The War Secrets Senator John McCain
Hides
Former POW Fights Public Access to POW/MIA Files
By Sydney Schanberg
April 25, 2000
NEW YORK (APBnews.com) — The voters who were drawn to John S. McCain
in his run for the Republican presidential nomination this year
often cited, as the core of his appeal, his openness and blunt
candor and willingness to admit past lapses and release documents
that other senators often hold back. These qualities also seemed to
endear McCain to the campaign press corps, many of whom wrote about
how refreshing it was to travel on the McCain campaign bus, “The
Straight Talk Express,” and observe a maverick speaking his mind
rather than a traditional candidate given to obfuscation and spin.
But there was one subject that was off-limits, a subject the Arizona
senator almost never brings up and has never been open about — his
long-time opposition to releasing documents and information about
American prisoners of war in Vietnam and the missing in action who
have still not been accounted for. Since McCain himself, a downed
Navy pilot, was a prisoner in Hanoi for 5 1/2 years, his staunch
resistance to laying open the POW/MIA records has baffled colleagues
and others who have followed his career. Critics say his
anti-disclosure campaign, in close cooperation with the Pentagon and
the intelligence community, has been successful. Literally thousands
of documents that would otherwise have been declassified long ago
have been legislated into secrecy.
For example, all the Pentagon debriefings of the prisoners who
returned from Vietnam are now classified and closed to the public
under a statute enacted in the 1990s with McCain’s backing. He says
this is to protect the privacy of former POWs and gives it as his
reason for not making public his own debriefing.
But the law allows a returned prisoner to view his own file or to
designate another person to view it. APBnews.com has repeatedly
asked the senator for an interview for this article and for
permission to view his debriefing documents. He has not responded.
His office did recently send APBnews.com an e-mail, referring to a
favorable article about the senator in the Jan. 1 issue of Newsweek.
In the article, the reporter, Michael Isikoff, says that he was
allowed to review McCain’s debriefing report and that it contained
“nothing incriminating” — although in a phone interview Isikoff
acknowledged that “there were redactions” in the document. Isikoff
declined to say who showed him the document, but APBnews.com has
learned it was McCain.
Many Vietnam veterans and former POWs have fumed at McCain for
keeping these and other wartime files sealed up. His explanation,
offered freely in Senate hearings and floor speeches, is that no one
has been proven still alive and that releasing the files would
revive painful memories and cause needless emotional stress to
former prisoners, their families and the families of MIAs still
unaccounted for. But what if some of these returned prisoners, as
has always been the case at the conclusion of wars, reveal
information to their debriefing officers about other prisoners
believed still held in captivity? What justification is there for
filtering such information through the Pentagon rather than allowing
access to source materials? For instance, debriefings from returning
Korean war POWs, available in full to the American public, have
provided both citizens and government investigators with important
information about other Americans who went missing in that conflict.
Would not most families of missing men, no matter how emotionally
drained, want to know? And would they not also want to know what the
government was doing to rescue their husbands and sons? Hundreds of
MIA families have for years been questioning if concern for their
feelings is the real reason for the secrecy.
Prisoners left behind
A smaller number of former POWs, MIA families and veterans have
suggested there is something especially damning about McCain that
the senator wants to keep hidden. Without release of the files, such
accusations must be viewed as unsubstantiated speculation. The main
reason, however, for seeking these files is to find out if there is
any information in the debriefings, or in other MIA documents that
McCain and the Pentagon have kept sealed, about how many prisoners
were held back by North Vietnam after the Paris peace treaty was
signed in January 1973. The defense and intelligence establishment
has long resisted the declassification of critical records on this
subject. McCain has been the main congressional force behind this
effort.
The prisoner return in 1973 saw 591 Americans repatriated by North
Vietnam. The problem was that the U.S. intelligence list of men
believed to be alive at that time in captivity — in Vietnam, Laos
and possibly across the border in southern China and in the Soviet
Union — was much larger.
