Title: John McCain’s 1969 “Tokyo Rose” Propaganda Recording Released Source:
TRUNEWS URL Source:http://www.trunews.com/article/john ... -propaganda-recording-released Published:Aug 6, 2016 Author:TRUNEWS Post Date:2016-08-06 20:23:39 by Hondo68 Keywords:very old news, Hanoi John McCain, uninal cakes Views:16632 Comments:55
Vero Beach, FL - (TRUNEWS) U.S. Senator John McCain recorded a Tokyo Rose-style propaganda message that was broadcast on North Vietnamese radio in 1969.
TRUNEWS, a nonprofit Christian digital news app, obtained the bombshell audio recording and released it today on the organizations daily newscast hosted by Rick Wiles. TRUNEWS acquired the audio recording in cooperation with WeSearchR.com, a new media company founded by Charles Johnson.
The 1969 North Vietnamese radio broadcast has never been heard in the United States of America. In fact, there has never been any knowledge that such a recording existed. The audio recording was found in a misplaced file in the National Archives in Washington, D.C. The broadcast was recorded by the Foreign Broadcast Information Service, a branch of the CIA that monitored international shortwave and foreign radio broadcasts.
Lt. Commander John McCain was shot down over Hanoi by a North Vietnamese missile while flying his 23rd bombing mission. Both of his arms and one leg were broken. He was pulled ashore by North Vietnamese who took him to a prison known by POWs as the Hanoi Hilton.
McCain was a prisoner of war for five and a half years. He was released on March 14, 1973, and returned to the United States of America as a war hero. His POW legacy propelled McCain to victory in a race for a U.S. Congressional seat in Arizona in 1982. He replaced Barry Goldwater in the Senate in 1986.
In the propaganda recording, Lt. Commander McCain said he was guilty of crimes against the Vietnamese country and people. He confessed that he bombed their cities, towns, and villages and caused many injuries, even deaths, for the people of Vietnam.
He praised the medical care and kindness of his communist captors even though he came to North Vietnam as an aggressor. McCain said he wished to express his deep gratitude for their kind treatment and that he will never forget the kindness extended to him by the communist North Vietnamese.
Senator McCain is running for a sixth six-year term in the Senate. He is facing a strong primary challenge from former State Senator Dr. Kelli Ward, a physician in Lake Havasu.
The Arizona Republican Primary is August 30. Sen. McCain will turn age 80 on the day before the primary.
Here is the actual script of John McCains 1969 Tokyo Rose propaganda broadcast on North Vietnamese radio.
To the Vietnamese people and the government of the DRVN:
From John Sidney McCain, 624787, Lieutenant Commander, U.S. Navy, born 29 August, 1936, Panama, home state Oregon. Shot down 26 October, 1967, A-4E aircraft.
I, as a U.S. airman, am guilty of crimes against the Vietnamese country and people. I bombed their cities, towns and villages and caused many injuries, even deaths, for the people of Vietnam.
I was captured in the capital city of Hanoi, while attacking it. After I was captured, I was taken to the hospital in Hanoi, where I received very good medical treatment. I was given an operation on my leg, which allowed me to walk again, and a cast on my right arm, which was badly broken in three places.
The doctors were very good and they knew a great deal about the practice of medicine. I remained in the hospital for some time and regained much of my health and strength. Since I arrived in the camp of detention, I received humane and lenient treatment.
I received this kind treatment and food even though I came here as an aggressor and the people who I injured have much difficulty in their living standards. I wish to express my deep gratitude for my kind treatment and I will never forget this kindness extended to me.
To listen to the full interview click here for the August 4th edition of TRUNEWS.
Poster Comment:
Hanoi John, GOP presidential candidate 2008. Endorsed by GOP presidential candidate Donald J. Trump, for re-election 2016.
What difference does it make, millions of loyal partisan hack Republicans voted for this known traitor in '08?
Piss on Trump/McCain 2016!
Need some of these with Trump endorsing McCain for US Senate.
