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http://www.villagevoice.com/issues/0438/turse.php

>From the National Archives: New proof of Vietnam War
atrocities
Swift Boat Swill
by Nicholas Turse
September 21st, 2004 11:40 AM

John Kerry is being pilloried for his shocking Senate
testimony 34 years ago that many U.S. soldiers—not
just a few "rogues"—were committing atrocities against
the Vietnamese. U.S. military records that were
classified for decades but are now available in the
National Archives back Kerry up and put the lie to his
critics. Contrary to what those critics, including the
Swift Boat Veterans for Truth, have implied, Kerry was
speaking on behalf of many soldiers when he testified
before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on April
22, 1971, and said this:


They told stories that at times they had personally
raped, cut off ears, cut off heads, taped wires from
portable telephones to human genitals and turned up
the power, cut off limbs, blown up bodies, randomly
shot at civilians, razed villages in a fashion
reminiscent of Genghis Khan, shot cattle and dogs for
fun, poisoned food stocks, and generally ravaged the
countryside of South Vietnam, in addition to the
normal ravage of war and the normal and very
particular ravaging which is done by the applied
bombing power of this country.

The archives have hundreds of files of official U.S.
military investigations of such atrocities committed
by American soldiers. I've pored over those
records—which were classified for decades—for my
Columbia University dissertation and, now, this Voice
article. The exact number of investigated allegations
of atrocities is unknown, as is the number of such
barbaric incidents that occurred but weren't
investigated. Some war crimes, like the Tiger Force
atrocities exposed last year by The Toledo Blade, have
only come to light decades later. Others never will.
But there are plentiful records to back up Kerry's
1971 testimony point by point. Following (with the
names removed or abbreviated) are examples, directly
from the archives:

"They had personally raped"

On August 12, 1967, Specialist S., a military
intelligence interrogator, "raped . . . a 13-year-old
. . . female" in an interrogation hut in a P.O.W.
compound. He was convicted of assault and indecent
acts with a child. He served seven months and 16 days
for his crimes.


"Cut off ears"

On August 9, 1968, a seven-man patrol led by First
Lieutenant S. entered Dien Tien hamlet. "Shortly
thereafter, Private First Class W. was heard to shout
to an unidentified person to halt. W. fired his M-16
several times, and the victim was killed. W. then
dragged the body to [the lieutenant's] location. . . .
Staff Sergeant B. told W. to bring back an ear or
finger if he wanted to prove himself a man. W. later
went back to the body and removed both ears and a
finger." W. was charged with assault and conduct to
the prejudice of good order and discipline; he was
court-martialed and convicted, but he served no prison
time. B. was found guilty of assault and was fined $50
a month for three months. S. was discharged from the
army before action could be taken against him.


"Cut off heads"

On June 23, 1967, members of the 25th Infantry
Division killed two enemy soldiers in combat in Binh
Duong province. An army Criminal Investigation
Division (CID) probe disclosed that "Staff Sergeant H.
then decapitated the bodies with an axe." H. was
court-martialed and found guilty of conduct to the
prejudice of good order and discipline. His grade was
reduced, but he served no prison time.


"Taped wires from portable telephones to human
genitals and turned up the power"

On January 10, 1968, six Green Berets in Long Hai,
South Vietnam, "applied electrical torture via field
telephones to the sensitive areas of the bodies of
three men and one woman . . . " Four received
reprimands and "Article 15s"—a nonjudicial punishment
meted out by a commanding officer or officer in charge
for minor offenses. A fifth refused to accept his
Article 15, and no other action was taken against him.
No action was taken against the sixth Green Beret.


"Cut off limbs"

A CID investigation disclosed that during late
February or early March 1968 near Thanh Duc, South
Vietnam, First Lieutenant L. ordered soldier K. to
shoot an unidentified Vietnamese civilian. "K. shot
the Vietnamese civilian, leaving him with wounds in
the chest and stomach. Soldier B., acting on orders
from L., returned to the scene and killed the
Vietnamese civilian, and an unidentified medic severed
the Vietnamese civilian's left arm." No punishment was
meted out because none of the "identified
perpetrators" was found to be on active duty at the
time of the June 1971 investigation.


"Blown up bodies"

On February 14, 1969, Platoon Sergeant B. and
Specialist R., on a reconnaissance patrol in Binh Dinh
province, "came upon three Vietnamese males . . . whom
they detained and then shot at close range using M-16
automatic fire. B. then arranged the bodies on the
ground so that their heads were close together. A
fragmentation grenade was dropped next to the heads of
the bodies." B. was court-martialed, convicted of
manslaughter, and sentenced to a reduction in grade
and a fine of $97 per month for six months—after which
time he re-enlisted. R. was court-martialed and found
not guilty.