Possibly hundreds of men larger. The State Department stated
publicly in 1973 that intelligence data showed the prisoner list to
be starkly incomplete. For example, only nine of the 591 returnees
came out of Laos, though experts in U.S. military intelligence
listed 311 men as missing in that Hanoi-run country alone, and their
field reports indicated that many of those men were probably still
alive. Hanoi said it was returning all the prisoners it had.
President Nixon, on March 29, 1973, seconded that claim, telling the
nation on television: “All of our American POWs are on their way
home.” This discrepancy has never been acknowledged or explained by
official Washington. Over the years in Washington, McCain, at times
almost single-handedly, has pushed through Pentagon-desired
legislation to make it impossible or much harder for the public to
acquire POW/MIA information and much easier for the defense
bureaucracy to keep it hidden.
The Truth Bill
In 1989, 11 members of the House of Representatives introduced a
measure they called “The Truth Bill.” A brief and simple document,
it said: “[The] head of each department or agency which holds or
receives any records and information, including live-sighting
reports, which have been correlated or possibly correlated to United
States personnel listed as prisoner of war or missing in action from
World War II, the Korean conflict and the Vietnam conflict shall
make available to the public all such records and information held
or received by that department or agency. In addition, the
Department of Defense shall make available to the public with its
records and information a complete listing of United States
personnel classified as prisoner of war, missing in action, or
killed in action (body not returned) from World War II, the Korean
conflict, and the Vietnam conflict.”
Opposed by Pentagon
Bitterly opposed by the Pentagon, “The Truth Bill” got nowhere. It
was reintroduced in the next Congress in 1991 — and again
disappeared. Then, suddenly, out of the Senate, birthed by the
Arizona senator, a new piece of legislation emerged. It was called
“The McCain Bill.” This measure turned “The Truth Bill ” on its
head. It created a bureaucratic maze from which only a fraction of
the available documents could emerge. And it became law. So
restrictive were its provisions that one clause actually said the
Pentagon didn’t even have to inform the public when it received
intelligence that Americans were alive in captivity.
First, it decreed that only three categories of information could be
released, i.e., “information … that may pertain to the location,
treatment, or condition of” unaccounted-for personnel from the
Vietnam War. (This was later amended in 1995 and 1996 to include the
Cold War and the Korean conflict.) If information is received about
anything other than “location, treatment or condition,” under this
statute, which was enacted in December 199l, it does not get
disclosed.
Second, before such information can be released to the public,
permission must be granted by the primary next of kin, or PNOK. In
the case of Vietnam, letters were sent by the Department of Defense
to the 2,266 PNOK. More than 600 declined consent (including 243 who
failed to respond, considered under the law to be a “no”).
Hurdles and limitations
Finally, in addition to these hurdles and limitations, the McCain
act does not specifically order the declassification of the
information. Further, it provides the Defense Department with other
justifications for withholding documents. One such clause says that
if the information “may compromise the safety of any United States
personnel … who remain not accounted for but who may still be alive
in captivity, then the Secretary [of Defense] may withhold that
record or other information from the disclosure otherwise required
by this section.”
Boiled down, the preceding paragraph means that the Defense
Department is not obligated to tell the public about prisoners
believed alive in captivity and what efforts are being made to
rescue them. It only has to notify the White House and the
intelligence committees in the Senate and House. The committees are
forbidden under law from releasing such information.
At the same time, the McCain act is now being used to deny access to
other sorts of records. For instance, part of a recent APBnews.com
Freedom of Information Act request for the records of a mutiny on
merchant marine vessel in the 1970s was rejected by a Defense
Department official who cited the McCain act. Similarly, requests
for information about Americans missing in the Korean War and
declared dead for the last 45 years have been denied by officials
who reference the McCain statute. (Read a denial letter.)
Another bill gutted in 1996
And then there is the Missing Service Personnel Act, which McCain
succeeded in gutting in 1996. A year before, the act had been
strengthened, with bipartisan support, to compel the Pentagon to
deploy more resources with greater speed to locate and rescue
missing men. The measure imposed strict reporting requirements.