McCain had two things going for him. Both his father and Grandfather were full admirals. On the strength of that, he was admitted to the Naval Academy where he was a chronic screw-up who graduated near the bottom of his class. From there he was given his choice of becoming an airplane pilot, a position for which he was unqualified. He wrecked several planes and nearly destroyed a ship. He would hace been court martialed, but someone who is a Admiral's son is not to be subjected to court martial. After being relaesed from being a POW and then eventually promoted to Captain and given the job of entertaining big wigs who wanted to meet an authentic war hero until his retirement. The man is a complete fabrication.
McCain had two things going for him. Both his father and Grandfather were full admirals. On the strength of that, he was admitted to the Naval Academy where he was a chronic screw-up who graduated near the bottom of his class. From there he was given his choice of becoming an airplane pilot, a position for which he was unqualified. He wrecked several planes and nearly destroyed a ship. He would hace been court martialed, but someone who is a Admiral's son is not to be subjected to court martial. After being relaesed from being a POW and then eventually promoted to Captain and given the job of entertaining big wigs who wanted to meet an authentic war hero until his retirement. The man is a complete fabrication.
I found no record to show where McCain wrecked several planes and nearly destroyed a ship. I found that he only crashed one aircraft that was determined to be his fault and listed in Navy records as pilot error. The accident investigation board determined a second aircraft was lost due to engine failure.
McCain was in no way at fault for the Forrestal disaster. He was in his A-4 Skyhawk. loaded with two, 1,000-pound bombs and waiting on the carrier deck for his turn to launch when a Zuni missile accidentally fired from another aircraft, swooshed across the carrier deck and stuck the plane next to McCains plane.
Of course, I could be wrong and stand to be corrected.
McCain was in no way at fault for the Forrestal disaster. He was in his A-4 Skyhawk. loaded with two, 1,000-pound bombs and waiting on the carrier deck for his turn to launch when a Zuni missile accidentally fired from another aircraft, swooshed across the carrier deck and stuck the plane next to McCains plane.
I have never seen how McCain could have been responsible, but there was a lot of controversy about the incident and whatever it was that McCain did or did not do.
John McCains personal account of his life has shaped a powerful political narrative that accords him deference on the full range of policy issues. His first effort at shaping that narrative received a remarkable boost when the May 14, 1973, edition of U.S. News & World Report gave him space for what is perhaps the longest article the magazine had ever run, a 12,000-word piece composed entirely of his unedited and often rambling account of his prisoner-of-war experience. Ever since, McCain has added compelling details at key points in his political career. When his stories are placed beside documented evidence from other sources, significant contradictions often emerge. One such case involves McCains experience in the devastating fire and explosions that killed 134 sailors on the aircraft carrier USS Forrestal during the Vietnam War three months before he was shot down over North Vietnam. McCain has made claims about this accident that differ dramatically from parts of the official Navy report and accounts of reliable eyewitnesses.
In considering the 1967 catastrophe, it is important to note that the official report concluded that no individual bore responsibility for the fire or its spread. There are a number of conflicting accounts of the Forrestal accident, but here is the story as based on the strongest sources. The fire started at 10:51 a.m. Saturday, July 29, 1967, as 30-year-old Lt. Cmdr. John McCain sat on the port side of the Forrestal in his A-4 Skyhawk going through preflight checks. To his right was Lt. Cmdr. Fred White, also in an A-4 Skyhawk attack aircraft. A Zuni rocket on another airplane accidentally fired and flew across the flight deck, passing through Whites auxiliary fuel tank and falling into the ocean. Fuel spilled onto the deck from Whites craft and ignited. McCain told his biographer, Robert Timberg, and repeats in his own book, Faith of My Fathers, that the rocket hit his own plane and knocked two bombs from it into the burning fuel as he scrambled out of his cockpit and raced to safety across the deck.1
There was, in fact, a single bombnot twothat dropped to the deck. It exploded 90 seconds after the fire broke out, intensifying the blaze until it raged out of control. White and Thomas Ott, McCains parachute rigger, were among the first to be killed instantly or mortally injured, along with most of the firefighting crew. McCains plane captain, Robert Zwerlein, was one of those who suffered fatal wounds at this point.