"Randomly shot at civilians, razed villages in a
fashion reminiscent of Genghis Khan"

While a U.S. "helicopter hunter-killer team . . . was
on a recon mission in Cambodia," its members fired
rockets at buildings and "engaged various targets [in
a small village] with machine-gun fire. Gunship
preparatory fire preceded the landing of a South
Vietnamese army platoon, which had been diverted from
another mission. A U.S. captain accompanied the
platoon on the ground in violation of standing orders.
The South Vietnamese troops, reconnoitering by fire,
did not search bunkers for enemy forces, nor were
enemy weapons found. . . . Civilian casualties were
estimated at eight dead, including two children, 15
wounded, and three or four structures destroyed. There
is no evidence that the wounded were provided medical
treatment by either U.S. or South Vietnamese forces. .
. . Members of the South Vietnamese platoon returned
to the aircraft with large quantities of civilian
property. . . . The incident was neither properly
investigated nor reported initially." Letters of
reprimand were issued to a lieutenant colonel and a
major. The captain received a letter of reprimand.


John Kerry made it clear when he testified more than
three decades ago that what he told the Senate was the
cumulative testimony of well over 100 "honorably
discharged and many very highly decorated" Vietnam
vets who gathered in Detroit in early 1971. Calling
their gathering the Winter Soldier Investigation, they
were trying to raise awareness of the type of war they
said America was waging in Southeast Asia. They were
trying to demonstrate that the shocking My Lai
massacre on March 16, 1968, of 567 civilians in a
Vietnamese village—a barbarism unknown to the American
public until late 1969—was not an isolated incident in
which rogue troops went berserk, but simply one of
many U.S.-perpetrated atrocities.

All these years later, neither the Swift Boat Veterans
for Truth (SBVT) nor the media feeding their
allegations about Kerry's supposedly "false 'war
crimes' charges" even broaches the subject of
Vietnamese suffering, let alone talk about Kerry's
exposition of large-scale atrocities, such as
free-fire zones and bombardment of villages—gross
violations of international law cannot simply be
denied or explained away.

Having worked for nearly five years doing research on
post-traumatic stress disorder among Vietnam vets, I
understand the intense trauma experienced by many of
them. However, having also spent years working with
U.S. government records of investigations into
atrocities committed against the Vietnamese by U.S.
soldiers, it is patently clear which country suffered
more as a result of the war, and it isn't the U.S.,
which tragically lost just over 58,000 soldiers. It's
Vietnam. Perhaps as many as 2 million Vietnamese
civilians died during the war, and who can even guess
at the number wounded—physically and psychologically.

On its website, the SBVT tries to debunk the Winter
Soldier Investigation by using the same rhetoric that
apologists for the Vietnam War have long employed:
They paint the vets who attended the Detroit meeting
as a parade of fake veterans offering false testimony.
"None of the Winter Soldier 'witnesses' Kerry cited in
his Senate testimony less than three months later were
willing to sign affidavits, and their gruesome stories
lacked the names, dates, and places that would allow
their claims to be tested," the SBVT claims. "Few were
willing to cooperate with military investigators."

While numerous authors have repeatedly advanced such
assertions, U.S. military documents tell a radically
different story. According to the formerly classified
army records, 46 soldiers who testified at the WSI
made allegations that, in the eyes of U.S. Army
investigators, "merited further inquiry." As of March
1972, the army's CID noted that of the 46 allegations,
"only 43 complainants have been identified" by
investigators. "Only" 43 of 46? That means at least 93
percent of the veterans surveyed were real, not fake.
Moreover, according to official records, CID
investigators attempted to contact 41 people who
testified at the Detroit session, which occurred
between January 31 and February 2, 1971. Five couldn't
be located, according to records. Of the remaining 36,
31 submitted to interviews—hardly the "few" asserted
by SBVT. Moreover, as Gerald Nicosia has noted in his
mammoth tome Home to War, "A complete transcript of
the Winter Soldier testimony was sent to the Pentagon,
and the military never refuted a word of it."

The assertion that the vets proved uncooperative and
refused to provide useful, identifiable information
has also been a typical device used to refute the WSI.
In this case, the Winter Soldiers themselves played
directly into the hands of their detractors by trying
to have it both ways: They wanted to expose atrocities
as a product of command policy while denying
individual soldiers' responsibility in committing the
crimes.

At the WSI, veteran after veteran told of brutal
military tactics, like burning villages and
establishing free-fire zones. They offered blunt,
graphic, and often horrific accounts of murder, rape,
torture, mutilation, and indiscriminate violence. But
when it came to perpetrators, the soldiers did not
name names. From the outset, they made it clear that
they would not allow their testimony to be used to, as
they put it, scapegoat individual G.I.'s and
low-ranking officers when, they said, it was the war's
managers—America's political and military
leadership—who were ultimately to blame for the
atrocities. Because of this stance, some veterans told
investigators after the WSI that they would not offer
any further testimony or would only speak before
Congress or a congressional committee. This stance
became a convenient way for the military to stop work
on cases and ignore the charges the anti-war vets had
made.

But in fact—and despite later claims to the contrary
by their pro-war critics—most of the Winter Soldier
participants had publicly given accounts with their
own names, unit identifications, dates of service, and
sometimes rather detailed descriptions of
locations—namely, all the information needed to
proceed with investigations. In practically all the
specific Winter Soldier cases, such probes were never
done.





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