McCain amended the heart out of the statute. For example, the 1995
version required a unit commander to report to his theater commander
within two days that a person was missing and describe what rescue
and recovery efforts were underway. The McCain amendments allowed 10
days to pass before a report had to be made.
In the 1995 act, the theater commander, after receiving the MIA
report, would have 14 days to report to his Cabinet secretary in
Washington. His report had to “ certify” that all necessary actions
were being taken and all appropriate assets were being used “to
resolve the status of the missing person.” This section was stricken
from the act, replaced with language that made the Cabinet
secretary, not the theater commander, the recipient of the report
from the field. All the certification requirements also were
stricken. ‘Turn commanders into clerks’ “This, ” said a McCain memo,
“transfers the bureaucracy involved out of the field to Washington.”
He argued that the original legislation, if left intact, “would
accomplish nothing but create new jobs for lawyers and turn military
commanders into clerks.”
In response, the backers of the original statute cited the
Pentagon’s stained record on MIA’s and argued that military history
had shown that speed of action is critical to the chances of
recovering a missing man. Moving “the bureaucracy” to Washington,
they said, was merely a way to sweep the issue under a rug.
Chilling effect cited
One final evisceration in the law was McCain’s removal of all its
enforcement teeth. The original act provided for criminal penalties
for anyone, such as military bureaucrats in Washington, who destroy
or cover up or withhold from families any information about a
missing man. McCain erased this part of the law. He said the
penalties would have a chilling effect on the Pentagon’s ability to
recruit personnel for its POW/MIA office.
McCain does not deal lightly with those who disagree with him on any
of these issues or who suggest that the evidence indeed shows that a
significant number of prisoners were alive and cached away as future
bargaining chips when he came home in the group of 591 released in
1973.
Over the years, he has regularly vilified any group or person who
keeps trying to pry out more evidence about MIAs. He calls them
“hoaxers” and “charlatans” and “conspiracy theorists.” He decries
the “bizarre rantings of the MIA hobbyists” and describes them as
“individuals primarily who make their living off of keeping the
issue alive.” Before he died last year of leukemia, retired Col. Ted
Guy, a highly admired POW and one of the most dogged resisters in
the camps, wrote an angry open letter to the senator in an MIA
newsletter. In it, he said of McCain’s stream of insults: “John,
does this include Senator Bob Smith and other concerned elected
officials? Does this include the families of the missing where there
is overwhelming evidence that their loved ones were ‘last known
alive? ’ Does this include some of your fellow POWs?”
Sightings dismissed
McCain has said again and again that he has seen no “credible”
evidence that more than a tiny handful of men might have been alive
in captivity after the official prison return in 1973. He dismisses
all of the subsequent radio intercepts, live sightings, satellite
photos, CIA reports, defector information, recovered enemy documents
and reports of ransom demands — thousands and thousands of pieces of
information indicating live captives — as meaningless. He has even
described these intelligence reports as the rough equivalent of UFO
and alien sightings.
In Congress, colleagues and staffers who have seen him erupt — in
the open and, more often, in closed meetings — profess themselves
confounded by his behavior. Insisting upon anonymity so as not to
invite one of his verbal assaults, they say they have no easy way to
explain why a former POW would work so hard and so persistently to
keep POW/MIA information from coming out. Typical is the comment of
one congressional veteran who has watched McCain over many years:
“This is a man not at peace with himself.” McCain’s sense of
disgrace.
Some McCain watchers searching for answers point to his recently
published best-selling autobiography, Faith of My Fathers, half of
which is devoted to his years as a prisoner. In the book, he says he
felt badly throughout his captivity because he knew he was being
treated more leniently than his fellow POWs owing to his propaganda
value as the son of Adm. John S. McCain II, who was then the CINCPAC
— commander in chief of all U.S. forces in the Pacific region,
including Vietnam. (His captors considered him a prize catch and
nicknamed him the “Crown Prince.”)