A camera on the deck recorded images showing that the Zuni rocket struck Whites plane. The Navy report later attributed the dropped bomb to Whites plane, although the film footage does not seem to establish this definitively. However, McCain has said many times that the Zuni rocket caused the bomb (two bombs in McCains version) to fall from his own craft.
Some of those who were on the Forrestal and other persons familiar with the ordnance told me that because the rocket did not hit McCains craft, only actions by the pilot could have caused any bomb to fall from McCains Skyhawk. These sourceswho spoke under the condition that they not be publicly identifiedagree with each other that, if any bomb fell from the McCain airplane, it was because of actions that he took either in error or panic upon seeing the fire on the deck or in his hasty exit from the plane. Two switches in the cockpit of a Skyhawk need to be thrown to drop such a bomb, according to the sources.
Whatever the circumstances of the fires origins, McCain did not stay on deck to help fight the blaze as the men around him did. With the firefighting crew virtually wiped out, men untrained in fighting fires had to pick up the fire hoses, rescue the wounded or frantically throw bombs and even planes over the ships side to prevent further tragedy. McCain left them behind and went down to the hangar-bay level, where he briefly helped crew members heave some bombs overboard. After that, he went to the pilots ready room and watched the fire on a television monitor hooked to a camera trained on the deck.
McCain has never been asked to explain why he claims that the Zuni rocket struck his plane. If a bomb or bombs subsequently fell from McCains plane as he has said, it seems to strongly suggests pilot error, and if a bomb or bombs did not fall from his plane, it suggests rash disregard for important facts in his accounts of the accident.
There is plenty more about this story that raises questions about McCains truthfulness and judgment. In the first hours after the fire, he apparently did not claim to have been injured. New York Times reporter R.W. Apple, who helicoptered out to the ship the day after the tragedy and sought out McCain as the son and grandson of two noted admirals, never mentioned him being wounded, although he reported on him more than on any other crew member. This would be an odd omission on Apples part if McCain indeed had been wounded, given that service wounds are usually highlighted in such reports during wartime. McCains own father, after seeing his son several weeks later, sent a letter to relatives and friends about the fire saying, Happily for all of us, he [John] came through without a scratch.2
A week after the fire, McCain made a statement in which he said that when he was on the hangar deck he noticed that he had a wound on his knee and small shrapnel cuts in his thigh and shoulder. He was not treated in sick bay, however, and he tells a story in Faith of My Fathers that seems to be at variance with the facts. He writes that he went to sick bay to have his wounds treated but when he got there, a kid who was anonymous to me because the fire had burned off all of his identifying features asked him if another pilot in the squadron was OK. When McCain replied that he was, the kid said Thank God and died before McCains eyes. McCain said that experience left him unable to keep my composure, and that is why he left sick bay without being treated.
Lt. j.g. Dave Dollarhide witnessed that encounter because he was in sick bay, having broken his hip escaping from his plane, which had been immediately to the left of McCains when the blaze started. Dollarhide knew McCain and also the kid, a young man whom McCain knew well because he was his own plane captain, Robert Zwerlein, who was terribly burned when the first bomb exploded on the ship. Notwithstanding McCains dramatic account of witnessing someone die before his eyes, Zwerlein did not die then but instead was evacuated to the hospital ship USS Repose, where he expired three days later. On the basis of Dollarhides account, if McCain left sick bay without being treated it was not because someone died before his eyes.3
McCains actions after the fire show a determination to exit the ship as quickly as possible. When New York Times reporter Apple finished gathering his notes on the fire, McCain boarded a helicopter with him and flew to Saigon. Given that fires still burned on the ship and some of his fellow airmen were gravely wounded and dying, McCains assertion that he left the carrier for some welcome R&R in Saigon has a surreal air. Apple, now dead, said nothing in his news reports about inviting McCain to leave the ship, although he did report talking to him in Saigon later that day. McCain does not mention receiving permission to leave the still-burning ship. Merv Rowland, a commander and chief engineering officer of the Forrestal at the time of the fire, told me that he had not known that McCain left the ship within 30 hours of the fire and that he found this extraordinary. Rowland added that only the severely wounded were allowed to leave the ship and that no one, as far as he knew, would have been given permission to fly to Saigon for R&R. McCains quick flight off the Forrestal meant that he missed the memorial service for his dead comrades held the following day in the South China Sea.
