Swift Boat Author O'Neill Addresses Contradiction
NewsMax.com Wires
Thursday, Aug. 26, 2004
WASHINGTON One of the men who helped put Democrat John
Kerry on the defensive over his military record during the Vietnam
war is answering questions about his own service during that
conflict.
During an Oval Office conversation in 1971, John O'Neill tells
President Richard Nixon he was in Cambodia in a swift boat during the war, a claim that is at odds with O'Neill's recent statements that he
wasn't in the country.
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"I was in Cambodia, sir. I worked along the border," O'Neill
is heard telling Nixon in a conversation that was taped by the
former president's secret recording system. The tape is stored at
the National Archives in College Park, Md.
In an interview Wednesday with The Associated Press, O'Neill did
not dispute what he said to Nixon on June 16, 1971, but he insisted
he was never actually in Cambodia.
"I think I made it very clear that I was on the border, which
is exactly where I was for three months," O'Neill said of the
conversation. "I was about 100 yards from Cambodia."
Chad Clanton, a spokesman for Kerry, said the tape "is just the
latest in a long line of lies and false statements from a group
trying to smear John Kerry's military service. Again, they're being
proven liars with their own words. It's time for President Bush to
stand up and specifically condemn this smear."
O'Neill has emerged as a leading figure in the attacks on
Kerry's war record. He is co-author of "Unfit for Command," which
accuses Kerry of exaggerating his military record in Vietnam.
O'Neill is also a member of Swift Boat Veterans for Truth, a group
that has aired two television commercials harshly critical of the
Democrat presidential nominee.
O'Neill served in Vietnam from 1969-70 and took command of
Kerry's swift boat after the future U.S. senator returned
home from the war.
In the book, O'Neill wrote that Kerry's accounts of having been
in Cambodia on Christmas Eve, 1968 "are complete lies."
He wrote that "Kerry was never ordered into Cambodia by anyone
and would have been court-martialed had he gone there." O'Neill
added that the Navy positioned its own craft along the border area
to make sure no American vessels strayed across the border from
Vietnam.
In an interview earlier this week on ABC's "This Week,"
O'Neill said: "Our boats didn't go north of, only slightly north
of Sedek," which he said was about 50 miles from the Cambodian
border.
During his AP interview, O'Neill criticized Kerry for making
claims, including in the Senate, that he was in Cambodia as part of
a secret war authorized by Nixon.
Said O'Neill: "I don't think I ever stated in the Senate that I
was on an illegal expedition to Cambodia, or wrote article after
article, or wrote 51 different things" like Kerry.
Kerry has defended his war record, though his campaign has
acknowledged that he might not have crossed into Cambodia on Dec. 24,
1968, as he previously has stated.
"They were in a firefight, so that's why it sticks out in his
mind. They were on the border. There were no clear markings of
which side of the border they were on, so it's uncertain," said
campaign spokesman Michael Meehan.
Meehan said Kerry recalls being in Cambodia at some point during
his Vietnam service. "He specifically remembers being in Cambodia
giving special [operations] guys a ride well into Cambodia."
For his part, Kerry has accused the swift boat group of being a
"front group" that is doing Bush's dirty work.
The Bush campaign says it has had no involvement with Swift Boat
Veterans for Truth.
© 2004 Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Editor's note:
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