Voluntary Society - Conditioning - Conspiracy
False Flag - Vietnam
1964 August 4 - False Flag 6: U.S. ships are
allegedly attacked by North Vietnamese in the Gulf
of Tonkin. Robert S. McNamara failed to inform the Presiden Johnson that the report was incorrect, "which handed President Johnson the carte blanc
charter he wanted for future intervention in Southeast Asia."
1964 August 7 - False Flag 6 result: The 25th
Congress passes House Joint Resolution 1145 (the Gulf of Tonkin)
authorizing the president to use "all necessary measures [to]
... prevent further aggression." The resolution sets no limits on
what Commander-in-Chief Lyndon Johnson may do, or where, or how long
force may be used.
1964 August 10 - False Flag 6 result: President
Lyndon Johnson signs Resolution 1145, "To any in southeast Asia who
ask our help in defending their freedom, we shall give it. ... This
resolution stands squarely within the four corners of the
Constitution of the United States. It is clearly consistent with the
principles and purposes of the Charter of the United Nations. And
millions of dead later… In fact Ho Chi Minh had asked the U.S.
for help in dislodging the French occupation of his country, but
since the U.S. was courting the French to join NATO, we took the side
of the French colonialists, and gave them arms and equipment to
subdue the Vietnamese in French Indochina. The Soviets seized the
opportunity to use the Vietnam war for independence as a proxy in the
cold war. Another war we had no business being in, since we had lost
thousands of people liberating France form the Nazis. Same principle,
different situation.
2010 July 15 - De-classified Vietnam-era Transcripts Show Senators Knew Gulf Of Tonkin Was A Staged False Flag Event - It usually takes 50 years to learn of government lies. This only took 30.
TOP
SECRET
COMIT/X4 report entitled "Skunks, Bogies, Silent Hounds, and the
Flying Fish. The Gulf of Tonkin Mystery, 2-4 August 1964:
"Two startling findings
emerged from the new research. First, it
is not simply there is a different story as to what happened; it is
that no attack happened that night. Through a compound of analytic
errors and an unwillingness to consider contrary evidence, American
SIGINT elements in the region and at NSA HQs reported Hanoi's plans
to attack two ships of the Desoto patrol. Further analytic errors and
an obscuring of other information let to publication of more
"evidence." In truth, Hanoi's navy was engaged in nothing that night
but the salvage of two of the boats damaged on 2 August."
"The second finding pertains
to the handling of the SIGINT
material related to the Gulf of Tonkin by individuals at NSA.
Beginning with the period of the crisis in early August, into the
days of the immediate aftermath, and continuing into October 1964,
SIGINT information was presented in such a manner as to preclude
responsible decision makers in the Johnson administration from having
the complete and objective narrative of events of 4 August 1964.
Instead, only SIGINT that supported the claim that the communists had
attacked the two destroyers was given to administration
officials."
Confirmed by an A4 pilot
friend who was immediately on the scene,
and saw no torpedo boats or wakes.
Derived from USChronology.com:
9/13/1945 - Major General Douglas D. Gracey, of the
Army of the United Kingdom, arrives in Vietnam to supervise the
disarming of the Army of Japan, and reassert imperialist French
colonial control.
Postscript: Within two weeks Gracey had a
serious confrontation with Lieutenant Colonel A. Peter Dewey, of the
Office of Strategic Services, head a seven-member team that had been
sent to Saigon to find American prisoners of war. Gracey and Dewey had
an instant mistrust of each other, Gracey for being pro-French, and
Dewey for being pro-Vietminh. Consequently, Gracey ordered Dewey to
leave Vietnam.
Kurnow, 139, 675.
9/21/1945
- Major General Douglas D. Gracey, of the Army of the United Kingdom,
violates the orders he had received from Allied Commander for Southeast
Asia, Lord Louis Mountbatten, and declares martial law in Saigon.
Gracey bans public meetings by Vietnamese citizens, and indigenous
language newspapers closed down'although French electronic media are
allowed to continue to function. Realizing he cannot enforce his rule
with only eighteen hundred British, Indian and Gurkha troops under his
command, Gracey arms fourteen hundred paratroopers and Foreign
Legionnaires, of the Army of France, who had been interned during the
Japanese occupation.