Not long after McCain left, the Forrestal set off without him on its somber voyage to Subic Bay in the Philippines, where it would undergo initial repairs. He rejoined the ship a week later when it was docked at Subic Bay. There he gave an official statement and asked for a transfer to the aircraft carrier Oriskany.
Apple filed two stories about McCains time in Saigon. Apples first story said: Today, hours after the fire that ravaged the flight deck and killed so many of his fellow crewmen, commander McCain sat in Saigon and shook his head. It was such a great ship, he said.4 Apples second story was filed three months later, just after McCain was shot down over Hanoi. In that story Apple wrote: It was almost three months ago that the young, prematurely gray Navy pilot was sitting in a villa in Saigon, sipping a Scotch with friends and recalling the holocaust that he had managed to live through. He was John Sydney [sicspelling is Sidney] McCain, 3rd, a lieutenant commander. The day before, he had watched from the cockpit of his Skyhawk attack plane as flames suddenly engulfed the flight deck of the Forrestal, on which his squadron was based. Its a difficult thing to say, he remarked after a long time. But now that Ive seen what the bombs and the napalm did to the people on our ship, Im not so sure that I want to drop any more of that stuff on North Vietnam. 5
The record suggests that after McCain left the burning Forrestal for the greater ease of Saigon, he saw his Navy career as being in jeopardy. Soon, he went to London, where his father, Adm. John S. McCain Jr., was stationed as commander in chief of the United States Naval Forces in Europe. Sen. McCain has written little about the fire, and his book does not mention any conversations with his father about bombs dropping from his plane on the Forrestal or his leaving the ship. However, it is difficult to imagine that he did not discuss the tragedy and his own personal difficulties because, by McCains own account, his father had intervened on his behalf before. After seeing the admiral in London, McCain went to the French Riviera, where he spent his nights gambling at the Palm Beach Casino.6
McCains book skips over the weeks after the Forrestal fire, but Timberg says that the young naval officer spent the months of August and September 1967 unsure of his status. Following McCains application for a transfer to the Oriskany, his orders were delayed, and in September he returned to his home in Jacksonville, Fla. There, an old friend, Chuck Larson, saw a change in McCain: The pilot was discouraged about his future. McCain confided to Larson that he might have to get out of the Navy because, in the words of the Timberg biography, his past had become a burden and whenever he joined a new outfit he was dismayed that his reputation for mayhem had preceded him.7Aside from any questions about his Forrestal actions, McCain had, in his short Navy career, crashed two planes and flown a third into power lines in Spain because of, as he put it, daredevil clowning.8
The investigation into the Forrestal fire was in the hands of Adm. Thomas Moorer, chief of naval operations and a close friend of McCains father. (Their friendship was why Moorer would personally convey the news to Adm. Jack McCain three months later that his son had been shot down in Vietnam.) Moorer gave the investigation to Rear Adm. Forsyth Massey, who handed in his report on Sept. 19, 1967. McCain received orders to report to the Oriskany on Sept. 30.9
During the period when John McCain was shot down over Hanoi on Oct. 26, 1967, less than a month after being assigned to the Oriskany, recent eventsthe Forrestal fire and his possible role in its growth, misgivings about dropping more of that stuff on Vietnam, his decision to leave the stricken ship for some R&R in Saigon, anxiety about his naval careerwere fresh in his mind. What had been going on in McCains life may cast light on some of the decisions he made later as a prisoner of war. While he was a POW, he famously refused to be released early, electing not to leave his comrades behind.
