May 30, 2013
ED Noor: When I plugged into Google for illustrations of John McCain War Hero a thousand and one photos of the great young man surfaced. That right there should have been a red flag before despite his parentage. How many other POW's received such a publicized welcome? Clearly he was being set in place for his role as the returning hero, however events ~ ever subject to the whims of the uppermost echelons of power ~ might play out in the future. I always ask myself who votes these men into power and found my answer in the top "cartoon". Of course, he plays the Christian Zionist card with the despicable John Hagee who would have his sizable brain dead flock out there campaigning for Jesus's choice, McCain.
ED Noor: When I plugged into Google for illustrations of John McCain War Hero a thousand and one photos of the great young man surfaced. That right there should have been a red flag before despite his parentage. How many other POW's received such a publicized welcome? Clearly he was being set in place for his role as the returning hero, however events ~ ever subject to the whims of the uppermost echelons of power ~ might play out in the future. I always ask myself who votes these men into power and found my answer in the top "cartoon". Of course, he plays the Christian Zionist card with the despicable John Hagee who would have his sizable brain dead flock out there campaigning for Jesus's choice, McCain.
Two
time Medal of Honour recipient Marine Major General Smedley Butler once said “war is a racket.”
He might have added that while enriching the few it victimizes and degrades
everyone else who is caught up in the meat grinder, soldiers as well as
civilians.
Consider
how accounts of soldiers who are captured and subsequently turn on their own
country are as old as warfare. American soldiers taken prisoner are only
supposed to provide their names, ranks, and serial numbers to their captors
though in practice many find themselves agreeing with their interrogators or
even signing confessions to avoid abuse or obtain better conditions in their
prisons.
A
number of American prisoners were described as having been “brainwashed” during
the Korean War, the expression initially suggesting that they had been subject
to psychological conditioning and indoctrination that made them question their
loyalties and which subsequently produced episodes of aberrant behaviour.
In
some cases the psychological conditioning was combined with physical torture,
but in most cases not. In nearly all cases the victims later recanted the confessions
they provided to their captors, were despondent over what they had done and
said while under North Korean and Chinese control, and sometimes had difficulty
in readjusting to life in the United States.
Vietnam
also produced its own crop of American prisoners of war, numbering perhaps as
many as 2,000 when the Paris peace talks started in 1973. One of them was John
McCain, now a reliably hawkish Senator from Arizona who has recently visited
Syria in an attempt to jump start a new war in the Middle East.
ED Noor: Looks like quite the staged photo op there, Mr. McCain.
.
.
While
it is well known that McCain was a captive of the North Vietnamese for more
than five years after his plane was shot down while bombing a power plant,
considerably less well known is his behaviour while a prisoner of war in Hanoi
which has long been the object of some speculation due to allegations of
possible cooperation with his captors.
McCain,
who was saved from drowning by a Vietnamese civilian and was treated at a Hanoi
hospital for his wounds, was the son of the Admiral commanding the Pacific Fleet,
so he was what might be referred to as a high value captive for the North
Vietnamese regime. As such he received considerable attention from his captors,
was referred to by his fellow prisoners as the “Crown Prince,” and was, by some
accounts,
handled with kid gloves.
And
his connections may have ensured that he would receive additional high value
treatment from the Pentagon upon his return to the U.S., he being awarded an
astonishing Silver Star, Legion of Merit, Distinguished Flying Cross, Bronze
Star and a Purple Heart for his 22 missions spent bombing mostly civilian
targets in North Vietnam.
Ed Noor: The first section of the above broadcast, Mark Dankof discusses MeCain and throws in some little publicized aspects of McCain's behaviour.
McCain’s
own tale of his torture and the confession he recorded for the North Vietnamese
comes largely from his book
Faith of My Fathers, in which he describes his shame at cooperating with
the enemy. But some of McCain’s fellow prisoners, who were tortured and did not
collaborate, have challenged his narrative, expressing their belief that McCain
was not physically abused at all and that he was well treated. Others who were
also in the prison camp dispute
that claim. But by McCain’s own account he may have begun cooperating with the North
Vietnamese within three days of his capture and was fully on board within two
weeks, providing specific intelligence on his aircraft carrier, its aircraft,
and the support vessels attached to it, information that was later featured in
North Vietnamese radio broadcasts.
