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McCain's collaboration with his Vietnamese captors. PDF Print E-mail
Written by Usenet   
Wednesday, 16 July 2008 21:36
McCain has said repeatedly that he was afforded no special treatment while
in the "Hanoi Hilton". Yet when he was first interviewed by the North
Vietnamese he is shown at a hospital reserved for Vietnamese military and
he was seen by Soviet Surgeons. He was drinking coffee and smoking
cigarettes while being interviewed. This was a far cry from the way the
rest of the POWs were treated.

His wife at the time, was a member of the National League of Families and
she fought to make sure that John McCain came home. He rewarded this
loyalty by divorcing her after his return.

He was shot down October 26, 1967, and by November 9, 1967 he was giving
interviews to foreign correspondents, providing information on his prior
command, casualties and tactics, in direct violation of the Code of
Conduct. (The U.S. military Code of Conduct is the definitive code
specifying the responsibilities of American military personnel while in
combat or captivity. Article V of the Code is very specific in ordering
U.S. military personnel to avoid answering questions to the utmost of
their ability and to make no oral or written statements disloyal to the
United States and its allies, or harmful to their cause. Any willful
violation of the Code is considered collaborating with the enemy.)

The Communist Vietnamese erected a bust of John McCain beside the lake
where he was shot down. His defenders say that this is a tribute to the
PAVN gunners that shot him down.

In the interview that he gave on November 9, 1967 to VNA International, he
claims when he bailed out and landed in the lake, that locals pulled him
out and took him to the hospital. Yet in the U.S. News and World Report -
May 14, 1973. McCain is quoted as saying "I think it was on the fourth day
(after being shot down) that two guards came in, instead of one. One of
them pulled back the blanket to show the other guard my injury. I looked
at my knee. It was about the size of a football . . . when I saw it, I
said to the guard, Ok, get the officer'...an officer came in after a few
minutes. It was the man that we came to know very well as 'The Bug'. He
was a psychotic torturer, one of the worst fiends that we had to deal
with. I said, Ok, I'll give you military information if you will take me
to the hospital."

While testifying before the Senate Select Committee, the very man McCain
claims was responsible for his own torture, his interrogator, "The Bug"
was appearing. When the moment of confrontation came, McCain rose from his
seat, walked from the podium to the floor and stood face to face with the
man who was responsible for torturing him and countless other Prisoners of
War...McCain then grabbed the man and embraced him!

He has been a consistent advocate of lenient treatment of Vietnam.

While a member of the Senate Select Committee on POW/MIA Affairs
(1991-1993) he referred to POW/MIA Family Members and POW/MIA Activists as
whiners, vultures and the lunatic fringe.

Although the Senate Select Committee concluded that we left men behind,
McCain crossed party lines to help lift the embargo and normalize
relations with Vietnam. "It's very important for us to recognize that the
war is over, ... In my view, an improvement in relations between our two
countries does a whole of lot things from a practical standpoint, but it
also, from a spiritual standpoint indicates that we are ready to close
that chapter," McCain said. (Many POWs and families of MIAs would strongly
disagree that is time to close this chapter! Improving relations with
Vietnam stood to benefit the McCain's family as they hold a large interest
in the Budweiser Corporation. Surprise, surprise Bud was among the first
large U.S. Corporations to enter Vietnam after relations were normalized.)

He ignored a letter from former POW, Capt. Eugene "Red" McDaniel,
co-signed by 50 former POWs which asked that the embargo not be lifted and
not to normalize relations and still McCain would not be swayed.

When the Missing Service Personnel Act of 1996 came on the Senate Floor
for debate, Senator McCain called this bill "un-necessary" and
"burdensome" even though the MSPA was sponsored by the then majority
leader and the man who had considered asking John McCain to run with him,
Sen. Bob Dole.

McCain managed to get the MSPA amended by removing criminal liability and
several articles that were important to POW/MIA Family members.

McCain voted against campaign-finance reform in 1987/1988.. and didn't
support the concept until 1990, just after the Keating story broke.

Until McCain began thinking about running for national office he was
consistently anti-gay (he even spoke at a fundraiser for Oregon's anti-gay
rights initiative) Now he says they are "not inclusive enough".

Keating Five Scandal
McCain received more than $112,000 in campaign contributions from one
Charles Keating (including $54,000 for his Senate campaign). Between 1984
and 1986 McCain and family had vacationed at Keating's home in the
Bahamas. (Keating was a corrupt owner of a savings-and-loan empire that
ended up costing taxpayers $3 billion.) For these contributions Keating
hoped (expected) McCain and four other senators - John Glenn, Dennis
DeConcini, Alan Cranston, Donald Riegle, would protect him from federal
banking regulators. After a 14 month investigation by the Ethics Committee
all McCain received was a slap on the wrist for using "poor judgment"!

McCain's Tasteless Joke
"Why is Chelsea Clinton so ugly?
Because her father is Janet Reno."

McCain's two-liner gives us some insight into what he considers funny
(lesbianism, a young woman's physical looks), especially since this was
delivered to a partisan Republican crowd. Remember, this is the same party
that champions pro-family values.

That McCain had made this tasteless joke was reported in major newspapers,
so was the vain attempt by his press secretary to initially deny that
McCain had done anything wrong. But in several major newspapers, the joke
itself was kept a secret. When McCain subsequently apologized to President
Clinton, the Washington Post, noted the apology but said the joke "was too
vicious to print."

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3.21 Copyright (C) 2007 Alain Georgette / Copyright (C) 2006 Frantisek Hliva. All rights reserved."

 
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