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September 25, 2004

Kerry's unlikely detractors...

Check out this surprising column by the WaPo's Colbert King regarding Kerry's record on Vietnam. King's column includes this email from former Clinton-era Assistant Secretary of the Air Force Rodney Coleman:

I vividly recall Kerry's antiwar testimony in April 1971. I was a White House fellow at the time, on a leave of absence from active duty, as were five of the 17 fellows selected. Two of them had Vietnam experience with Silver and Bronze Stars and Purple Hearts awarded for their heroism. In early April 1971, I volunteered to go to Vietnam after my year as a White House fellow. I could have very easily taken steps to forgo a tour in 'Nam, but as an Air Force captain committed to the ideals of the oath of office I took, Vietnam was the only game in town.

When Kerry made those critical statements of the war, my parents, God bless them, went ballistic about their son going in harm's way. My military colleagues in the fellows program who had been there and were shot up were incensed that a so-called military man would engage in such insubordinate actions. At the time Kerry made those unfortunate remarks, America had POWs and MIAs, among them my friend, Colonel Fred Cherry, the longest-held black POW of the Vietnam War. How could a true American fighting man throw away his medals, while thousands he fought alongside of were in the midst of another example of man's inhumanity to man?

On an only tangentially related note, I read this moving tribute to one of the brave young men who never came back from Vietnam last night.   It is worth reading.

September 25, 2004 at 02:22 PM | Permalink

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