Kurnow, 148-49.
9/22/1945
- Foreign Legionnaires (many of whom have felony records) and
paratroopers, of the Army of France, who had been armed by southern
Vietnamese military dictator Major General Douglas D. Gracey, of the
Army of the United Kingdom, the day before, go on a rampage in Saigon.
The soldiers raid city hall, then move onto police stations, and other
public buildings, raising the French flag from rooftops. Emboldened
French citizens take up arms, and raid the homes of indigenous
Vietnamese, indiscriminately clubbing men, women and children.
Kurnow, 149.
9/25/1945
- The Vietnamese-French War/First Vietnam War begins in Saigon: a
general strike, which had been called by the Vietminh the day before,
in response to anti-Vietnamese rioting, by French colonials, three days
previous, paralyzes the city: utilities do not function; shops and
offices are closed; public transportation has disappeared from the
streets. Twenty thousand panicked French citizens barricade themselves
into the Continental Palace Hotel. Meanwhile Vietminh guerillas close
down the airport, burn the central market, and storm the local prison
liberating hundreds of their comrades. In the Cit' H'rault, Binh Xuyen
terrorists (a splinter group from the Vietminh) sneak through armed
Japanese soldiers, who had been ordered to protect the Saigon suburb
and massacre any French citizens that could be found.
Kurnow, 149.
9/26/1945
- Lieutenant Colonel A. Peter Dewey, of the Office of Strategic
Services, becomes the first American to die in Vietnam. Dewey is
killed, after he is mistaken for a French officer at a Vietminh
roadblock in Saigon. Dewey had been on his way to the airport, having
been ordered to leave by Major General Douglas D. Gracey, of the Army
of the United Kingdom. Before leaving, Dewey summed up in his final
report to William J. 'Wild Bill' Donovan, Director of the OSS,
'Cochinchina is burning, the French and British are finished here, and
we [the United States] ought to clear out of Southeast Asia.'
Postscript:
In appreciation for OSS officers having saved his life eight months
previous, General Ho Chi Minh, of the Vietminh, sent a letter of
condolence to the James Byrnes, secretary of state.
Kurnow, 139-40, 675. [added 4/14/2002]
3/6/1946
- General Ho Chi Minh, of the Vietminh Militia, reluctantly agrees with
Jean Sainteny, special emissary of President Felix Gouin of France, to
allow twenty-five thousand soldiers from the Army of France into
Vietnam, for a period of five years. This is an effort to drive out
their ancient enemy the Chinese'on the condition that France recognizes
Vietnamese independence. Ho has a very difficult persuading his
lieutenants that the French were a lesser evil than the Chinese:
"You
fools! Don't you realize what it means if the Chinese remain? Don't you
remember you history? The last time the Chinese came, they stayed a
thousand years. The French are foreigners. They are weak. Colonialism
is dying. The white man is finished in Asia. But if the Chinese stay
now, they will never go. As for me, I prefer to sniff French s___ for
five years than eat Chinese s___ for the rest of my life."
Kurnow, 153.
3/18/1946
- Vietnamese leader Ho Chi Minh agrees to the return of the Army of
France to Vietnam, to protect the Vietnamese from their traditional
enemies, the Chinese (the Nationalist faction under dictator Chaing Kai
Shek). In return, France agrees to recognize the concept of Vietnamese
independence modeled after the British Commonwealth of Nations:
"The
French Government recognises the Republic of Vietnam as a free state,
having its Government. its Parliament, its army, and its finances, and
forming part of the Indochinese Federation and the French Union.
The
Government of Vietnam declares itself ready to receive the French army
in friendly fashion when, in accord with international agreements, it
relieves the Chinese troops. An annex attached to the present
Preliminary Convention will fix the terms under which the operation of
relief will take place.
The Government of Vietnam declares
itself ready to receive the French army in friendly fashion when, in
accord with international agreements, it relieves the Chinese troops.
An annex attached to the present Preliminary Convention will fix the
terms under which the operation of relief will take place.
The
stipulations formulated above shall enter into effect immediately upon
exchange of signatures. Each of the contracting parties shall take
necessary steps to end hostilities, to maintain troops in their
respective positions, and to create an atmosphere favourable for the
immediate opening of friendly and frank negotiations. These
negotiations shall deal particularly with the diplomatic relations
between Vietnam and foreign states, the future status of Indochina, and
economic and cultural interests. Hanoi, Saigon, and Paris may be
indicated as the locales of the negotiations.
