Friday, August 6

KERRY'S COMMANDER RETRACTS CRITICISM -- SWIFT BOAT VETERANS FOR "TRUTH" STRIKE AGAIN


These people. I saw several of them on TV last night. It's patently obvious that the entire cause for their hatred of John Kerry (and they do truly hate him) is his anti-war activities. They don't have a real basis for evaluating his military service -- it's what he did when he came back to the USA that they despise him for. The ads are totally deceptive -- when they say they "served with John Kerry," they really mean, "I was in country at the same time," not that they were on the boat with him. "We never said we were on the same boat!" Yeah, yeah, sounds like the same old "We never used the word imminent when we described the threat!" and "We never said Saddam was behind 9-11!" excuses. My good Christian mama taught me that when you deliberately deceive, it's the same as a lie.

Isn't there some legal remedy? I mean, the facts are easy to check -- Kerry's released his entire military record.

Here's the latest. A lie debunked by the liar himself.

A week after Senator John F. Kerry heralded his wartime experience by surrounding himself at the Democratic convention with his Vietnam ''Band of Brothers," a separate group of veterans has launched a television ad campaign and a book that questions the basis for some of Kerry's combat medals.

But yesterday, a key figure in the anti-Kerry campaign, Kerry's former commanding officer, backed off one of the key contentions. Lieutenant Commander George Elliott said in an interview that he had made a ''terrible mistake" in signing an affidavit that suggests Kerry did not deserve the Silver Star -- one of the main allegations in the book. The affidavit was given to The Boston Globe by the anti-Kerry group to justify assertions in their ad and book.

Elliott is quoted as saying that Kerry ''lied about what occurred in Vietnam . . . for example, in connection with his Silver Star, I was never informed that he had simply shot a wounded, fleeing Viet Cong in the back."

The statement refers to an episode in which Kerry killed a Viet Cong soldier who had been carrying a rocket launcher, part of a chain of events that formed the basis of his Silver Star. Over time, some Kerry critics have questioned whether the soldier posed a danger to Kerry's crew. Crew members have said Kerry's actions saved their lives.

Yesterday, reached at his home, Elliott said he regretted signing the affidavit and said he still thinks Kerry deserved the Silver Star.

''I still don't think he shot the guy in the back," Elliott said. ''It was a terrible mistake probably for me to sign the affidavit with those words. I'm the one in trouble here."

Elliott said he was no under personal or political pressure to sign the statement, but he did feel ''time pressure" from those involved in the book. ''That's no excuse," Elliott said. ''I knew it was wrong . . . In a hurry I signed it and faxed it back. That was a mistake."

The affidavit also contradicted earlier statements by Elliott, who came to Boston during Kerry's 1996 Senate campaign to defend Kerry on similar charges, saying that Kerry acted properly and deserved the Silver Star.

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