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 PC man vocal as Swift boat vet   
 Author: 
 Dated:  Saturday, October 09 2004 @ 09:00 AM PDT
 Viewed:  10862 times  
-- by Sarah Williams

Of the Swift boat veterans, a Port Clinton native says he served the most time in Vietnam with presidential candidate John Kerry.

Steve Gardner, a native of Port Clinton and a Port Clinton High School graduate, appears alone in one of the organization's six ads. The ad was released Aug. 26 and is titled "Gunner."

The 56-year-old was a member of the U.S. Navy from 1965 to 1969, serving two tours during Vietnam as a 3rd class gunnersmate. His first tour lasted from February 1966 through February 1967, and the second from early 1968 to January 1969.

It was during his second tour that he met and served under Kerry, he said. Gardner said he served two months and 14 days with Kerry, who served a total of four months and 14 days.

For his service, Kerry was awarded a Silver Star -- the Navy's fifth highest medal -- a Bronze Star with Combat V, and three Purple Hearts, which were awarded for wounds received in combat, according to www.johnkerry.com. Kerry received the Bronze Star for rescuing a Green Beret who had gone overboard during a mission, the site shows.

Gardner said he became involved with Swift Vets after the writer of "Tour of Duty: John Kerry and The Vietnam War" contacted him. Because Gardner started "finding inconsistencies in the book involved with me," he began calling every newspaper and radio station he could, trying to get the word out.

According to www.swiftvets.com, the organization -- Swift Vets and POWs for Truth -- is a tax-exempt, nonpartisan public advocacy "527" organization that consists of former military officers and enlisted men who served in Vietnam on U.S. Navy "Swift boats" or in affiliated commands, as well as former prisoners of war and their families.

In the ad featuring him, Gardner says Kerry "hasn't been honest, he has been deceitful." Kerry never spent Christmas in Cambodia, and he wasn't there in December or January, Gardner said.

"We were never there -- period. Any time John Kerry wants to call me a liar, he can take me to court immediately," Gardner said during an interview Friday. "If I were telling untruths about John Kerry, what do you think a truthful, honest man would do? (I would) be in court or in jail. But there's been no suit brought against me."

"... (If there was), he would have to give up the info, and that's something he doesn't want to do because he knows he's a liar."

Kerry's quotes regarding Cambodia are posted on the Swift Vets' Web site, including a 1979 article in the Boston Herald, a 1986 speech pulled from the Congressional Record during which Kerry spoke in opposition to President Reagan's policy in Central America, a 1992 article by the Associated Press, and the "lie" was mentioned in an article appearing in U.S. News and World Report in 2000. A book, "Unfit for Command," by John O'Neill and Dr. Jerome Corsi outlines the "impossibility" of Kerry's story, the Swift Vets' site shows.

Gardner said Kerry has since retracted the statement that he was in Cambodia for Christmas 1968. But Brendon Cull, a spokesman for the Democratic campaign in Ohio, said he has done no such thing.

"... There's no border sign that says exactly when you cross into a country -- you're in a creek or swamp," Cull said. "There's no exit that says, 'Welcome to Cambodia.' They were either in or very close to the border there."

Gardner and the other Swift Vets also claim that Kerry received his first and third Purple Heart medals -- which combined with the second qualified Kerry to be sent home -- because of self-inflicted wounds. Gardner also said Kerry produced a fraudulent report outlining an incident that occurred in a Viet Cong stronghold during which Gardner shot a man and young boy. Gardner says the incident occurred because Kerry, who was supposed to be watching the radar, failed to see a boat that had gotten within 30 yards of the Swift boat.

Numerous additional allegations appear on the Web site.

"This is an absolute disgrace, what they've done," Cull said of the Swift boat veterans' allegations. "They are spreading distortions and untruths in an attempt to smear John Kerry's honorable record of service to his country. Their advertisements are chock full of misleading statements and falsehoods. That kind of rhetoric, there's no place for it in American politics."

"... This is a smear campaign by the Swift boat veterans for (President George W.) Bush -- that's what they should be called."

Gardner however, said he's not a Republican or necessarily a Bush supporter.

"I never voted for Bush," he said. "I voted for his dad, but I've voted Democratic just as much as I've voted Republican. ... I'm addressing the very character of the individual who thinks he can be the next commander in chief. And that's absolutely absurd."

Gardner currently lives in Clover, S.C. After returning from Vietnam in 1969, he moved to Oak Harbor where he had a farm until 1985. He then lived in Catawba until 1988 and moved to Burlington, N.C., when the economy "got really tight." He lived in Burlington for 10 years, then moved to Clover.

For the past 16 years, he has been general manager for "a couple different boat stores and companies" and has now opened his own marine adjusting and survey business called Marine Solutions.

He has been married to wife, Marsha, for 21 years.

Gardner said he will likely be making stops in Cincinnati, Columbus, Toledo and possibly Youngstown in the next couple weeks to share his message.

This article was published by The Fremont (Ohio) News-Messenger.




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