Postscript:
The following November the French reneged on the agreement, and bombed
Viet Minh positions at Haiphong harbor. After a month of fighting, the
Viet Minh retreated into the jungles and hills, and resumed guerilla
warfare against the French.
6/1/1946 - High Commissioner for
Indochina, Admiral Thierry d'Argenlieu, of the Army of France,
proclaims a separate government for Cochinchina (the southern third of
Vietnam). This is in violation of the agreement three months previous
that France would respect the establishment of a single, autonomous
Vietnam.
Kurnow, 676.
3/8/1949
- President Vincent Auriol, of France, and former French and Japanese
puppet Emperor Bao Dai, of Vietnam (who has no popular support from his
countrymen), sign the Elys'e Agreement. The pact reaffirms the
principle of Vietnamese independence, unifies the regions of
Cochinchina (south), Amman (central), and Tonkin (north) into a united
Vietnam; but the agreement also allows France to maintain control of
financial, foreign and military affairs.
Kurnow, 177.
2/7/1950
- The Cold War contniues: Fearing a communist takeover in Southeast
Asia, Democratic (socialist/fascist) President Truman extends
diplomatic recognition to the puppet French-Vietnamese government of
King Bao Dai. During the Axis War (World War II), the Army of Japan
allowed 'king' Bao Dai to remain on the throne as a puppet ruler. The
majority of the Vietnamese people now see Bao Dai as a Japanese
collaborator and traitor, and will not support his rule over them. Ho
Chi Minh, the leader of the independent Vietnam movement, who, during
the Axis War saved many downed American pilots from the fate of a
Japanese prisoner of war camp, interprets this as an act of betrayal.
Ho vows to purge his land of foreign Franco-American influence.
NOTE:
Beginning in 1949, and throughout the decade of the 1950s, communist
Yugoslavia was the receipient of millions of 'dollars' worth of United
States military and economic aid, as a check against Soviet expansion
in Europe. But not such aid was given to Ho as a check against Chinese
expansion in Asia. Phyliss Auty, Tito, (New York: McGraw-Hill, 1970), 255-56. Kurnow, 677. Truman, 433.
5/1/1950
- Democratic (socialist/fascist) President Truman announces a ten
million 'dollar' military aid package for France, to aid its struggle
to maintain its colony in Indochina (Vietnam). Truman is sending this
aid to be used against his loyal, one-time ally Ho Chi Minh.
Postscript:
By the end of 1953, the U.S. was paying over 80% of the cost of the
Franco-Vietnamese War/First Vietnam War, at a total expenditure of over
two billion 'dollars.' Date not exact.
Please get the family
supply of pink bismuth off of the shelf to prepare to read the Chapter
1 Link. The intervention by HST murdered almost 60,000 Americans and
about 1.5 million Vietnamese, Thais, etc. I have to put HST down on the
list of the worst U.S. dictators with Lincoln, Wilson and FDR, et al.
And Eisenhower wasn't much better, but with his experience he should
have known better. Add the Korean war casualties to those of the
Vietnam war and we have about 100,000 American dead and 3.5 million
dead Asians; for what? Truman's ego? It is little wonder that the rest
of the world sees America as a mad bomber, not of a few buildings and
school buses, as tragic as those things are, but of whole nations in
their millions of souls. ' JL
6/27/1950 - The United Nations
Security Council passes Resolution 82, authorizing Commander-in-Chief
Truman to use military force against the communist Democratic Republic
of (North) Korea. In compliance, Truman issues a press release stating
that he is extending the Truman Doctrine to the Pacific, and orders
United States Armed Forces'Army, Navy, Marine Corps, and Air
Force'(private mercenaries) to South Korea. This begins the United
States fifth foreign war (this time undeclared). Although he was a
valued ally during the Axis War (World War II), Truman does not trust
General Ho Chi Minh, of the communist Vietnminh, for fear that Ho will
align with Vietnam's ancient enemy the mainland, communist People's
Republic of ('Red') China. Also at this time, Truman orders the Seventh
Fleet of the United States Navy to patrol the waters off the coast of
Taiwan, in case of Chinese decides to enter the Korean-American War.
