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#141
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![]() "Bob Coe" wrote in message news:CQqYc.15616$ni.10357@okepread01... "ArtKramr" wrote PLONK I guess that was the toilet seat lid. Hopefully he is going to flush now, although I don't think he's gotten everything out of his brain yet. LOL! Just give him a day or two and he'll be back to responding to Dan's posts. Apparently Art thinks that merely typing "plonk" activates the filter. Within a couple of days, he has usually forgotten who he supposedly plonked and who he hasn't, and is back to heaving his grade school level insults at them all over again (that is, when he is not completely confused and mistakenly tosses those insults the rare posters who has actually *agreed* with him...). Brooks |
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Ed Rasimus wrote in message . ..
On 23 Aug 2004 20:51:31 -0700, (Fred the Red Shirt) wrote: Ed Rasimus wrote in message . .. On 23 Aug 2004 14:13:26 -0700, (Fred the Red Shirt) wrote: Ed Rasimus wrote in message . .. On 20 Aug 2004 11:09:32 -0700, (Fred the Red Shirt) wrote: I'll give more stock to the men whom we know were on the boat with Kerry, and are willing to stand with him today, over what we are told is said by others whom we are told were on other boats. ... Personally, I'm putting very little stock into the words of the "band of brothers" who seem to be getting a lot of travel, perks and "face-time" by being loyal to Senator Kerry. That sounds remarkably close to slander. How is it slander to claim that I put little stock into their words? Or, is it slander to point out that they are traveling the country with the candidate and not at their own expense? I've not come close to slander in the slightest. It is slanderous to imply that they are lying in exchange for the privilege of traveling about the country at the DNC's expense. They don't seem to be bothered by his subsequent slander of his "brothers" when he completed his 4 months of duty. As we have previously discussed, Kerry did not slander them though arguably it is slander to claim that he did. Lemme see now, if you quote "Viet vets" and your own experience in the Senate testimony under oath that accuses the military in Vietnam of atrocities, war crimes, violations of the Geneva Convention, etc. See below. Typically the whole body of treaties comprising the laws of warfare are referred by the umbrella term Geneva Conventions even though the treaties may have been negotiated in the Hague or other cities. I'll use the term that way. knowing (or at least you should have known before becoming the organization's front-man) that they are lying, often not combat vets and often not vets at all are you not slandering me? (See Burkett's "Stolen Valor" for evidence on the veracity and qualifications of the Winter Soldier testimony. --Burkett's work has been thoroughly peer-reviewed and examined for accuracy.) While 'peer review' is not without its uses in other fields when one moves outside of the sciences it does little to assure accuracy. For example, had Pons and Fleichman submitted their famous 'cold fusion' paper to peer review they would never have published because their peers would have pointed out the major flaw in their methodology. In an investigation of historical fact, acceptable methodology is nowhere near as well-defined as in science, nor does it do as well to assure accuracy. That's not a reflection on the intellect, skill, or honesty of the writer and reviewer, just a consequence of the nature of the field itself. If you have a copy of the book, perhaps you'd like to post a list of WSI witnesses whom Burkett claims to debunk. Not organisers, or supporters, but witnesses, those who gave 'testimony'. I'll check that list against lists of witnesses and their testimony. If you go on "Meet the Press" and state that the command structure from the top down to the field officer was complicit in ordering, prescribing, tolerating war crimes are you not slandering me? No more so than I slander you and myself today when I blame you and myself for the abuses at Abu Ghraib. If you say that abiding by the ROE is a war crime are you not slandering me? To my knowledge, Kerry never said "abiding by the ROE is a war crime" It is easy to criticise someone for words YOU put in his mouth. However, if the ROE themselves call for violations of the GC, then one may commit a war crime by acts that fall within the ROE, right? If you say that using a .50 cal against personnel is a war crime (it isn't!) and I've used 20MM Vulcan against troops in the open are you not slandering me? No, I am not. Since the 1868 St Petersburg declaration several nations have prohibitted the use of explosive or incindiery projectiles weighing less than 400 grams (approximately the weight of a 37mm shell). The development of the warplane motivated a refinement such that use of said ammunition against aircraft, or other vehicles was not a crime while retaining the prohibition for antipersonell use. Also, unlike some provisions of the Geneva Conventions, the declaration is not reciprocal. Signatory nations consider violation of the declaration by any nation to be a war crime. As you know, the 12.7 mm (.50 cal) HMG has used a variety