One
account that
appeared on a wire service entitled “PW Songbird is Pilot Son of Admiral”
reported that McCain may have gone beyond an acceptable level of collaboration
in assisting the psychological warfare offensives aimed at American servicemen:
“The broadcast was beamed to American servicemen in South Vietnam as a part of
a propaganda series attempting to counter charges by U.S. Defense Secretary
Melvin Laird that American prisoners are being mistreated in North Vietnam.”
Douglas
Valentine, in a 2008 article
in Counterpunch, describes how
“On one occasion, General Vo Nguyen Giap, the top Vietnamese commander and a nationalist celebrity of the time, personally interviewed McCain. His compliance during this command performance was a moment of affirmation for the Vietnamese. His Vietnamese handlers thereafter used him regularly as prop at meetings with foreign delegations.”
It
has also been claimed
by retired Army Colonel Earl Hopper, admittedly without any corroborating
evidence apart from what might be contained in inaccessible Pentagon files,
that
“McCain told his North Vietnamese captors, highly classified information, the most important of which was the package routes, which were routes used to bomb North Vietnam. He gave in detail the altitude they were flying, the direction, if they made a turn… he gave them what primary targets the United States was interested in…the information McCain provided allowed the North Vietnamese to adjust their air-defenses.“As result…the US lost sixty percent more aircraft and in 1968 [and] called off the bombing of North Vietnam, because of the information McCain had given to them.”
If
McCain indeed collaborated beyond the point that might have been understandable
for any prisoner seeking to ameliorate his confinement it would be an
intriguing tale, particularly if it could be plausibly demonstrated that it
might have influenced his subsequent behaviour as a senator cheerleading for
the Pentagon while simultaneously covering up some of the more disgraceful by
products of Vietnam.
Pulitzer
Prize winning journalist Sydney Schanberg, who was intrigued by the Vietnam POW
issue, began pursuing the McCain story in the late 1980s. Schanberg, a former
senior editor at the New York Times, is best known for his coverage of
the war in Vietnam and his book The Killing Fields about Cambodia, which
was made into an Oscar winning movie. Schanberg was unable to find a mainstream
paper or magazine interested in the story but he eventually completed a feature
article
on the Senator and the prisoners in Vietnam entitled “McCain and the POW Cover Up,”
which first appeared on the website of The Nation Institute in September 18,
2008. The article was later replayed
by The American Conservative in its July 2010 edition, together with
critical commentary.
Schanberg
makes two key points:
First that a number of American prisoners of war were left behind in Indochina in 1973 with the connivance of top levels in the U.S. government andSecond that John McCain has worked assiduously to obstruct any efforts to open Pentagon files and follow up on leads to determine the status of the POWs and the “missing in action.”
Admittedly,
the prisoner of war issue is considerably more complicated than Schanberg
represents it to be with many of the sightings and other evidence subject to
challenge while his assumption that the Vietnamese were interested in
exchanging their remaining prisoners for U.S. financial assistance is also
somewhat speculative. But it appears undeniable based on the statements of
senior U.S. government officials cited in the article and accompanying
commentary that at least some prisoners were left behind with the full
knowledge of and even enablement by the White House and Congress. Numerous
elected and appointed officials subsequently lied to cover up their mendacity.
It
was a national disgrace, compounded through the fully documented case Schanberg
makes for subsequent obstructionism by McCain and a number of other Senators
who followed his lead, including current Secretary of State John Kerry, to
impede any serious search for the missing in action and POWs.
One
might reasonably infer that McCain’s cover up of Vietnam era POW sightings
could well have been driven by fear that some released prisoners might have
unpleasant things to say about his activities while at Hoa Lo prison. But as
the war is now long over and any remaining prisoners are surely dead, none of
this would matter a great deal today realistically speaking except to the
remaining POW families.
