that were literally torn apart, of brothers who ceased to talk to brothers, of fathers who disowned their sons, of people who felt compelled to leave the country and forget their own future and turn against the will of their own aspirations?

Are we now to descend, like latter-day Spiro Agnews, and play, as he did, to the worst instincts of divisiveness and reaction that still haunt America? Are we now going to create a new scarlet letter in the context of Vietnam?

Certainly, those who went to Vietnam suffered greatly. I have argued for years, since I returned myself in 1969, that they do deserve special affection and gratitude for service. And, indeed, I think everything I have tried to do since then has been to fight for their rights and recognition.

But while those who served are owed special recognition, that recognition should not come at the expense of others; nor does it require that others be victimized or criticized or said to have settled for a lesser standard. To divide our party or our country over this issue today, in 1992, simply does not do justice to what all of us went through during that tragic and turbulent time.

I would like to make a simple and straightforward appeal, an appeal from my heart, as well as from my head. To all those currently pursuing the Presidency in both parties, I would plead that they simply look at America. We are a nation crying out for leadership, for someone who will bring us together and raise our sights. We are a nation looking for someone who will lift our spirits and give us confidence that together we can grow out of this recession and conquer the myriad of social ills we have at home.

We do not need more division. We certainly do not need something as complex and emotional as Vietnam reduced to simple campaign rhetoric. What has been said has been said, Mr. President, but I hope and pray we will put it behind us and go forward in a constructive spirit for the good of our party and the good of our country.

I thank our distinguished manager of the bill and the Senator from Delaware.


TOPICS: Extended News
KEYWORDS: 1992; 2004; johnkerry; kerry; kerryhypocracy; kerryrecord; vietnam; vietnamwar
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I am sure that any day now, John F'n Kerry will be reiterating this publically to Terry McAuliffe and the rest of the Democrats who are openly questioning George W. Bush's patriotism and his military record.

Of course he won't. We need to point out his hypocrisy, and then nail his butt for his positions taken after Vietnam which have consistently been on the side of weakening the United States of America.

1 posted on 02/04/2004 9:16:13 AM PST by William McKinley
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To: William McKinley
I am sure that any day now, John F'n Kerry will be reiterating this publically to Terry McAuliffe and the rest of the Democrats who are openly questioning George W. Bush's patriotism and his military record.
Of course he won't. We need to point out his hypocrisy, and then nail his butt for his positions taken after Vietnam which have consistently been on the side of weakening the United States of America.


I suggest that each FREEPER copy this, and all other posts about JFKerry, and send them to everyone in their personal address book. This is the time for all good conservatives to come the aid of their party! (-:
2 posted on 02/04/2004 9:30:51 AM PST by FlyLow (The leftists hate the home team, root for the visitors, and get indignant when you point it out!)
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To: William McKinley
You bring up two issues, and I'll only address one. The fact that Kerry protested the war, AFTER fighting it is ok with me, and a lot better than the many others who protested it from Canada, England or on the run in the US.

But he fought even if he didn't believe that the US should be involved. That's what a soldier (or sailor in this case) does.
3 posted on 02/04/2004 9:39:06 AM PST by NYFriend
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To: NYFriend
The problem is not Kerry protesting the war. The problem was the way he slandered those who fought in the war, and how he cynically used opposition to the war for his own political benefit, and how he grandstanded using the honors bestowed upon him for his service (when he threw someone else's medals over the fence of the White House).

Kerry was a hero, but quickly parlayed whatever honor he earned into his own disgrace.

4 posted on 02/04/2004 10:00:39 AM PST by William McKinley
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To: MeekOneGOP
Could you please ping your list about this article? Thanks!
5 posted on 02/04/2004 10:31:31 AM PST by NYCVirago
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To: NYCVirago
BUMP!
6 posted on 02/04/2004 10:47:55 AM PST by PogySailor
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To: NYCVirago; William McKinley; Alamo-Girl; onyx; SpookBrat; Republican Wildcat; Howlin; ...
VIETNAM INSERTED INTO CAMPAIGN
(John Kerry, Senate - February 27, 1992)

Could you please ping your list about this article? Thanks!

