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 Events  
Sunday, September 12, 2:00 - 4:00 pm Eastern:

Kerry Lied Rally: National rally held in Washington to tell the truth about Vietnam veterans.

Rally Photos
Operation StreetCorner

Wednesday, October 27, 5:30 - 7:30 pm Eastern: Swift Vets and POWs for Truth Orlando Rally, followed by an exclusive showing of Stolen Honor. Location: Lake Eola Bandshell.


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Contact Swift veterans at Latch@SwiftVets.com

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       Articles and Interviews  

This section contains selected articles about our organization, and interviews with some of our representatives.

A more comprehensive article list can be located with a Google News search.


 Kerry's Discharge Is Questioned by an Ex-JAG Officer Email Article To a Friend View Printable Version 
 Author: 
 Dated:  Monday, November 01 2004 @ 08:00 AM PST
 Viewed:  18407 times  
-- by Thomas Lipscomb

A former officer in the Navy's Judge Advocate General Corps Reserve has built a case that Senator Kerry was other than honorably discharged from the Navy by 1975, The New York Sun has learned.


read more (1171 words)

 Kerry's Legacy: No One Who Has Aided the Enemy Deserves to Become President Email Article To a Friend View Printable Version 
 Author: 
 Dated:  Saturday, October 30 2004 @ 08:00 PM PDT
 Viewed:  10605 times  
-- by Paul Galanti

Being a prisoner of war in Vietnam had some high points but many more low ones. The worst days physically were behind us in 1970, 1971, and 1972. After Ho Chi Minh died in 1969, the routine torturing of POWs for propaganda purposes pretty much stopped. Our captors panicked in November, 1970, following the daring raid on a closed POW camp at Son Tai 20 miles west of Hanoi - and moved all of us into the huge Hoa Lo prison in central Hanoi. We finally were permitted a semblance of societal life after years in solitary and/or stuffed into tiny windowless cells with two or three other POWs.


read more (938 words)

 Post Mortem Email Article To a Friend View Printable Version 
 Author: 
 Dated:  Thursday, October 28 2004 @ 09:00 AM PDT
 Viewed:  11116 times  
-- by Jeff Carrington

Mr. Leonard Downie, Executive Editor
Mr. Michael Getler, Ombudsman
The Washington Post

On October 27, 2004 Washington Post executive editor Leonard Downie Jr. penned an op-ed entitled, “A Strict Separation”. Therein Mr. Downie, the self-described “ultimate gatekeeper” (Post, “Live Online” 10/6/04) for everything printed in the newspaper, reassures readers that there is what amounts to a Chinese wall between the editorial and news reporting departments at the Post.


read more (1779 words)

 Most decorated U.S. vet Kerry a 'Benedict Arnold' Email Article To a Friend View Printable Version 
 Author: 
 Dated:  Wednesday, October 27 2004 @ 07:00 AM PDT
 Viewed:  13021 times  
Ex-POW campaigns against Democrat, denounces him for 'war crimes' charge

The nation's most highly decorated living veteran told a hometown audience in Sioux City, Iowa, Democratic Party presidential candidate John Kerry "will go down in history as the Benedict Arnold of 1971."


read more (855 words)

 Hanoi Approved of Role Played By Anti-War Vets Email Article To a Friend View Printable Version 
 Author: 
 Dated:  Tuesday, October 26 2004 @ 07:00 AM PDT
 Viewed:  10100 times  
-- by Thomas Lipscomb

The communist regime in Hanoi monitored closely and looked favorably upon the activities of the Vietnam Veterans Against the War during the period Senator Kerry served most actively as the group's spokesman and a member of its executive committee, two captured Viet Cong documents suggest.


read more (831 words)

 Vietnam veterans in 'Stolen Honor' deserve to be heard Email Article To a Friend View Printable Version 
 Author: 
 Dated:  Monday, October 25 2004 @ 07:00 AM PDT
 Viewed:  5403 times  
-- by Dawson Bell

In the long run, it probably won't make much difference that the Sinclair Broadcast Group didn't show the documentary film about John Kerry's anti-Vietnam War activism as a primetime news show.


read more (1285 words)

 Vets Plan to Make 'Stolen Honor' Free to Stations Email Article To a Friend View Printable Version 
 Author: 
 Dated:  Sunday, October 24 2004 @ 09:00 PM PDT
 Viewed:  5846 times  
Pulitzer-prize-winning journalist Carlton A. Sherwood, producer of "Stolen Honor: Wounds That Never Heal," says his organization plans to make his film free to television and radio broadcasters who would like to air it.

read more (400 words)

 Never Apologize, Never Explain Email Article To a Friend View Printable Version 
 Author: 
 Dated:  Sunday, October 24 2004 @ 08:00 AM PDT
 Viewed:  11794 times  
-- by Joshua Muravchik

JOHN KERRY SAYS HE IS "PROUD" of his activities in opposition to the Vietnam War. Why, then, have he and his spokesmen consistently misrepresented them? Indeed the Kerry camp has been so effective in obscuring this history that both the New York Times and the Washington Post were forced to run corrections on the subject recently because their reporters relied on misinformation that the Kerry camp had succeeded in putting into wide circulation.


read more (1775 words)

 Kerry's Vietnam ghosts won't go away Email Article To a Friend View Printable Version 
 Author: 
 Dated:  Sunday, October 24 2004 @ 07:00 AM PDT
 Viewed:  10770 times  
-- by Robert J. Caldwell

In a race appropriately dominated by questions of presidential leadership, the war on terror, Iraq and the economy, Vietnam nonetheless continues to haunt Democrat John Kerry. For this, Kerry has only himself to blame.

It is Kerry who quite deliberately made his brief four months on Navy Swift Boats in Vietnam in 1968-69 his signature credential to be commander in chief 35 years later. It is Kerry and his surrogates who repeat constantly the mantra that he "defended this country as a young man." It was Kerry who presented his "band of brothers" – the seven (out of eight) members of his Swift Boat crew who support him for president – as a backdrop at the Democratic National Convention.


read more (788 words)

 The Speech John O'Neill Wasn't Allowed to Give Email Article To a Friend View Printable Version 
 Author: 
 Dated:  Friday, October 22 2004 @ 07:00 AM PDT
 Viewed:  20137 times  
-- by Max Friedman

Honor to the Soldier, and Sailor everywhere, who bravely bears his country's cause. Honor also to the citizen who cares for his brother in the field, and serves, as he best can, the same cause - honor to him, only less than to him, who braves, for the common good, the storms of heaven and the storms of battle.

-- President Abraham Lincoln, December 2, 1863

In 1971, a Vietnam veteran wrote a speech defending the honor of the servicemen and women who served in that war and its surrounding theaters of operation. He hoped to present it before Congress, but was prevented from doing so, while the Senate testimony of anti-war Vietnam vet John Kerry was splashed all over the media. John O'Neill's eloquent defense of the Vietnam veteran lay sleeping in old files for more than 33 years, but it retains its original power and deserves to be heard at this point in America's history.


read more (2178 words)