of ammunition including solid, tracer, explosive, armor piercing, and incindiery, often a mix of two or more of these was used in the same belt. In Norway (and I suppose probably many other European countries) the 12.7 mm HMG is dedicated to anti-aircraft use, the standard load is HE. So when Europeans read of the US using .50 cal machine guns I suspect they assumed it was used with explosive, rather than solid, projectiles. I believe that this contributed to the misconception that use of the ..50 cal per se, was a war crime and Kerry was factually mistaken in the matter IF his .50 was firing solid projectiles. A bit of googling shows he is not alone, it appears to be a common misconception. On its face the antipersonell use of tracers would seem to violate the St Petersburg declaration but I'm skeptical that anyone would interpret it that narrowly. However it is clear that using a 20mm against troops in the open is a violation of the St Petersburg declaration, even as modified, and would therefor be considered a war crime by any signatory nation. That the US is not a signatory nation, said use permitted by the ROE, and you would never be prosecuted in a US court for the non-violation of US law does not make is slander if someone were to accuse you of a war crime. It IS a war crime in many (perhaps most) civilized nations and those officers in the chain of command from the CIC on down who order or permit the anti- personell use of explosive projectiles under 400 grams are war criminals according to the laws of those nations even if those nations do not assert prosecutorial jurisdiction. Much of the European animosity toward the US during that era was a consequence of the US operating in a matter that violated the laws of war that were accepted by the Europeans. That we had not officially acknowledged, or accepted those same laws was regarded as evidence of guilt, not as a defense. Another issue was the use of CS chemical agent (tear gas). There are GC prohibitions against poisonous, deleterious or other gases, clearly not limited to lethal gasses, and understood to not be limitted to gasses as most such agents were atomized liquids. CS, in fact, is a solid particulate. But there is no need to quibble over the issue of how 'deleterious' a chemical weapon need be to be prohibited. The CS munitions used by the US in tunnels and bunkers in Vietnam produced and dispersed CS by combustion, which also produced, as a by product, carbon monoxide. CO IS a gas and IS poisonous. The CS munitions used in tunnels in Vietnam killed. Some of the victims were friendlies who made the mistake of thinking that a gas mask would provide adequate protection. Another issue is the use of napalm. Weapons that cause excessive suffering are prohibitted on principle. By the Vietnam era most European nations had abandoned the use of incindiery anti-personell weapons on that basis so many regarded the use by the US to be a war crime. That the US did not recognise these are war crimes does not exhonerate us, rather it condemns us for permitting the use of weapons the rest of the civilized world had outlawed or restricted. If you say that employing ordinance in a free-fire zone is a war crime--knowing that free fire zones are militarily controlled areas held by the enemy, are you not slandering me? Ignoring your staw man I'll point out that the term 'free fire zone' can be used in practice in a manner that constitutes a war crime: http://www.toledoblade.com/apps/pbcs...ORCE/110210076 Under questioning during the Army investigation, at least eight officers with authority over Tiger Force - mostly captains and majors - swore that free-fire zones gave the men the right to "kill anything that moved." If you say that bombing campaigns are war crimes and I've dutifully engaged in 250 combat missions are you not slandering me? Not if you dutifully engage in those missions because, as I'm sure you'll agree, your duty forbad you from comitting a war crime. However: S. BRIAN WILLSON, [who is NOT a John Kerry supporter, FF] , http://www.brianwillson.com As head of a 40-man USAF combat security unit in Vietnam, I was separately tasked to assess 'success' of targeted bombings. I discovered egregious war crimes -- daylight terror bombings of undefended fishing and rice farming villages resulting in mass murders and maimings of hundreds of residents. If you can show that Mr Wilson was not the 'head of a 40-man USAF combat security unit in Vietnam' etc etc, please let me know. It isn't slander for me to apply what he clearly said in the Senate and to Tim Russert on Meet the Press and call it lies. It is slanderous for you take what he said out of context and to misquote him. In another article we addresse the issue of how it must be obvious to a man of your intelligence, when Kerry was speaking generally, or for others, and when he was speaking personally for himself. Sorry I didn't pick up on this in my earlier reply but can you show that there are 60 Swift Boat veterans who contend that Kerry is 'Unfit for Command' IIUC, the authors of the book claim only that 60 contributed to the book, not that they are all agreed on the conclusion. I understand your parsing here, and while it might be quite good in a courtroom, it doesn't pass the (un)-common sense test