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  2004-12-19 Bruce Kesler-John Kerry


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Kesler provides background

On anti-Kerry Vietnam vets


jewishsightseeing.com,  Dec. 19, 2004

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By Donald H. Harrison

A member of San Diego’s Jewish community, who likes to “challenge people’s assumptions,” is emerging as a post-election spokesman for the group of Vietnam veterans who opposed the candidacy of John Kerry.

Bruce Kesler, who gave permission for jewishsightseeing to reprint his op-ed in today’s San Diego Union-Tribune, told us that he is only one of many anti-Kerry veterans who are Jewish.  Among others he listed Steve Sherman of Houston, who leads the Special Forces Association, and Max Friedman, a Justice Department employee in Washington D.C. 

Mentioned beginning on page 13 in Unfit for Duty, the book by John O’Neill and Jerry Corsi that challenged Kerry’s Vietnam War record, Kesler had served as a Marine Corps sergeant in Vietnam between his graduation with a bachelor’s degree from Brooklyn College and his post-graduate work at the University of Pennsylvania.

Kesler grew up in an Orthodox home in Brooklyn and resided in a number of cities during a corporate career that included posts with Olivetti, Crown Zellerbach, and ITT.  He moved to San Diego County in 1989 where he started his own business.  Today, he is affiliated with three congregations across the Jewish spectrum from Reform to Conservative to Orthodox. 

Along with his wife, Judith, and son Jason, Kesler is affiliated with Chabad of University City, Congregation Beth Am and Temple Solel.  During the 1990s when the organization was active, Kesler was active with the San Diego Jewish Republicans.  He also has been a supporter of Seacrest Village Retirement Communities, having donated funds to the program memorializing family members on benches.

Independent of any letter that you might write to the San Diego Union-Tribune, Jewishsightseeing.com welcomes your comments on Kesler’s column printed below.  You may send your comments to sdheritage@cox.net.                    

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The revolt of the Vietnam veterans

By Bruce Kesler
December 19, 2004

By Bruce Kesler

Post mortems in the liberal press on the role that Vietnam veterans played in presidential candidate John Kerry's defeat mask the key role of the liberal press, which tried to suppress the vets' story and is distorting it now. I was there at the creation of a veterans group and all along, and know better. The American people deserve to know better too.

In 1971 I organized Vietnam Veterans for a Just Peace. John O'Neill enlisted to counter the smears of American servicemen in Vietnam. No one else spoke up for us, so we had to. The mainstream press was more diverse than today and we got a spotty but honest hearing.  got a spotty but honest hearing.

Kerry's light dimmed then. Americans got the message that a motley crew of exaggerators and frauds didn't speak for Vietnam veterans. We said our piece and went home, back to our diverse, nonpolitical lives.

Meanwhile, anti-Vietnam war protesters of the 1960s marched through academia and the media to claim its power as their own. In 2004, they fought to defend their self-image by defaming that of anti-Kerry Vietnam veterans.

In February 2004, anti-Kerry Vietnam veterans were shocked that he won the Democratic nomination. The mainstream media blessed this coronation. No one except Kerry and his advisers really wanted to revisit Vietnam, but they saw it as a way to appeal to anti and pro-war voters.

Kerry's Vietnam veteran opponents hadn't been in contact for over 30 years, so we searched each other out. Scott Swett, creator of wintersoldier.com that collected research on Kerry's protest activities, was an invaluable connector among us, creating an Internet political network that bound us together.

While we knew all too well about Kerry's anti-Vietnam protest period, we compared notes and surprised ourselves at the extent of deceptions in Kerry's self-hagiography about being a sterling war hero. It was intolerable that John Kerry brazenly glorified this suspect record to centerpiece his few months as a junior officer 35 years ago as qualification to lead the United States in this most challenging time since the Cold War.

The liberal media portrayed anti-Kerry Vietnam veterans as a long-planned, far-right funded conspiracy of liars. That's far, far from the truth. The real story is like the Minutemen, rising from peaceful lives to spontaneously come together to again fight for the America we so deeply love.

There was little or no coordination, just mutual support, with each volunteer shooting from behind his own tree in the same direction. We came to know each other on the field of our revolt against the false image created by Kerry of himself in the media and the false image Kerry was instrumental in painting of us and America.

John O'Neill got off his sickbed. He asked me whether I had the contacts and resources to lead as I did in 1971, which I didn't, and he dug in his own pocket to get the Swift Boat Veterans for Truth started. Vietnam veterans from every service, and Americans from every walk of life, joined in and followed O'Neill into political combat.

Early in the year a friend with access to the Kerry campaign warned me it was digging for any kind of dirt to destroy us. Contrary to the liberal media's story that we surprised Kerry in August, he thought the mainstream media could succeed in ignoring and stifling the Swift Boat veterans, and he had long planned a new smear campaign against us.

The surprise to the Kerry camp and liberal press was that the new media did break through and that Vietnam veterans could not be intimidated. In August, as reported by Newsweek, Kerry operatives fed negative documents and talking points to the New York Times, Washington Post and Boston Globe. Subsequent articles in those newspapers reflected negatively on the Swiftees.

With only one halting exception, the mainstream media refused to investigate the sworn affidavits of 60 credible witnesses to Kerry's behavior, or to follow up on the abundance of additional information given them. The New York Times repeatedly used "unsubstantiated" as its adjective describing the Swift Boat veterans' allegations without ever exerting its considerable power to investigate.

Kerry wasn't pressured by the mainstream media to reveal his full military records to resolve issues, nor questioned as to what he was hiding. The mainstream media's zeal in chasing down every scrap of trivia about Bush's service stands in sharp contrast. That alone strongly suggested a liberal bias.

This behavior by some of the liberal media was purposeful. The survival of their favored candidate was endangered by our truth and facts. As important, the self-image of many reporters was endangered. Their myths of our pervasive evils in defending Vietnamese freedom, and of their valiant memories of mounting school libraries' ramparts, could not take the incongruence of exposure.

In the campaign to discredit anti-Kerry Vietnam veterans, some charged that we were reviving an old vendetta. Actually, we had ignored Kerry until last February. Some charged that we were refighting a cultural war from the '60s. Again, untrue. Many of us smoked marijuana, rocked to the same songs, grew the same long hair. We're Democrats, independents and Republicans.

The true post mortem of Kerry's defeat is simply the last hurrah of simple patriots, amateurishly but fervently rising up and banding together, with few resources, to defeat the mainstream media's boy and juggernaut. Polls and the election show we succeeded.

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