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Swift Boat Veterans for Truth Leader’s
Renewed Attacks on Senator John Kerry “Sicken” Former POW
As a former prisoner of war in
Vietnam, I read with great
sadness retired Air Force Col. George E. "Bud" Day’s
statements in yesterday’s press release from the “Vietnam
Veterans
Legacy Foundation,” a group that was formerly known as the
infamous “Swift Boat
Veterans for Truth.”
They may have changed their name, but they have not
changed their tradition of lies and distorted facts.
In the press release, Col. Day resumes
the vicious partisan attacks his group honed against Sen.
John Kerry in 2004, an attack which our fellow POW, Senator
John McCain aptly described as “dishonest and dishonorable.”
Day claims that he speaks “for a vast majority of Vietnam
veterans who believe he [Kerry] betrayed them 35 years ago”
and that “…John Kerry's deliberate betrayal of his
countrymen … alone compelled many POWs and most Vietnam
veterans, Swift Boaters included, to stand firm against this
poser, this strutting would-be hero and turncoat."
I was captured on April 20th of 1965
and released on February 12th of 1973, making me the 8the
longest-held POW in Vietnam. During one period, November of
1969 till May of 1972, I
was incarcerated in a camp we named “Camp Unity,” part of
the “Hanoi Hilton,” with hundreds of my fellow POW’s. During
this time I shared a 40 man cell with Ken Cordier and in the
adjoining cell were Paul Galanti and Jim Warner who recently
were active in the Swift Boat Veterans for Truth negative
campaign. Contrary to statements by these men, none of us
ever heard about John Kerry’s testimony or statements
against the Vietnam War while we were in captivity. I
remember. I was there.
The great majority of us were mentally,
emotionally and physically tortured by our Vietnamese
captors. We often suffered from malnutrition, diseases and
isolation. Many of our comrades died in captivity under
these conditions. We experienced even the best of times
there as stressful and no one who was ever held captive as a
POW in Vietnam will ever completely put the experience
behind them.
But what sustained all of us during
those terrible years was our supportive brotherhood because
every POW relied on his brothers for survival, a bond that
transcended any differences in race, rank or politics. Just
before our repatriation in 1973 we formed a fraternal group,
“The Fourth Allied POW Wing,” also known as “Nam POW’s.” It
was to be an apolitical and fraternal organization of those
who “returned with honor.”
And it wasn’t until 2004 that the
fraternal bond was broken and many former POW’s were stunned
and sickened to see a small number of our former cellmates
enter the political fray with the negative Swift Boat
Veterans for Truth campaign against John Kerry. Regretfully,
many of us remained silent as a multi-million dollar
political smear campaign diminished and denigrated Kerry’s
service in Vietnam.
Day, Cordier, Galanti and Warner have
claimed to speak for most veterans and POW’s. But they only
spoke for a small group of ultra right-wing ideologues. In
his renewed attacks on Senator Kerry this week, Day recycles
the same personal vitriol and falsehoods about Kerry’s
“betrayal” of our fellow veterans that his organization
trademarked in 2004.
The real truth is John Kerry is a Vietnam Veteran who fought
heroically and was awarded a Silver Star and Purple Heart
for his service. But he is also courageous for coming home
and telling Americans the truth about the Vietnam War. John
Kerry has continued to honorably and selflessly serve his
country to this day. And I am proud, as a graduate of the
U.S. Naval Academy, as a former Navy Light Attack carrier
pilot, as a retired Navy Commander, as a Vietnam veteran and
former POW, to call Senator John Kerry a Vietnam brother
whom I honor and respect.
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