In
a short note to Republican (fascist/socialist) governor Thomas E.
Dewey, of new york, whom Truman had defeated for the presidency two
years earlier, he writes, 'we [will] champion liberty wherever the
tyranny of communism is the aggressor.'
U.N.
Yearbook, 4 (1950): 222-24. Ambrose, 119. Thomas A. Bailey, The
Pugnacious Presidents: White House Warriors on Parade, (New York: The
Free Press, 1980), 415. Calvin D. Linton, ed., The Bicentennial
Almanac: 200 Years of America, 1776-1976, (New York: Thomas Nelson,
1977), 372-73.
6/28/1950 - Three days after the
outbreak of war on the Korean peninsula, Commander-in-Chief
Truman'without congressional authorization'orders the clandestine,
illegal shipment of eight C-47 cargo transports, laden with fifteen
million 'dollars' in weapons to aid France in the First
Vietnam/Franco-Vietnamese War.
Kurnow, 177.
This
was the second undeclared war that Truman got us into inside of one
week. The casualties total for both of Truman's wars add to 351,756,
for the U.S. alone. It wouldn't end until 1973; the Korean War is still
under a 1953 truce, and may never end. ''
5/20/1953 - Upon
assuming command of the French Union Forces in Vietnam, General
Henri-Eugene Navarre, of the Army of France, says 'Now we can see
[success in Vietnam] clearly, like light at the end of a tunnel'.
1/1/1954
- United States Army General J. Lawton Collins (private mercenary)
arrives in Saigon, Vietnam, as the special representative of Republican
(fascist/socialist) President Eisenhower, to assure the rival southern
government of Emperor Bao Dai of a one hundred million 'dollar' aid
package.
Kurnow, 678. The exact day for this event is not known.
3/13/1954
- The Presidium (the executive committee of 37 elected from among the
membership of the upper legislative house), of the Soviet Union, issues
an internal memo creating the Komitet Gosudarstvennoi Bezopasnosti
(Committee of State Security), a super agency responsible for foreign
intelligence, training of future military officers, maintaining border
and emigration integrity, investigating and punishing crime, the
maintenance of domestic order and morality, ensuring the delivery of
goods and services, and the proper dissemination of public information.
NOTE: Were the United States to establish the equivalent of the KGB
it would have to merge the Air Force, Military and Naval academies;
Border Patrol; Bureau of Prisons; Central Intelligence Agency; Drug
Enforcement Agency; Federal Bureau of Investigation; Immigration and
Naturalization Service; National Security Agency; National Security
Council; Secret Service; and United States National Guard into one
consolidated agency. It would also be necessary to include all
municipal functions of civil defense, along with all private labor
unions and major new services.
The siege at Di'n Bi'n Ph'
begins: General Vo Nguyen Giap, of the Vietminh Militia, attacks the
Far East Expeditionary Corps of France, which had fortified itself 35
miles inside Laos from the Vietnam border. The fort had been set up as
a trap for the Vietnamese army by Brigadier General Christian Marie
Ferdinand de la Croix de Castries, who plans to annihilate the
Vietnamese independence movement by drawing it out into the open then
destroying it with superior air power.
Kurnow, 678.
Since
this idiot also built his fortress on a valley floor, around his only
means of reliable support, an airfield. Giap had his people slowly drag
artillery tubes and ammo up the backside trails, until they could drop
plunging fire down on the Legionnaires, at will. Giap also launched
sappers to approach the French lines at their choice of points. The
French lost a lot of people and finally surrendered, beaten. As did the
United States almost two decades later. '' JL
5/7/1954 - The
Vietnamese-French War/First Vietnam War ends at the battle of Di'n Bi'n
Ph': Viet Minh guerillas, under the command of General Vo Nguyen Giap
defeat the Far East Expeditionary Corps of France, commanded by
Brigadier General Christian Marie Ferdinand de la Croix de Castries,
forcing the French to negotiate with the Vietnamese on the subject of
independence for the Vietnam.
Kurnow, 678.