Gladly ! Thanks for the post and ping.


Please let me know if you want ON or OFF my General Interest ping list!. . .don't be shy.


7 posted on 02/04/2004 11:35:07 AM PST by MeekOneGOP (Check out this HILARIOUS story !! haha!: http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1060580/posts)
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To: Travis McGee; MeekOneGOP
Travis states the case against Kerry better than anyone here and he doesn't mince words either. I wonder why? Could it be that he's a PUBLISHED author?
8 posted on 02/04/2004 11:41:59 AM PST by onyx (Your secrets are safe with me and all my friends.)
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To: William McKinley
Yet Kerry's campaign is openly questioning W's military record. Kerry's hypocrisy rivals Bubba Clintoon, his mentor. That's what makes Kerry dangerous. He's so much like Bubba. This country doesn't need to return to the morally corrupt, hypocritical, decadent clintoonian era.
9 posted on 02/04/2004 11:42:58 AM PST by lilylangtree (Olde English takes a long time to say, and we never say anything unless it takes a long time to say)
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To: NYFriend
Before anybody starts proclaiming Kerry a bonafied hero had better check up on him a little closer. Everything he did may me suspect to include the Purple Hearts.

Check out "Useful Fools Vietnam Veterans against John Kerry".
10 posted on 02/04/2004 11:44:00 AM PST by U S Army EOD (Volunteer for EOD and you will never have to worry about getting wounded.)
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To: NYFriend
"You bring up two issues, and I'll only address one. The fact that Kerry protested the war, AFTER fighting it is ok with me, and a lot better than the many others who protested it from Canada, England or on the run in the US.

But he fought even if he didn't believe that the US should be involved. That's what a soldier (or sailor in this case) does."

So I will bring up the other issue. He called US soldiers baby killers, posed in front of the Vietcong flag, wrote an Anti-American book and over the last 19 years has done everything in his power to rid this country of its military and intelligence establishment.

He fought in a war. Big "Kerry" woop. So did several million others over the last 228 years.

Kerry served his country. Now he is trying toi serve his country on a platter to the UN.


11 posted on 02/04/2004 11:46:02 AM PST by EQAndyBuzz (Gore Lost! Deal with it!!!)
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To: William McKinley
Kerry's many on the record words will come back and haunt him.
12 posted on 02/04/2004 11:46:38 AM PST by 1Old Pro (It's time for Bush & the GOP to begin the campaign)
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To: NYFriend
Read what William Buckley had to say about Kerry's war protest and come back and tell me that there is nothing wrong with what Kerry did.

EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the text of William F. Buckley Jr.'s June 8, 1971, commencement address to the United States Military Academy at West Point. The speech appears here as it is in Let Us Talk of Many Things : The Collected Speeches.

The morale in the armed services was low, reflecting the impasse and progressive demoralization in Vietnam, and especially the trial of Lieutenant William Calley for the massacre at Mylai. A drastic charge, flamboyantly made by decorated veteran John Kerry (now a United States senator from Massachusetts), had been rapturously received. Kerry ascribed to our soldiers in Vietnam uncivilized, barbarous practices. I devoted my talk to asking about Mr. Kerry's charges and reflecting on their implications.

A great deal has been written lately on the spirit of progressivism at West Point. I note that a generation ago, cadets were not permitted to read a newspaper, whereas today, each cadet room receives a daily copy of the New York Times. I know now what it means to be nostalgic for the good old days.

I read ten days ago the full text of the quite remarkable address delivered by John Kerry before the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations. It was an address, I am told, that paralyzed the committee by its eloquence and made Mr. Kerry — a veteran of the war in Vietnam, a pedigreed Bostonian, a graduate of Yale University — an instant hero.

After reading it I put it aside, deeply troubled as I was by the haunting resonance of its peroration, which so moved the audience. The words he spoke were these:

"[We are determined] to undertake one last mission, to search out and destroy the last vestige of this barbaric war, to pacify our hearts, to conquer the hate and fear that have driven this country these last ten years and more, so that when, thirty years from now, our brothers go down the street without a leg, without an arm, or a face, and small boys ask why, we will be able to say 'Vietnam!' and not mean a desert, not a filthy obscene memory, but the place where America finally turned and where soldiers like us helped it in the turning."

