By John Corry on 3.9.04 @ 12:20AM
John Kerry has a POW past.
John Kerry and I have a past. He once said an article I had
written was "filled with lies, distortions and fabrications," and
that in publishing it The American Spectator had "done a
disservice to the nation." The article, "The MIA Cover-Up," in the
February 1994 issue, had mentioned Kerry only in passing, however,
and wasn't really about him. It was about the methods used by
government agencies, especially the Defense Intelligence Agency, to
discredit reports that American servicemen had been abandoned in
Southeast Asia. It also stated, and offered abundant evidence, to
prove:
[that] America's MIA-POW policy has been disfigured by
denials, half-truths and evasions…. For two decades, a
cover-up has been in progress, sustained not so much by conspiracy
as by government ineptitude, a bureaucratic unwillingness to draw
obvious conclusions from incontrovertible facts, and a failure of
national resolve. It is now certain that we left men behind in
Southeast Asia -- not nearly the handful we now unofficially
acknowledge in Laos, but in numbers reaching well into the hundreds
in Vietnam.
And that, I am sure, was what so upset Kerry. Perhaps he even
felt guilty. The article had also raised the possibility -- in
fact, I thought it a very strong possibility -- that there were
still American prisoners in Vietnam. But I don't think Kerry wanted
to know about that. He was an authentic Vietnam War hero, but he
was also part of the MIA cover-up.
For the year before the article appeared, the Senate Select
Committee on POW/MIA Affairs, with Kerry as chairman, had callously
sidestepped the MIA issue. "There is no proof that U.S. POWs
survived," the committee said in its final report, "but neither is
there proof that all of those who did not return had died."
This was moral cowardice of a high order. After more than a year
and a half of hearings, the committee would neither confirm nor
deny that servicemen had been left behind to die. Buried in its
1,123-page final report, though, and in thousands more pages of
unpublished depositions, were pieces of information that could
hardly be ignored.
SATELLITE IMAGERY, FOR example, had picked up the distress signals,
and even the names, of downed American pilots on the ground. And
the distress signals -- combinations of letters and numbers --
appear in photographs taken after, not before, March 1973, when
North Vietnam released 591 Americans in Operation Homecoming.
President Nixon told the nation then, "All of our American POWs are
on their way home."
But they weren't, of course, and that should have been apparent.
As far as I know, for example, the 591 returnees included no
amputees or burn cases; there was no one maimed, disfigured, or
blind. The most afflicted POWs, I suspect, had either remained in
Vietnam, or been murdered.
More tellingly, Nixon had sent a secret letter to North Vietnam
Premier Pham Van Dong two months before Operation Homecoming; it
reflected an unpublicized understanding reached by Henry Kissinger
and Le Doc Tho, a member of the Hanoi Politburo, when they signed
the Paris Peace Accord on January 23, 1973.
Nixon told Pham that the U.S. would "contribute to postwar
reconstruction in North Vietnam," in an amount that would "fall in
the range of $3.25 billion of grant aid over five years…other
forms of aid…could fall in the range of $1 to 1.5
billion."
None of the aid was extended, however, although if it had been
North Vietnam might have returned all its captives. A 1969 study by
the Rand Corporation had said it was doubtful the POWs would be
freed immediately after a peace agreement was reached. It was "more
likely," the Rand study found, that North Vietnam would await
"concrete evidence of U.S. concessions before releasing the
majority of American prisoners."
But no concessions were forthcoming, and there was no
possibility they ever would be. Nixon would soon be undone by
Watergate, and Congress wanted no more of the war. True, Nixon had
said the POWs were on their way home, but he also had said:
"[T]here are still some problem areas. The provisions of the
agreement requiring an accounting for all missing in
action…have not been complied with…. We shall insist
that North Vietnam comply with the agreement."
But we did not insist, of course. Congress had turned its back.
In May, the pusillanimous Senate rejected a Republican amendment
that would have allowed continued bombing if Nixon certified that
North Vietnam was not trying to account for all the missing in
action. There was ample evidence by then that we had left men
behind, and over the years the evidence would grow, but no matter.
Neither Washington nor the mainstream media were interested, and
only veterans' groups and MIA family members kept the issue
alive.
SO BACK NOW TO THE 1994 American Spectator article that so
annoyed John Kerry. I have been a journalist for some four decades,
and it involved the most painstaking and difficult reporting I have
ever done. The MIA question was shrouded in rumor and
misinformation. Much of it had been dispensed by the merely
gullible or misinformed, but much of it had also been dispensed by
frauds and charlatans. One had to work hard to separate fact from
fiction.
I cannot claim now to have written the complete story on MIAs,
but I am quite sure I did a responsible piece of reporting. And
while the Spectator article cannot be easily summarized, I
offer the following as a sample of what it found. The Defense
Intelligence Agency, for example, had received more than 15,000
live-sighting reports about American prisoners in Southeast Asia.
Approximately 1,650 of the reports were first-hand. That is, a
source said he had actually seen an American held in captivity, or
under circumstances that could not be easily explained. The
remainder of the reports were hearsay; a source said he had been
told by someone else about an American, or many Americans, held in
captivity. Many of the reports, even the ones that were hearsay,
were quite specific, with physical details, exact locations, and an
abundance of certifiable facts.
No live-sighting report, however, had ever been accepted as
proof by the Defense Intelligence Agency that an MIA was alive, or
ever had been alive, in Southeast Asia. "This defies the law of
probability," I wrote and made it permissible to wonder if the
agency "has ever been seriously interested in uncovering the truth
about our missing men, or whether it has always been an instrument
in a cover-up."
As chairman of the Senate select committee, Kerry might have
given us the definitive answer on this and other MIA matters, but I
think he had another agenda. Perhaps he thought it more important.
Along with so many other liberal thinkers and policy-makers, he
wanted to normalize relations with Vietnam. But the MIA issue
worked against this, of course, and I think Kerry just wanted it to
go away.
Meanwhile it would be pleasant to report now that the
Spectator article, while angering Kerry, also galvanized
conservatives and roused them into making amends for the wrong that
had been done to our missing men. But no other conservative
publication took up the cause, and as far as I know, no
conservative talk-show host showed any interest; and neither did
any of the Washington tough guys who spent the Vietnam years in
graduate school, but carry on so bravely now about committing
Americans soldiers to dangerous places.
It is unlikely that the MIA question will ever be an election
issue, although I wish it would be. We broke faith with men who
fought for their country, and we ought now to admit it.
topics:
Mainstream Media, Law