7/21/1954
- French and Vietnamese negotiators conclude the 1954 Treaty of Paris:
Cambodia and Laos are granted immediate independence, and Vietnam is to
be partitioned between a northern half under the control of Ho Chi
Minh, while the southern half is to be ruled by a pro-French
government, with unification elections to be held in two years.
2/12/1955
- Commander-in-Chief Eisenhower orders the first United States Armed
Forces (private mercenaries) to serve as combat advisors to the
kleptocratic (rule by thieves) Republic of (South) Vietnam.
10/24/1955
- Republican (fascist/socialist) President Eisenhower extends
diplomatic recognition to the kleptocratic (rule by thieves) Republic
of (South) Vietnam, and sends 100 million 'dollars' in military
assistance for its civil war against communist Democratic Republic of
(North) Vietnam.
10/26/1955 - Prime Minister Ngo Dinh Diem
declares independence for the kleptocratic (rule by thieves) Republic
of (South) Vietnam'with himself as its first President'by refusing to
hold unification elections with the north. This prompts Ho Chi Minh,
leader of the communist Democratic Republic of (North) Vietnam to begin
the two-decade long First Vietnamese Civil War/Second Vietnam War.
7/8/1959
- South Vietnamese communist guerillas at Bien Hoa, South Vietnam, kill
United States Army Major Dale Buis and Master Sergeant Chester Ovnard
(private mercenaries). They are the first Americans to die during what
is to become the Vietnamese-American War.
12/20/1960 -
South Vietnamese communist guerillas organize the National
Liberation Front for (kleptocratic, rule by thieves, South) Vietnam, to
carry out guerilla war operations against the government of dictator
Ngo Dinh Diem. NOTE: The rival southern government referred to
the NLFSV as the 'Vietcong' (Vietnamese for 'Communist Vietnamese').
Kurnow, 680.
8/10/1961
- Operation Ranch Hand begins: The United States Air Force
(private mercenaries) begin spraying a 1:1 mixture of 2,4
dichlorophenoxyacetic acid and 2,4,5 trichlorophenoxyacetic acid,
commonly known as the defoliant 'Agent Orange,' in the kleptocratic
(rule by thieves) Republic of (South) Vietnam. The intention is to
destroy the jungle foliage, allow Army of the Republic of Vietnam
pilots to search for and destroy Vietcong positions. Not only does
Agent Orange destroy foliage, but also crops.
Postscripts:
Over
the next decade, over 19 million gallons of Agent Orange were sprayed
over thirty thousand square miles of South Vietnam. This did not defeat
the Vietcong. But it did consistently destroy rice crops, causing
famine and overcrowding in the cities.
Four decades later the last
of the 20,000,000 tons of herbicides and defoliants were dropped on
Vietnam, much of the attacked areas remain unable to support anything
other than a weed known as 'American Grass.'
Not to mention the
poisoning of U.S. troops, and the thirty years of denials and
cover-ups. The public's anger was directed at Dow and Dupont, etc., who
were mere vendors, incapable of command decisions. '' JL
12/11/1961
- The first United States combat forces (private mercenaries) arrive in
Vietnam, consisting of two helicopter companies: 32 aircraft and 400
Soldiers.
2/6/1962 - The United States Military Assistance Command is formed in South Vietnam.
3/9/1962
- Department of Defense officials admit United States pilots (private
mercenaries) are flying combat missions in Vietnam.
David Wallechinsky and Irving Wallace, eds., The People's Almanac, (Garden City, New York: Doubleday, 1975), 246.
2/19/1963 - Robert Strange McNamara, Secretary of Defense, announces that 'victory is in sight in Vietnam.'
Howard Zinn, A People's History of the United States, (New York: Harper Colophon, 1980; HarperPerenial, 1980), 538.
6/5/1963
- Henry Cabot Lodge, ambassador to South Vietnam, assures General Khanh
of the South Vietnamese Army that 'the United States government would
in the immediate future be preparing U.S. public opinion for actions
against North Vietnam.'
Howard Zinn, A People's History of the United States, (New York: Harper Colophon, 1980; HarperPerenial, 1980), 489-90.
8/24/1963
- Commander-in-Chief Kennedy orders Henry Cabot Lodge, ambassador to
South Vietnam, to help co-ordinate activities that will lead to
dictator Ngu Dinh Diem's overthrow.
Lasky, 94.
