
I received this from my former roommate
Lt. Gen. Charlie Bagnal, Retired, US Army. I saw the original
article in Atlanta Journal. Kerry is trying to smear our President
and others who were in the National Guard and Reserves during
Vietnam era as draft dodgers. We need to let others know about
Kerry.
Carl
Classmates:
This is an article by Terry Garlock, who flew Cobra gunships
in 334th Armed Helicopter Company in RVN. He was severely injured
when a surface to air missle blew off his tail rotor and a portion
of the tail boom. Terry spent several years in hospital and
therapy. The Atlanta Journal Constitution has an exclusive
on this for 30 days, so it can't be published in a newspaper
or magazine until after that; but he is allowing this to be sent
to you with that understanding.
All the Best, Charlie Bagnal
Many
Vietnam Vets Will Object to Kerry
by Terry Garlock
- Now that Massachusetts Sen. John Kerry
is claiming the veteran vote based on his war record, both sides
of that story should be told. To appreciate the dark side of
Sen. Kerry's war record, you should know a few things about
Vietnam veterans.
- For example, having fought in an unpopular
war 30 something years ago, and having been awarded medals, is
noteworthy. But it doesn't give anyone a pass -- their record
and their ideas should be examined on their own merit.
- And reporters make a mistake when they
divide us into decorated veterans like Sen. Kerry and then all
the others. We like to think of ourselves as brothers, whether
we fought the enemy directly in combat or served in vital support
roles in protected areas that were often exposed to attack.
- Even today, after all this time, when
two Vietnam veterans meet one another for the first time they
are likely to say "Welcome home brother!" because many
were never welcomed home - they met the cold shoulder of an ungrateful
nation on their return.
Those of us whose job was combat feel a very special brotherhood.
We learned to trust our brothers on the ground, on the water
and in the air to do the right things to protect one another,
even under fire. We came to deeply value the same trust they
placed in us, and that mutual trust would form a bond that cannot
be fully explained in words.
- We quietly feared dying in battle, but
there was something we feared even more. We knew if we should
panic under fire and fail to do our job, we might lose our brothers'
trust or we might lose their lives, and this we feared more than
anything.
- Like Sen. Kerry, I have a few medals.
But among combat veterans, who has what medal doesn't make a
dime's worth of difference between us. What matters is that
we are, for the rest of our life, brothers who kept faith with
one another in a miserable war.
- A young John Kerry, however, broke faith
with his brothers when he returned to the US. With the financial
aid of Jane Fonda he led highly visible protests against the
war.
- He wrote a book that many considered
to be pro-Hanoi, titled The New Soldier. The cover photo of
his book depicted veterans in patchwork military uniforms, holding
the American flag upside down and mocking the legendary image
of Marines raising the American flag atop Mount Suribachi in
the 1945 battle for Iwo Jima.
- Sen. Kerry publicly supported Hanoi's
position to use our POWs as a bargaining chip in negotiations
for a peace agreement.
- Sen. Kerry played a key role in "Winter
Soldier," a Jane Fonda event where over 100 men, many of
whom were later discredited, testified about atrocities committed
in the Vietnam war by American soldiers.
In 1971 Sen. Kerry testified before the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee and said our soldiers in Vietnam were not America's
best, as Vice President Agnew had claimed, but that they were
committing widespread rape, torture and murder of Vietnamese
civilians. We who were there know that to be untrue.
- Later that same day Sen. Kerry threw
what he said were his medals over a fence in front of the capitol
building in protest, on camera of course, but was years later
caught in his lie when his medals turned up displayed on his
office wall.
- Some say Sen. Kerry's anti-war stance
arose from his political ambitions since the war was so unpopular,
and I cannot say I know his motivations. But when he ran for
congress in 1972 maybe he thought his book and it's cover would
be an embarrassment since it remarkably disappeared from store
and library shelves. I would guess Hercule Poirot himself could
not find a copy today.
- Many good and decent people other than
Sen. Kerry opposed the Vietnam war.
Many of us who fought it hated it, too, I know I did. But like
Jane Fonda's infamous visit to Hanoi in 1972, Sen. Kerry's public
actions encouraged our enemy at a time they were killing America's
sons.
- Decades after the war was done, interviews
with our former enemy's leaders confirmed that public protests
in the US, like Sen. Kerry's, played a significant role in their
strategy and worked against our chances of victory. Many of
us wonder which of our brothers who died young would be alive
today had people like Jane Fonda and Sen. Kerry objected to
the war in a more suitable way.
- Now that it serves his ambition to be
President, Sen. Kerry reminds the public of his war record daily,
but the story of the dark side of that record is not being told.
Many Vietnam veterans have taken notice, and many of us will
vigorously oppose Sen. Kerry's election to any office. I will
be one of them.
Terry L. Garlock of
Peachtree City, GA was a Cobra helicopter pilot in Vietnam.
-
-
-
-
-