Also in the book, the Arizona Senator repeatedly expresses guilt and
disgrace at having broken under torture and given the North
Vietnamese a taped confession, broadcast over the camp loudspeakers,
saying he was a war criminal who had, among other acts, bombed a
school. “I felt faithless and couldn’t control my despair,” he
writes. He writes, revealing that he made two half-hearted attempts
at suicide. Most tellingly, he said he lived in “dread” that his
father would find out. “I still wince,” he says, “when I recall
wondering if my father had heard of my disgrace.”
After McCain returned home, he says he told his father about the
confession, but “never discussed it at length.” The admiral, McCain
says, didn’t indicate he had heard anything about it before.
McCain’s father died in 1981. McCain writes: “I only recently
learned that the tape … had been broadcast outside the prison and
had come to the attention of my father.”
McCain wasn’t alone — it’s well-known that a sizeable percentage of
prisoners of war will break down under torture. In fact, many of his
supporters view McCain’s prison travails as evidence of his overall
heroism. Fears unpublished details?
But how would McCain’s forced confession alone explain his endless
campaign against releasing MIA/POW information?
Some veterans and other McCain watchers have speculated that
McCain’s mortification, given his family’s proud military tradition
(his grandfather was also an admiral), was so severe that it
continues to haunt him and make him fear any opening up of
information that could revive previously unpublished details of the
era, including his own nagging history.
Another question that defies easy explanation is why there has never
been any significant public outcry over the POWs who didn’t come
home or about the machinations of public officials like McCain who
carefully wove a blanket of secrecy around this issue. It can only
be understood in the context of what the Vietnam War did to the
American mind.
Forgetting the Vietnam War
It was the longest war in our history and the only one in which we
accepted defeat and brought our troops home. It had roiled the
country more than any conflict but the Civil War — to the point
where almost everyone, regardless of their politics, wanted to get
away from anything that reminded them of this bloody failure. Only a
small band of Americans, led by Vietnam veterans and MIA families,
kept asking for more information about the missing men and demanding
that the government keep its promise to do everything possible to
bring them home. Everyone else seemed to be running away from all
things Vietnam.
Knowledgeable observers note that it’s quite possible that Nixon,
leading the country’s withdrawal, accepted the peace treaty of Jan.
27, 1973, while telling himself that somehow he would negotiate the
release of the remaining POWs later. But when Congress refused to
provide the $3 billion to $4 billion in proposed national
development reparations that National Security Adviser Henry
Kissinger had dangled as a carrot to Hanoi, the prospects for the
abandoned men began to unravel.
Observers also point out that over the years that followed,
Washington continued to reject paying what it branded as ransom
money and so, across six presidencies, including the present one,
the issue of POWs who may have been left behind remained
unacknowledged by the White House and the Pentagon. Hanoi refused to
correct the impression that all the prisoners had been returned, and
Washington, for its part, refused to admit that it had known about
abandoned POWs from the beginning.
Mainstream press
indifferent
Of course, the government and many mainstream scholars reject this
theory. And whether any such prisoners remain alive to this day is
impossible for the outsider to know. Intelligence sources privately
express the belief that most of the men had either died or been
executed by the early 1990s. Presumably, these sources say, the
POW’s lost their bargaining value to Hanoi as time passed and ransom
dollars never materialized. Eventually Hanoi began seeking another
path to the money — the renewal of relations with Washington.
Diplomatic ties were restored by President Clinton in 1994, and
American economic investment quickly followed.
One factor in the nation’s indifference to the POWs was the stance
of the national press. From the very start to the present, the
mainstream media showed little interest. With just a smattering of
exceptions, the journalistic community, like the rest of the
country, ran away from the story. During the war, thousands of
American journalists poured into Vietnam in shifts; now only a
handful cover the country, most of them filing business stories
about Nike and other conglomerates opening up factories to avail
themselves of the cheap labor.
Even reporters who had covered the war came to view the MIA story,
in the years afterward, as a concoction of the far right. Without
doing much, if any, first-hand reporting, such as digging into the
available documents in the National Archives, nearly all these
journalists dismissed the MIA story as unfounded.
