National Review: The Vets Became Upset When They Read Brinkley's Book
Editorial, in the National Review (Aug. 26, 2004):
Speaking on behalf of Vietnam veterans in
his Senate testimony on April 22, 1971, John Kerry said, "We wish that a
merciful God could wipe away our own memories of that service..." Thirty-three
years later, it's clear that his plea fell on deaf ears. Kerry recalls his Vietnam
service in virtually every campaign speech he makes. At the Boston convention,
his four-month stint in Vietnam was repeatedly invoked as his primary qualification
for the presidency.
Kerry's problem is that those who served alongside
him haven't forgotten either. Many Vietnam veterans remember that Kerry slandered
their service when he claimed they were responsible for widespread atrocities.
These veterans include 250 of his Swift boat comrades, whose organization, Swift
Boat Veterans for Truth, has taken to the airwaves to accuse him of lying about
his record and betraying his fellow veterans. In particular, they say that in
telling the U.S. Senate about non-existent American war crimes, he did something
that our POWs refused to do under torture.
The book that has thrown Kerry on the defensive is not Unfit for Command so much as Tour of Duty, the authorized biography written by the pro-Kerry historian Douglas Brinkley. Until the book's publication in January, Kerry's fellow Swift boat veterans were unaware of his exact version of their alleged atrocities and his alleged heroics. Some of them had come to Kerry's rescue in the past, when he was accused of committing war crimes of his own (these statements are now used to challenge the Swift boat vets' consistency). The vets intended to refute Kerry's allegations of atrocities, but found that their eyewitness accounts contradicted Kerry's version of his exploits.
Why
should it matter? First, there is the fact that Kerry has put his Vietnam experience
at the center of his campaign. If it turns out that his account of that experience
is based on exaggerations or lies, it is a damning indictment of his candidacy,
on his own terms. Even if Kerry had not made Vietnam such a large part of his
campaign, this controversy would be important, since dishonesty (even relatively
minor incidents of it) with regard to war stories and decorations has ruined careers.
Finally, there is Kerry's 1971 testimony, which he has never retracted and which
still stands as testament to his belief that the American military was a criminal
force in Vietnam. The Swift boat vets can be forgiven for asking whether someone
who believes this country would order such crimes, and that its men in uniform
would "routinely" carry them out, is fit to be commander-in-chief.