"Where America finally turned." We need to wonder: where America finally turned from what?

Mr. Kerry, in introducing himself to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, made it plain that he was there to speak not only for himself, but for what he called "a very much larger group of veterans in this country." He then proceeded to describe the America he knows, the America from which he enjoined us all to turn.

In Southeast Asia, he said, he saw "not isolated incidents but crimes committed on a day-to-day basis with the full awareness of officers at all levels of command."

A grave charge, but the sensitive listener will instantly assume that Mr. Kerry is using the word "crime" loosely, as in, "He was criminally thoughtless in not writing home more often to his mother." But Mr. Kerry quickly interdicted that line of retreat. He went on to enumerate precisely such crimes as are being committed "on a day-to-day basis, with the full awareness of officers at all levels of command." He gave tales of torture, of rape, of Americans who "randomly shot at civilians, razed villages in a fashion reminiscent of Genghis Khan, shot cattle and dogs for fun, poisoned food stocks, and generally ravaged the countryside of South Vietnam in addition to the normal ravages of war."

Mr. Kerry informed Congress that what threatens the United States is "not Reds, and not redcoats," but "the crimes" we are committing. He tells us that we have "created a monster, a monster in the form of millions of men who have been taught to deal and to trade in violence, and who have returned with a sense of anger."

Most specifically he singled out for criticism a sentence uttered by Mr. Agnew here at West Point a year ago: "Some glamorize the criminal misfits of society while our best men die in Asian rice paddies to preserve the freedom which most of those misfits abuse." Mr. Kerry insists that the so-called misfits are the true heroes, inasmuch as it was they who "were standing up for us in a way that nobody else in this country dared to." As for the men in Vietnam, he added, "we cannot consider ourselves America's 'best men' when we are ashamed of and hated for what we were called on to do in Southeast Asia."

And indeed, if American soldiers have been called upon to rape and to torture and to exterminate non-combatants, it is obvious that they should be ashamed, less obvious why they have not expressed that shame more widely on returning to the United States, particularly inasmuch as we have been assured by Mr. Kerry that they have been taught to deal and to trade in violence.

Are there extenuating circumstances? Is there a reason for our being in Vietnam?

"To attempt to justify the loss of one American life in Vietnam, Cambodia, or Laos by linking such loss to the preservation of freedom . . . is . . . the height of criminal hypocrisy, and it is that kind of hypocrisy which we feel has torn this country apart." It is then, we reason retrospectively, not alone an act of hypocrisy that caused the joint chiefs of staff and the heads of the civilian departments engaged in strategic calculations to make the recommendations they made over the past ten years, to three Presidents of the United States: it was not merely hypocrisy, but criminal hypocrisy. The nature of that hypocrisy? "All," Mr. Kerry sums up, "that we were told about the mystical war against Communism."

The indictment is complete.

It is the indictment of an ignorant young man who is willing to condemn in words that would have been appropriately used in Nuremberg the governing class of America: the legislators, the generals, the statesmen. And, reaching beyond them, the people, who named the governors to their positions of responsibility and ratified their decisions in several elections.

The point I want to raise is this: If America is everything that John Kerry says it is, what is it appropriate for us to do? The wells of regeneration are infinitely deep, but the stain described by John Kerry goes too deep to be bleached out by conventional remorse or resolution: better the destruction of America, if, to see ourselves truly, we need to look into the mirror John Kerry holds up for us. If we are a nation of sadists, of kid-killers and torturers, of hypocrites and criminals, let us be done with it, and pray that a great flood or fire will destroy us, leaving John Kerry and maybe Mrs. Benjamin Spock to take the place of Lot, in reseeding a new order.

Gentleman, how many times, in the days ahead, you will need to ask yourselves the most searching question of all, the counterpart of the priest's most agonizing doubt: Is there a God? Yours will be: Is America worth it?

