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Old 02-14-2004, 02:50 PM
Hanoi Jane Kerry
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Default More On How John Kerry & Jane Fonda Helped North Vietnam Kill American Soldiers

http://www.1stcavmedic.com/jane_fonda.htm

As the American POWs returned home in 1973, they spoke out about the
inhumane treatment and torture they had suffered as prisoners of war.
Their stories directly contradicted Jane Fonda's earlier statements of
1972. Some of the American POWs such as Senator John McCain, a
former Presidential candidate, stated that he was tortured by his
guards for refusing to meet with Jane Fonda and her group. Jane
Fonda, in her response to these new allegations, referred to the
returning POWs as being "hypocrites and liars."

The Wall Street Journal (August 3, 1995) published an interview with
Bui Tin who served on the General Staff of the North Vietnam Army and
received the unconditional surrender of South Vietnam on April 30,
1975. During the interview Mr. Tin was asked if the American antiwar
movement was important to Hanoi's victory. Mr. Tin responded "It was
essential to our strategy" referring to the war being fought on two
fronts, the Vietnam battlefield and back home in America through the
antiwar movement on college campuses and in the city streets. He
further stated the North Vietnamese leadership listened to the
American evening news broadcasts "to follow the growth of the American
antiwar movement." Visits to Hanoi made by persons such as Jane Fonda,
former Attorney General Ramsey Clark and various church ministers
"gave us confidence that we should hold on in the face of battlefield
reverses."

Mr. Tin surmised that "America lost because of its democracy; through
dissent and protest it lost the ability to mobilize a will to win."
Mr. Tin further advised that General Vo Nguyen Giap (Commanding
General of the North Vietnam Army) said the 1968 Tet Offensive was a
defeat. Gen. Giap in his book, made the same statement, adding that
they were surprised by the news media reporting and the demonstrations
in America. Instead of seeking a conditional surrender, they would
now hold out because America's resolve was weakening and victory could
be theirs.

From 1969 to the end of the war over 20,000 American soldiers lost
their lives in a war that the United States did not have the resolve
to win. If General Giap was accurate in his assessment that North
Vietnam was going to seek a conditional surrender at the Paris Peace
Conference, but stopped due to the sensationalism of the American news
media and the anti-war protests following the 1968 Tet Offensive, it
follows that those who participated in these anti-war activities have
to share partial responsibility for those 20,000 + Americans deaths.

We won the war on the battlefield but lost it back home on the college
campuses and in the city streets.

Americans must realize that there are agents* operating in this
Country attempting to undermine our Country and it's leadership
through our democratic principles in an effort to achieve a foreign
country's goal. A prime example of such a person during the Vietnam
War was Jane Fonda, an admitted Socialist, who blatantly supported
North Vietnam. * Agent - Any person who works to obtain the goals of
another nation either for money or for their own political beliefs.

A valuable lesson was taught by North Vietnam to other nations on how
the United States may be defeated by fighting a two front war - the
battlefield and the American home front. We must be aware of this
vulnerability.

In 1975, after the fall of the South Vietnam Government, Jane Fonda
returned to Hanoi with her newborn son Troy for a celebration in her
honor for the work she had done for North Vietnam. During the
celebration, her son was christened after a Viet Cong hero, Nguyen
Van Troi. Troi had attempted to assassinate Secretary of Defense
Robert McNamara while on his visit to South Vietnam in 1963. The
South Vietnam Government executed Troi for this attempted
assassination.
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