Generated a hero aura
In McCain’s recently suspended campaign for the presidency, it was
almost as if, in the press’s eyes, he was to be treated differently
and quite gingerly because of the hero aura generated by his POW
experience. None of his political opponents ever dared criticize him
for his legislative history on withholding POW information, and the
press never brought itself to be direct enough to even question him
on the issue.
It’s not that he didn’t give reporters plenty of openings to ask the
right Vietnam questions. For one thing, he used his history as a
Vietnam prisoner as a constant campaign theme in his speeches.
Rarely did he appear without a larger-than- life photo backdrop
showing him in battle gear as a Navy pilot before he was shot down
over Hanoi in 1967.
Here is a passage typical of the soft, even erroneous reporting on
McCain — this from a March 4 story in The New York Times: “His most
striking achievement came when he joined with another Vietnam
veteran, Senator John Kerry, Democrat of Massachusetts, to puncture
the myth that Vietnam continued holding American prisoners. ” The
piece went on to speak with admiration about “his concern over the
prisoners-of-war issue” — but, tellingly, it offered no details.
Tepid veterans’ vote
The press corps, covering the state-by-state primary vote, made an
assumption, based apparently on sentiment, that McCain, as the war
hero, would capture the significant veterans’ vote by stunning
margins. Actually, he didn’t capture it at all. He carried veterans
only in the states that he won, like Michigan and New Hampshire, but
was rejected by them in the larger number of states that he lost,
like New York, Ohio and California. Added together, when the states
were tallied up, the veterans’ vote went to George W. Bush.
The Washington press corps had gone openly soft once before on the
prisoner issue, again benefiting McCain. That was in 1991-93, during
the proceedings of the Senate Select Committee on POW/MIA Affairs.
McCain starred on that committee, working hand in hand with his new
ally, Sen. John Kerry, the panel’s co-chairman, to play down
voluminous evidence that sizeable numbers of men were still held
alive after the prisoner return in 1973. One example: At the time of
the committee’s hearings, the Pentagon had received more than 1,600
firsthand sightings of live American prisoners and nearly 14,000
secondhand reports. The intelligence officers who gathered these
reports from refugees and other informants in the field described a
large number of them as “credible” and so marked the reports. Some
of the informants had been given lie-detector tests and passed.
But the Pentagon’s Defense Intelligence Agency, after reviewing all
the reports, concluded that they “do not constitute evidence” that
men were still alive at the time.
McCain and Kerry endorsed the Pentagon’s findings. They also treated
both the Pentagon and the CIA more as the committee’s partners than
as objects of its inquiry. As one committee staff investigator said,
in a memo preserved from the period: “Speaking for the other
investigators, I can say we are sick and tired of this investigation
being controlled by those we are supposedly investigating.”
McCain stood out because he always showed up for the committee
hearings where witnesses were going to talk about specific pieces of
evidence. He would belittle and berate these witnesses, questioning
their patriotism and otherwise scoffing at their credibility. All of
this is on record in the National Archives.
Confrontation with witness
One such witness was Dolores Apodaca Alfond, chairwoman of the
National Alliance of Families, an all-volunteer MIA organization.
Her pilot brother, Capt. Victor J. Apodaca, out of the Air Force
Academy, was shot down over Dong Hoi, North Vietnam, in the early
evening of June 8, 1967. At least one person in the two-man plane
survived. Beeper signals from a pilot’s distress radio were picked
up by overhead helicopters, but the cloud cover was too heavy to go
in. Hanoi has recently turned over some bone fragments that are
supposed to be Apodaca’s. The Pentagon first declared the fragments
to be animal bones. But now it is telling the family — verbally —
that they came from the pilot. But the Pentagon, for unexplained
reasons, will not put this in writing, which means Apodaca is still
unaccounted for. Also the Pentagon refuses to give Alfond a sample
of the fragments so she can have testing done by an independent
laboratory.