John Kerry's assault on this country did not rise fullblown in his mind, like Venus from the Cypriot Sea. It is the crystallization of an assault upon America which has been fostered over the years by an intellectual class given over to self-doubt and self-hatred, driven by a cultural disgust with the uses to which so many people put their freedom. The assault on the military, the many and subtle vibrations of which you feel as keenly as James Baldwin knows the inflections of racism, is an assault on the proposition that what we have, in America, is truly worth defending. The military is to be loved or despised according as it defends that which is beloved or perpetuates that which is despised. The root question has not risen to such a level of respectability as to work itself into the platform of a national political party, but it lurks in the rhetoric of the John Kerrys, such that a blind man, running his fingers over the features of the public rhetoric, can discern the meaning of it:

Is America worth it?

That is what they are saying to you. And that is what so many Americans reacted to in the case of Lieutenant Calley. Mistakenly, they interpreted the conviction of Calley as yet another effort to discredit the military. And though they will not say it in as many words, they know that if there is no military, it will quickly follow that there will be no America, of the kind that they know, that we know. The America that listens so patiently to its John Kerrys, the America that shouldered the great burden of preserving oases of freedom after the great curtain came down with that Bolshevik subtlety that finally expressed itself in a Wall, to block citizens of the socialist utopia from leaving, en route even to John Kerry's America; the America that all but sank under the general obloquy, in order to stand by, in Southeast Asia, a commitment it had soberly made, to the cause of Containment — I shall listen patiently, decades hence, to those who argue that our commitment in Vietnam and our attempt to redeem it were tragically misconceived. I shall not listen to those who say that it was less than the highest tribute to national motivation, to collective idealism, and to international rectitude. I say this with confidence because I have never met an American who takes pleasure from the Vietnam War or who desires to exploit the Vietnamese.

So during those moments when doubt will assail you, moments that will come as surely as the temptations of the flesh, I hope you will pause. I know, I know, at the most hectic moments of one's life it isn't easy — indeed, the argument can be made that neither is it seemly — to withdraw from the front line in order to consider the general situation philosophically. But what I hope you will consider, during these moments of doubt, is the essential professional point: Without organized force, and the threat of the use of it under certain circumstances, there is no freedom, anywhere. Without freedom, there is no true humanity. If America is the monster of John Kerry, burn your commissions tomorrow morning and take others, which will not bind you in the depraved conspiracy you have heard described. If it is otherwise, remember: the freedom John Kerry enjoys, and the freedom I enjoy, are, quite simply, the result of your dedication. Do you wonder that I accepted the opportunity to salute you?



13 posted on 02/04/2004 11:51:04 AM PST by Eva
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To: 1Old Pro
Yep...we need to use them for ads at the RNC
14 posted on 02/04/2004 11:51:13 AM PST by international american (Support our troops..............................................revoke Hillary's visa!!)
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To: international american
I see newsmax is running with this.
15 posted on 02/04/2004 11:52:08 AM PST by 1Old Pro (It's time for Bush & the GOP to begin the campaign)
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To: William McKinley
CONGRESSIONAL RECORD SEARCH

Have a it Freepers

16 posted on 02/04/2004 11:54:30 AM PST by OXENinFLA ("We disregard the lessons of history." ----- Patton)
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To: William McKinley
Someone need to e-mail this to HANNITY!
17 posted on 02/04/2004 12:00:29 PM PST by OXENinFLA ("We disregard the lessons of history." ----- Patton)
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To: William McKinley
Read this LInk from the Viet Nam Vets against Kerry!
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1071467/posts

Ops4 God BLess America!
18 posted on 02/04/2004 12:09:50 PM PST by OPS4
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To: onyx
I do? Aw shucks!
19 posted on 02/04/2004 5:46:22 PM PST by Travis McGee (www.EnemiesForeignAndDomestic.com)
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To: Travis McGee
Let's put it this way: You have stated the case against Kerry better than anyone else as recent as last night. Guess I'll have to track you to re-post your statement here, since you seem intent on playing shy. :)
20 posted on 02/04/2004 5:58:38 PM PST by onyx (Your secrets are safe with me and all my friends.)
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