After McCain made his first run for the presidency, in 2000, Gregory Freeman wrote a book on the fire, Sailors to the End. Freemans 2002 book appears to be mostly reliable, but it ignores key parts of the official report and hews closely to McCains claim that the Zuni rocket struck his plane, not Fred Whites, causing the two thousand-pound bombs to drop into the burning fuel.
In addition to following McCains misleading narrative of the Zuni rocket accident to the letter, Freeman published an uncredited hand-drawn sketch purporting to show the Forrestal deck just before the fire. In that sketch, the plane in which White died is stripped of Whites name, even though Freeman printed the names of the other pilots near McCains plane and told their stories. The only place that Whites name appears is at the back of the book in a list of those who died. In the narrative of Sailors to the End, Fred Whites name is conspicuous by its absence.
After erasing White, Freemans sketch presents an incorrect line between the original position of the Zuni rocket and McCains plane, instead of showing the actual line that the rocket took in striking Whites plane. This sketch alone will cause the unwary reader to believe there is visual evidence to support the claim that the Zuni rocket hit McCains plane, not that of White, the pilot lost on the Forrestal and now airbrushed out of history, at least in Freemans book.
McCain wrote a glowing blurb for Freemans book, drawing and all, calling it a riveting account. The presence of his enthusiastic blurb on the book cover raises another issue: Freeman relied heavily on interviews of survivors who were close to the Forrestal events but he never quotes McCain directly or mentions having requested an interview with him. Because his book pushes McCains misleading and unsubstantiated account, Freeman should make public whether McCain, or people around him, played a role in the genesis of Sailors to the End.
Im an old Navy pilot. I know when a crisis calls for all hands on deck,10 Sen. McCain said recently in explaining why he was temporarily suspending his presidential campaign and calling for postponement of the first debate between himself and Democratic candidate Barack Obama, which eventually occurred as scheduled. At the one time in his life when he was faced with a real crisis on deck, we now know, McCain left the crisis to others and descended to safety below. As to the question of whether the first bomb to explode on the Forrestal dropped from his plane through pilot error, it is not reassuring to hear him describe his attitude as a Navy pilot toward safety procedures. He told reporters during his 2000 presidential campaign that his motto in those days was: Kick the tires and light the fires [jet engines]. To hell with the checklist. Anybody can be slow.11
McCain has gone much further than most veterans in using his military experiences for political purposes, but he has not allowed his military records to be released, save for the list of his awards and medals, all of which were given only after he became a prisoner of war. It is appropriate that he release those records before the election. If his actions contributed to the magnitude of the Forrestal disaster and if he left the burning ship under less than honorable circumstances, that information should be available to voters as they choose their next president. At the very least, John McCain should be asked to explain his actions in the summer of 1967 and tell American voters why he has repeatedly given a false account of Robert Zwerleins death.
Mary Hershberger is a historian and the author of Jane Fondas War and other books. She is a recipient of the Binkley-Stephenson Award, given annually for the best scholarly article in the Journal of American History.
1. John McCain with Mark Salter, Faith of My Fathers, 177-181; Robert Timberg, John McCain: An American Odyssey, 71-74.
2. R.W. Apple Jr., Start of Tragedy: Pilot Hears a Blast As He Checks Plane (New York Times, July 31, 1967) 1; McCain, 181.
3. James Caiella, Hell 1051, Foundation Magazine (fall 2003) 52.
4. Apple, ibid.
5. R.W. Apple Jr., McCains Son, Forrestal Survivor, Is Missing in Raid (New York Times, Oct. 28, 1967) 1.
6. Timberg, 75-76.
7. Ibid.
8. McCain, 155-156, 159, 172.
9. Ibid., 192, 182.
10. Prepared Remarks by John McCain to the Clinton Global Initiative, Boston Globe, Sept. 25, 2008, online.
11. Roger Simon, Honest John, on the Loose: With McCain, you get the good, the bad, and the angry, U.S. News & World Report, posted Sept. 19, 1999.
Aside from any questions about his Forrestal actions, McCain had, in his short Navy career, crashed two planes and flown a third into power lines in Spain because of, as he put it, daredevil clowning.8