of daily discourse in usenet. Consider this, I'm going to write a book. I'm planning to call it "Unfit for Command". I'm planning to entire a political firefight challenging a major presidential candidate's credentials. I ask you to contribute. What do you do if you don't agree with the thesis of my book? To directly address your question, I would make honest and truthful statements to the authors. Why, what would you do? No answer? But your hypothetical presumes over much. First, you assume 60 persons really did contribute, and really know that they contributed. Perhaps you base that on faith in the authors. I don't know the authors myself, and am not willing to make that presumption. My point is that if I'm writing a book in which I'm seeking your testimony about the actions of someone in combat with the intent to disprove that individual's assertions about his own action, you won't contribute your name to the effort if you don't agree with the book's thesis. You're more intelligent than that. And my point is that you don't have to tell me the thesis of your book in order to talk with me about my experiences. I'm more trusting than that. Even if you do, and I disagree with it I might not stonewall you. I might be quite willing to talk with you hoping to disabuse you of your misconceptions. I'm contributing to this discussion right now. We agree on very little. In the future if you write about your UseNet experiences you could honestly claim that I was a contributor. Second you presume that the authors informed the persons they interviewed of their intent befor even interviewing them. How could that be unless the authors reached their conclusions befor doing their research? This isn't academic research. It is historic recounting of the experiences of the authors. It is collection of supporting information to validate what they already know and to bolster their thesis. Non sequitor. That does not preclude interviewing 60 people most of whom, for example have no opinion on the thesis itself and simply corraborate objective historical information. E.g. 60 contributors to the book does not prove 60 people support the thesis. Don't confuse it with science in which you postulate and then conduct experiments to substantiate your hypothesis. You don't need to do a "double-blind" on your own experiences. I don't need 60 witnesses either. Third, you assume that the authors informed those they interviewed of that conclusion, or that they read the book. Otherwise, how would they know what conclusion the authors had reached? Few publishers will allow authors to quote individuals without questioning the author regarding the accuracy and authorizations for those quotes. Now you are assuming all 60 were quoted. One may contribute without being quoted. .... You may recall several weeks ago there was a fairly extensive document with photos of Swifties at all levels of the chain of command who had come forward in May of this year in a press conference in Washington DC at the National Press Club. No, I missed that. Can you direct me to a copy of that document? At your service: http://swift1.he.net/~swiftvet/index...SwiftVetQuotes Now that he has started down that path *I* personally would like to see him continue and explain his actions after his return to the US. It is also a repudiation of the actions of the Senator after his brief combat service. No. He doesn't appear to be running on his war resistance. That position served him for an earlier election. Now he's running on his war participation and running away from his record (much more substantial) as a resister. He needs to advance the clock and explain why he came out against the war, or more accurately, against American participation in the war. Many Americans went through a similare transition at that time and more recently in regard to the Iraq campaign. For example a Navy aviation verteran who lives next door to me who confidently stated that we'd 'stomp them into a mudhole'. befor the invasion, pointed out that is pretty much what we did just after the fall of Baghdad, and now regards the Bush administration much as he does LBJ. Apropos so long as the '60 contributors' to the book remain unamed. Have you read the book? No. Have you? Someone who has has posted elsewhere in this thread that the 60 contibutors are named. For the moment that satifies my concerns as none of your speculation could. People who have the means to do so can contact them and ask appropriate questions. I expect that if any of those 60 named dispute the authors, we'll hear about it. -- FF |
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Fred the Red Shirt wrote:
Much of the European animosity toward the US during that era was a consequence of the US operating in a matter that violated the laws of war that were accepted by the Europeans. Wrong. The French were using larger than .50 calibre weapons against troops in SE Asia a decade before Ed began straffing troops there. Europe's issue with the U.S. was political, not legal. BUFDRVR "Stay on the bomb run boys, I'm gonna get those bomb doors open if it harelips everyone on Bear Creek" |
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#146
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"Steven P. McNicoll" wrote in message ink.net...
