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Wednesday, March 26, 2008
War Stories and Cameras
By Austin Bay
Poll
Will Hillary Clinton fight for the nomination past June 1st?


John Kerry's "Christmas in Cambodia" yarn ignited the Swift Boat Veterans for Truth. Whatever your memory of the 2004 presidential campaign, Kerry's sudden silence about a wartime Christmas "seared" in his memory was a rare example of a citizens group (the Swifties) publicly backing down a powerful U.S. senator and a major-party presidential candidate.

Kerry's full quote, delivered in the midst of a 1986 Senate debate about aid to the Nicaraguan Contras, is rhetorically powerful:

"I remember Christmas of 1968 sitting on a gunboat in Cambodia. I remember what it was like to be shot at by Vietnamese and Khmer Rouge and Cambodians, and have the president of the United States telling the American people that I was not there; the troops were not in Cambodia. I have that memory which is seared -- seared -- in me."

Glorious oratory indeed, based, unfortunately, on a touch of truth (his naval service) magnified by chest-pounding falsehood.

There were, however, no cameras recording Christmas in the Mekong estuaries, which left Kerry with wiggle room. That's all a politician ever needs, of course, a silly centimeter of wiggle room. He accused the Swift vets of being motivated by partisan malevolence and personal animosity rather than historical veracity.

Kerry was dead right on the personal animosity angle. I still run into Vietnam veterans who rile at a memory "seared" in their minds -- that of Kerry pulling his made-for-television "Winter Soldier" routine, where he accused American soldiers of hideous war crimes. He rode those anti-American allegations into a political career.

Hillary Clinton is having her "Cambodian" moment -- her claim that she ducked sniper fire when she landed in Bosnia in 1996. Cameras, however, were rolling. The CBS News clip juxtaposing Clinton's stump speech rendition of her "snipers tale" to the tender hugs reality of her Bosnian excursion exposes the candidate's story as blarney.

This is blarney with damaging blowback, since Clinton's claim to superiority over her Democratic primary opponent, Barack Obama, is she possesses hard-core foreign policy expertise.

CBS earns qualified kudos. An Obama supporter, the comedian Sinbad, pulled the magic carpet from beneath Clinton's Bosnian crock. Sinbad was with Clinton in Bosnia, and he told a Washington Post political blog that "I think the only 'red-phone' (i.e., scary) moment was, 'Do we eat here or at the next place?'" Continued...

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About The Author

Austin Bay Austin Bay is author of three novels. His third novel, The Wrong Side of Brightness, was published by Putnam/Jove in June 2003. He has also co-authored four non-fiction books, to include A Quick and Dirty Guide to War: Third Edition (with James Dunnigan, Morrow, 1996).

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©Creators Syndicate
Recognizing the hundreds of billions in cost, maybe a trillion, and thousands of soldiers’ lives lost, an economics question arises. Which is less costly (in dollars, lives, international diplomatic relationships and alliances, etc.) and most efficient; invasion and an arduous nation-building occupation or improved domestic homeland security with increased international police action to dissuade “terrorists”? Answer that question five years into Bush’s Iraq War.

Neoconservatives, supporters of the Bush Administration or those who whole-heartedly believe in the goodness of the Iraq War simply must watch the Frontline report Bush’s War and answer to history. Of course, those same people are likely to pre-emptively label the report left-wing propaganda without watching the show and that is unfortunate.

Practically every plan, idea, assumption and strategy advanced by Cheney, Rumsfeld and the neoconservatives was incorrect. The level of incompetence uncovered by "Frontline" is stunning. The program interviews dozens of persons directly involved in the war and subsequent attempt at nation-building (e.g. – Bremer, Garner, etc.) who shed light on the folly of the process. History and many Americans ask what possibly compelled policy makers to believe that the outcome of that war and nation-building would be an easy success considering the realities of tribal and sectarian hatreds? Was there really naïve innocent belief that Iraqi’s would treat Americans like Parisians did in 1944 and they would not loot their own government or use the existing weaponry against American occupiers? The Frontline show is available on the Internet so please watch it and try not listen to Dittoheads. Actually I want John McCain to watch the Frontline program and immediately offer his policy beliefs within an investigative journalist interview as to if America can militarily impose it’s will successfully on Middle Eastern nations.

Subject: I find it amusing
That to neolibs, when conservatives don't tell the truth, they "lie." But when liberals don't tell the truth, they "misspeak."

Their hypocrisy is just huge.
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