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Bert Robbins
 
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Default Swift Boat Liars

Gould, you are blind. Open your eyes. The guys on Kerry's boat most likely
got stuck there because they couldn't transfer off due to nobody wanting to
transfer onto Kerry's boat. Kerry never went anywhere alone on his boat.
There was always somebody covering his six or he was covering somebody
else's six. What is telling is that the CO's of the other boats didn't trust
Kerry covering their six. If you are not trusted to cover someone's six then
you are really a screw up.

"Gould 0738" wrote in message
...
They did not all work the same place at the same time, but I bet they

worked
in teams a lot of the time. If the boat took a disabling hit, they would

be
toast if a single boat. Same as a wing man in the air force or naval

air.
I have a buddy who was shot down a couple of times (Marine pilot), and he
states the buddies check out damage and flew cover. I would bery much
presume the same for boats.
Bill



Yes, the swift boats were often deployed in
small groups.

The problem with your Swift Boat Veterans for the Truth is that they make

some
specific charges about specific actions that Kerry supposedly took during
combat.
Most of the 249 guys were not there. The men who actually served on

Kerry's
boat not only say "That's horse****!", they are campaigning for him.

For example:

On Friday I heard two different radio interviews.

The first was 2-3 guys from Swift Boat Veterans for (distorting the)

Truth.
They all claimed to have been on the scene when Kerry turned his boat

around to
pick the guy out of the water. They said that Kerry's boat was never under

fire
at any time during the engagement, that another boat was hit instead, and

that
Kerry sped off and (basically) "hid" until he was sure the
area was safe.

The second was with the guy that was pulled out of the water. It turns

out, the
guy was *not* actually part of Kerry's crew. He was Army, a Green Beret.

The
Special Forces used to get ferried into various areas by swift boats, and

that
was Kerry's mission on the day in question.

According to the Green Beret, they were proceeding up the river when they

came
under heavy small arms fire. The bow gunner's weapon was disabled by

hostile
fire, and the soldier was going forward with
another weapon when a mortar rocked the boat, throwing Kerry against some
machinery and tossing the soldier overboard. By the time Kerry got back to

the
helm, the boat was a little distance away from the MOB. According to the

guy
who was in the water, Kerry turned the boat around (while the small arms

fire
from both banks continued) and recovered him.
He was a sitting duck in that river, and he credits Kerry for saving his

life.

So, ladies and gentleman of the jury, we have two stories to consider. One
version of events is being related by a much larger group, but nearly all

of
them were *somewhere else* when the events occured. The other version of

events
is being related, very consistently, by everybody who was actually on

board the
boat in question and substantiated by the
guy who was pulled out of the river.

Since none of us were there, it becomes a judgment call. Do we believe

200,
2000, or
20000 people who *weren't there* either?
Or do we have to conclude (even if our politics cause us to wish it were
otherwise)
that the people who were actually on the scene can give a better and more
accurate account of events?

What's that Faux News slogan? "We distort, so you'll divide".