John 'I’m a War Criminal' McCain
by
Michael Gaddy
by Michael Gaddy
DIGG THIS
The Republican
Party, in its search for consistency, has now nominated a confessed
war criminal to be its presidential nominee. Having a war criminal
for president for the past eight years, at least now the republicans
have a candidate who admits it.
While John
McCain states that he signed a confession admitting to being a war
criminal after being tortured repeatedly, this was most likely the
only time in his military/political career he embraced the truth.
Still, there
are many in the Prisoner of War/Missing in Action community, including
former POWs, who have their doubts about McCain ever being tortured
while a Prisoner of War, and actually believe he received preferential
treatment at the hands of the North Vietnamese, Russians and Cubans.
Perhaps the
reason both McCain and Bush support torture as a means of obtaining
military intelligence is they know that is the only way anyone could
ever get them to be truthful!
In 1987–88,
I spent a multitude of hours volunteering with the American Foundation
For Accountability of POWs/MIAs in Arlington, Virginia. My duties
in the foundation included traveling to colleges and high schools
throughout the US in an effort to bring public awareness to the
plight of military service personnel who had been left in the hands
of our enemies in WWII, Korea and Vietnam by the irresponsible government
who sent them in harm's way.
I distinctly
remember when members of the foundation, myself included, made a
trip to "The Hill" to speak with members of the US House of Representatives
and the US Senate to solicit their help in getting legislation passed
that would bring pressure on those we believed still held American
Servicemen as prisoners and to pass legislation that would protect
future service personnel should they be captured. When we visited
the office of Senator McCain, we were told by his staff that he
did not have time to visit with us and that "he believed he could
not have survived that long in captivity and therefore he doubted
anyone else could have."
Just a couple
of days later, while working at our vigil near the Vietnam Veterans
Memorial, I witnessed Senator McCain alight from his Mercedes Benz
sports car with a couple of young, beautiful women, one on each
arm, whom he escorted on a tour of the Lincoln Memorial, Vietnam
Veterans Memorial area. It was more than obvious from his actions;
he had a great deal of time for these ladies.
My duties with
the foundation brought me in contact with many former Prisoners
of War; it was fantastic to visit and listen to the late Colonel
Laird Guttersen, Captain Eugene "Red" McDaniel, Major John Parcels,
and Larry Stark, not to mention the hundreds of family members of
those still missing in either Laos or Vietnam. I also enjoyed my
conversations and time with former Senator Bob Smith and former
Congressmen Billy Hendon and Bob Dornan. Never in any of my conversations
with these folks did I ever hear a positive word said about John
McCain. In fact, Colonel Laird Guttersen spoke often of his utter
contempt for McCain and his conduct while a prisoner of war.
In the late
1980’s and the early to mid 1990’s, John McCain would lead the battle
to keep the fate of those left behind in the hands of their captors
secret from their families and the American public, and was known
for his angry
verbal attacks on both family members and veterans.
Many find it
ironic that the North Vietnamese erected a monument which features
prominently a
bust of John McCain at the sight of his shoot down. This is
tantamount to the citizens of New York erecting a monument with
the bust of Mohammad Atta, or the citizens of Hawaii erecting a
monument with the bust of Japanese Fleet Commander Nagumo!
Why has John
McCain fought so hard to keep
the facts of his imprisonment secret?
How can anyone
defend the character of John McCain, much less support him for president?
His character began to show its dark side as a Cadet
at the U.S. Naval Academy where he was known as a womanizer and
underachiever. He, at his own admission, received preferential
treatment at the hands of the North Vietnamese, while true heroes
such as US Air Force Academy graduate Captain
Lance Sijan endured torture to the death rather than betray their
fellow soldiers.
John
McCain is no hero; many veterans refer to him as the Manchurian
Candidate. Was it the Diebold
voting machines that brought him the nomination, a nation of
cowards, or both?
In the case
of John McCain, it is true we get the government we deserve!
March
14, 2008
Michael
Gaddy [send him mail],
an Army veteran of Vietnam, Grenada, and Beirut, lives in the Four
Corners area of the American Southwest.
Copyright
© 2008 LewRockwell.com
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