Alfond’s testimony, at a hearing of the POW/MIA committee Nov. 11,
1992, was revealing. She pleaded with the committee not to shut down
in two months, as scheduled, because so much of its work was
unfinished. Also, she was critical of the committee, and in
particular Kerry and McCain, for having “discredited the overhead
satellite symbol pictures, arguing there is no way to be sure that
the [distress] symbols were made by U.S. POWs.” She also criticized
them for similarly discounting data from special sensors, shaped
like a large spike with an electronic pod and an antenna, that were
airdropped to stick in the ground along the Ho Chi Minh trail.
These devices served as motion detectors, picking up passing convoys
and other military movements, but they also had rescue capabilities.
Specifically, someone on the ground — a downed airman or a prisoner
on a labor detail — could manually enter data into the sensor pods.
Alfond said the data from the sensor spikes, which was regularly
gathered by Air Force jets flying overhead, had showed that a person
or persons on the ground had manually entered into the sensors — as
U.S. pilots had been trained to do — “no less than 20 authenticator
numbers that corresponded exactly to the classified authenticator
numbers of 20 U.S. POWs who were lost in Laos.”
Other than the panel’s second co-chairman, Sen. Bob Smith, R-N.H.,
not a single committee member attended this public hearing. But
McCain, having been advised of Alfond’s testimony, suddenly rushed
into the room to confront her. His face angry and his voice very
loud, he accused her of making “allegations … that are patently and
totally false and deceptive.” Making a fist, he shook his index
finger at her and said she had insulted an emissary to Vietnam sent
by President Bush. He said she had insulted other MIA families with
her remarks. And then he said, through clenched teeth: “And I am
sick and tired of you insulting mine and other people’s [patriotism]
who happen to have different views than yours.”
Brought to tears
By this time, tears were running down Alfond’s cheeks. She reached
into her handbag for a handkerchief. She tried to speak: “The family
members have been waiting for years — years! And now you’re shutting
down.” He kept interrupting her. She tried to say, through tears,
that she had issued no insults. He kept talking over her words. He
said she was accusing him and others of “some conspiracy without
proof, and some cover-up.” She said she was merely seeking “some
answers. That is what I am asking.” He ripped into her for using the
word “fiasco.” She replied: “The fiasco was the people that stepped
out and said we have written the end, the final chapter to Vietnam.”
“No one said that,” he shouted. “No one said what you are saying
they said, Ms. Alfond.” And then, his face flaming pink, he stalked
out of the room, to shouts of disfavor from members of the audience.
As with most of McCain’s remarks to Alfond, the facts in his closing
blast at her were incorrect. Less than three weeks earlier, on Oct.
23, 1992, in a ceremony in the White House Rose Garden, President
Bush — with John McCain standing beside him — said: “Today, finally,
I am convinced that we can begin writing the last chapter in the
Vietnam War.”
The committee did indeed, as Alfond said they planned to do, shut
down two months after the hearing.
Cannot discuss it
As for her description of the motion sensor evidence about prisoners
in Laos, McCain’s response at the hearing was that this data was in
a 1974 report that the committee had read but was still classified,
so “I cannot discuss it here. … We hope to get it declassified.”
The question to the senator now is: What happened to that report and
what happened to the pilots who belonged to those authenticator
numbers? Intelligence sources in Washington say the report was never
declassified. It became clear over the months of hearings and
sparrings that the primary goal of the Kerry-McCain alliance was to
clear the way for normalization of relations with Vietnam. They did
it in two ways — first, by regularly praising Hanoi for its
“cooperation” in the search for information about the
unaccounted-for prisoners and then by minimizing and suppressing the
volume of evidence to the contrary that had been unearthed by the
committee’s staff investigators.
Recasting the issue
Kerry and McCain also tried, at every opportunity, to recast the
issue as a debate about how many men could still be alive today,
instead of the real issue at stake: How many men were alive in 1973
after the 591 were returned? Although much evidence was kept out of
the committee’s final report in January 1993, enough of it, albeit
watered down by the committee’s majority, was inserted by the
determined staff to demonstrate conclusively that all the prisoners
had not come home. Still, if the reader didn’t plow through the
entire 1,223-page report but scanned just the brief conclusions in
the 43-page executive summary at the beginning, he or she would have
found only a weak and pallid statement saying that there was
“evidence … that indicates the possibility of survival, at least for
a small number” after the repatriation of 1973. On page 468 of the
report, McCain provided his own personal statement, saying that “we
found no compelling evidence to prove that Americans are alive in
captivity today. There is some evidence — though no proof — to
suggest only the possibility that a few Americans may have been kept
behind after the end of American’s military involvement in Vietnam.”