But
the past does shape the present and character surely does matter, particularly
if one wants to become president and have the authority to send American
soldiers to their deaths in support of questionable interventionist policies
that might be rooted in a psychological need to fix what went wrong in Vietnam.
Though
no longer a presidential candidate, John McCain is still a powerful voice in
the Senate consistently advocating policies calling for the United States to
use military force around the world. He is a reliable hawk who contrary to all
the evidence continues to embrace the Iraq fiasco as if it were an American
triumph and who is now the most active senator agitating for direct U.S.
military action against Syria and Iran. His recent visit to Syria to
demonstrate support for the rebels is, in fact, a violation of the Logan Act which forbids the
conduct of foreign policy by anyone outside the executive branch of government.
More
troubling perhaps, McCain has consistently and irrationally advocated an
undeviating hard line against Russia, the only country with the military
capability to confront and destroy much of the United States through its
nuclear armed ballistic missile forces. McCain supports untouchable defense
budgets, American Exceptionalism, and a proactive “defense” policy that is a
holdover from the George W. Bush years. He constantly flouts his patriotism and
war record, which have become essential parts of his political persona, and he
might well be reasonably described as the leading advocate of militarism in the
United States Senate.
Much
of McCain’s chauvinistic bluster might indeed be explained by guilt over his
long ago confession to the North Vietnamese, a failing for which he might be
making atonement through doubling down to demonstrate his unwavering support of
the military. And there is also a darker side to him, possibly fed by guilt,
evident in his frequently observed volcanic temper, which has been sometimes
been directed against families of former prisoners who have raised the POW
issue. It has been plausibly described
as the side of a man who is not at peace with himself.
So
who is the real John McCain? A credible case has been made that McCain may have
crossed the line and collaborated extensively while a prisoner in North
Vietnam. His subsequent actions to block any inquiry into the status of
possible POWs have also been examined in some detail and quite reasonably
questioned. Many journalists and former government officials have long been
aware of McCain’s possible misrepresentation of his deportment in Hanoi even if
the story has not exactly made the front pages.
The
Pentagon reportedly
has recordings of McCain’s radio broadcasts, which could be released if the
Senator allows the Department of Defense to do so. And there would also been an
intensive intelligence debriefing after the return to the United States, an
unredacted version of which has never been produced.
If the recordings were truly limited to an under duress script fabricated to satisfy McCain’s tormentors, as he states in his book, they would only have reinforced the image of war hero, so it raises the question of why that was not done in 2008 or when McCain made his first run for the presidency in 2000.
The
president of the United States has his finger on the nuclear trigger, surely
making his mental state and possible betrayal of his comrades while in military
service legitimate lines of inquiry. The documents relating to McCain in the
Pentagon archives would reveal one way or the other at least some of the truth
about the man.
There
are a number of possible reasons for the unwillingness within the media and
among the public to seek the truth about John McCain, also noted most recently
in the broader reluctance to confront the legacy of the war against Iraq on the
tenth anniversary of the invasion. No one likes to reopen old wounds,
particularly since both Vietnam and Iraq were wars fought on lies and both are
now widely viewed as major policy disasters.
In
post-9/11 America, government secrecy has created a situation in which
information can easily be managed to both protect and benefit those in the
White House and in Congress while embedded journalists increasingly become part
of the story as they integrate seamlessly with policy makers.
This
groupthink is largely driven by the intangible beltway consensus about the
underlying American myth of “we are the good guys” that the public is inclined
to support in an age when the country is falsely and deliberately perceived as
drowning in a sea of terrorists and ungrateful foreigners.
Confidence
in America’s public institutions can be criticized but must not be seriously
damaged so there is a well understood line that must not be crossed.
If
one were to read about a war hero Senator who turns out to be considerably less
than that and who did his best to block the return of American prisoners it
would undermine confidence in government and just might call into question the
legitimacy of America’s wars since 1945.
But
it is perhaps not too late to take another look at McCain and the post-Vietnam
POW issue while many veterans of that conflict are still alive. It might also
help to discredit the Senate’s leading warmonger. Either way, it would be a
reckoning that is long since overdue.
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