"Fred the Red Shirt" wrote in message om... ... Actually he said that it was impossible for Kerry to have been in Cambodia, that he (Kerry) would have been courtmartialed had he gone there. Yes, at the time Kerry says he was there. First, it is not hard to believe that Kerry confused two or more, missions, thus misremembering which was the Christmas mission. Second, it is accepted that there were special forces operations in Cambodia long befor the offical invasion in 1970. Those special forces had to get there, maybe they walked in, maybe they parachuted in, or maybe they were ferried in by Swift boats or small boats with outboard motors. It seems O'Neal (I've seen his name spelt three different ways) knows better. It seems you don't understand what O'Neill said. He said to Nixon that he was in Cambodia. -- FF |
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In message , Fred the
Red Shirt writes (BUFDRVR) wrote in message ... Wrong. The French were using larger than .50 calibre weapons against troops in SE Asia a decade before Ed began straffing troops there. I'll take your word for that. What ammo was used? 20mm HE from Bearcats, at the very least. Explosive rounds with a mass under a certain limit (Hague or St. Petersburg, can't recall offhand): technical war crime. (One of those ignored issues because everyone found 20mm+ cannon so useful for shooting at "stuff" and therefore also fired them at people _outside_ trucks, trains, cars, tanks, ships etc.) There was a prohibition against firing rounds weighing less than, IIRC, 400g (just under a pound) at people. This led to the interwar selection of 1.1" for the US light antiaircraft gun, to keep the shell 'legal' for firing at manned aircraft. It appears to have been gently allowed to fall into abeyance, like only-recently-rescinded laws about it being legal to shoot Welshmen with bow and arrow in certain British towns after the hours of darkness, when everyone discovered how useful 20mm cannon were. But more relevant, there is no reason at all why firing ball rounds from a .50 machine gun at enemy combatants should be less than lawful. There's a persistent myth that it's illegal to fire .50" at people, and it just isn't true. It might be possible to claim that firing 'explosive bullets' of under the proscribed weight is a war crime, which would make every 20mm strafing run an atrocity: but by the time of Vietnam this fell into "long-accepted custom" with every nation that could strafe troops having done so with 20-23mm cannon. The law was written around the idea that undersized low-velocity explosive bullets with a few grains of black powder as burster and unreliable fuzes were excessively injurious to people and ineffective against hardware. Time rapidly produced much more effective small-calibre rounds that *were* effective against machinery and vehicles. -- He thinks too much: such men are dangerous. Julius Caesar I:2 Paul J. Adam MainBoxatjrwlynch[dot]demon{dot}co(.)uk |
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Fred the Red Shirt wrote:
First, it is not hard to believe that Kerry confused two or more, missions, thus misremembering which was the Christmas mission. Except that he said the memory was "seared into his brain". Kind of hard to get confused with memories that are "seared". BUFDRVR "Stay on the bomb run boys, I'm gonna get those bomb doors open if it harelips everyone on Bear Creek" |
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![]() "BUFDRVR" wrote in message ... Fred the Red Shirt wrote: First, it is not hard to believe that Kerry confused two or more, missions, thus misremembering which was the Christmas mission. Except that he said the memory was "seared into his brain". Kind of hard to get confused with memories that are "seared". Even worse is his double-speak regarding his first "wound". He has steadfastly maintained of late that the 2 Dec 68 action where he received that scrape did involve enemy fires directed at the boats. Unfortunately for him, though, he had given his personal journals from the era to his hand-picked biographer, Brinkley, who stated in "Tour of Duty" that Kerry'y recorded on 11 Dec, nine days after this wound was received, that he and his crew had *yet* to be fired at by the enemy. Brooks BUFDRVR "Stay on the bomb run boys, I'm gonna get those bomb doors open if it harelips everyone on Bear Creek" |
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