Two defense secretaries
And even these meager concessions were not voluntary. They had been
forced by the sworn public testimony before the Senate committee of
two former defense secretaries from the Nixon Administration, Melvin
Laird and James Schlesinger. Both these men testified that they
believed in 1973, from strong intelligence data, that a number of
prisoners in Vietnam and Laos had not been returned. Their testimony
has never been challenged. Schlesinger, before becoming defense
secretary, had been the CIA director. During his committee
appearance, Schlesinger was asked why Nixon would have accepted the
prisoners being held back in 1973. He replied: “One must assume that
we had concluded that the bargaining position of the United States …
was quite weak. We were anxious to get our troops out and we were
not going to roil the waters …” Then he was asked “a very simple
question. In your view, did we leave men behind?” ‘Some were left
behind’ “I think that as of now,” replied the former Pentagon
secretary, “that I can come to no other conclusion [that] … some
were left behind.” The press went along once again with the
debunkers. The Schlesinger-Laird testimony, which seemed a
bombshell, became but a one-day story in the nation’s major media.
The press never followed it up to explore its implications. On Jan.
26, 1994, when a resolution ardently backed by McCain and Kerry came
up in the Senate calling for the lifting of the two-decade-old
economic embargo against Vietnam, some members — in an effort to
stall the measure — tried to present new evidence about men left
behind. McCain rose to his feet and, offering no rebuttal evidence
of his own, proceeded to chide “the professional malcontents,
conspiracy mongers, con artists and dime-store Rambos who attend
this issue.” The resolution passed, 62-38. ‘Isolated Personnel’
These days, the Pentagon seems to be moving toward closing its
POW/MIA books completely. In recent statements and reports, it has
begun describing prisoners not as POWs but as IPs — Isolated
Personnel.
And in a 1999 booklet, the Pentagon said: “By the end of the year
2004, we will have moved from the way the US government conducts the
business of recovery and accounting [now] to an active program of
loss prevention, immediate rescues, and rapid post-hostility
accounting.” More important, there seems to be no allocation of
funds in 2004 for the task force that now conducts POW/MIA
investigations, searches for remains and does archival research. As
for McCain, he continues to stonewall on his own POW records.
Through numerous phone calls, faxes and letters to his office,
APBnews.com has been trying since late January to interview the
Senator and get his permission to view his POW debriefing. The
response has been that the senator has been occupied by his campaign
schedule.
Call for openness and
disclosure
During the campaign, McCain, who is chairman of the Senate Commerce
Committee, had to address a controversy over queries he had made to
the Commerce Department on behalf of a major campaign contributor.
To deal with the press interest, he announced he was releasing all
of his correspondence with the Commerce Department, not just the
letters involving the one case. In addition, to show his full
commitment to openness and disclosure, he called on every other
government agency to release his communications with them. On Jan. 9
on the CBS program Face the Nation, he announced: “Today, we are
asking the federal government to release all correspondence that
I’ve had with every government agency.”
McCain’s staff has acknowledged that this request includes the
Pentagon. But the Pentagon says it needs an official document from
McCain designating a surrogate before it can show his debriefing
report to anyone else. APBnews.com has repeatedly asked the senator
for this waiver. He does not respond.
Sydney H. Schanberg is the editor of APBnews.com’s investigative
unit. He was awarded a Pulitzer Prize for his 1975 coverage of
political and social chaos in Cambodia. His news reports and a
best-selling book about his experiences in Southeast Asia became the
basis for the Academy Award-winning film The Killing Fields.
http://www.vvof.org/mccain_hides.htm
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