11/2/1963
- A military coup, financed by the Central Intelligence Agency,
assassinates Ngo Dinh Diem, dictator of The (kleptocratic) Republic of
(South) Vietnam.
NOTE: This begins the U.S.' fourth attempt at 'nation-building.'
Doug
Bandow, 'Nation-Building's Grim Record,' Orange County (California)
Register, 25 April 2003, Local:7. Ellen J. Hammer, A Death in November:
America in Vietnam, 1963, (New York: E.P. Dutton, 1987), 296-99. Howard
Zinn, A People's History of the United States, (New York: Harper
Colophon, 1980; HarperPerenial, 1980), 465.
11/26/1963 -
The Vietnamese-American War begins: Commander-in-Chief Lyndon Johnson
issues National Security Action Memorandum 273, escalating United
States involvement in the First Vietnamese Civil War:
"We
should seek to turn the tide not only of battle but of belief, and we
should seek to increase not only the control of hamlets but the
productivity of this area, especially where the proceeds can be held
for the advantage of anti-Communist forces.....Planning should include
different levels of possible increased activity, and in each instance
there should he estimates of such factors as...The plausibility of
denial..."
Question: By what lawful authority did Johnson
propose to fight Marxism abroad, and then impose it at home via the
'War on Poverty,' a.k.a. the 'Great Society?'
5/27/1964 -
Democratic (socialist/fascist) President Johnson confides in McGeorge
Bundy, his National Security Advisor, 'I stayed awake last night
thinking about this [Vietnam] thing, and the more I think of it'I don't
think its worth fighting for, and I don't think we can get out, and
it's just the biggest damn mess [sic].'
Robert Scheer. 'Face It'Our Behavior in the War Was Evil,' Los Angeles Times, 2 May 2000, B13.
8/2/1964
- In an effort to involve America in another undeclared foreign war
(the Vietnamese-American War), the United States government fabricates
the Gulf of Tonkin Incident.
R.B. Smith, 278-79.
8/7/1964
- The Democratic (socialist/fascist) 25th counterfeit congress (elected
within the provisions of the fraudulent 17th amendment) passes House
Joint (the Gulf of Tonkin) Resolution 1145, authorizing the president
to use 'all necessary measures [to] ... prevent further aggression.'
The resolution sets no limits on what Commander-in-Chief Lyndon Johnson
may do, or where, or how long force may be used.
David G. Savage, 'Vietnam Ghost Haunts Senate,' Los Angeles Times, 17 September 2001, A14.
8/10/1964
- Democratic (socialist/fascist) President Lyndon Johnson signs House
Joint (the Gulf of Tonkin) Resolution 1145, which gives him a free hand
to conduct offensive military operations in Vietnam.
"To
any in southeast Asia who ask our help in defending their freedom, we
shall give it. ... This resolution stands squarely within the four
corners of the Constitution of the United States. It is clearly
consistent with the principles and purposes of the Charter of the
United Nations."
And millions of dead later' In fact Ho
Chi Minh had asked the U.S. for help in dislodging the French
occupation of his country, but since the U.S. was courting the French
to join NATO, we took the side of the French colonialists and gave them
arms and equipment to subdue the Vietnamese in French Indochina. The
Soviets seized the opportunity to use the VN war for independence as a
proxy in the cold war. Another war we had no business being in, since
we had lost thousands of people liberating France form the Nazis. Same
principle, different situation. And here we go again. Like the lesson
of Vietnam never happened. '' JL
8/30/1964 - The New Deal
III/Great Society (1964-68) continues: while the United States Armed
Forces (private mercenaries) are in Vietnam 'defending freedom,'
Democratic (socialist/fascist) President Lyndon Johnson signs the
Economic Opportunity Act Office of 1964, creating, a myriad of
vocational programs in communities, which are to be directly
administered by the Federal government'bypassing the states'such as the
Job Corps, the Neighborhood Youth Corps, and Volunteers in Service to
America (VISTA, a 'domestic Peace Corps'). The act also establishes
'neighborhood centers,' which send Federal employees door-to-door to
inform United States enemy/subject/citizens of their 'right' to
welfare.
Postscript: These programs did very little to help
people lift themselves out of poverty, but did recruit many into a
state of dependency. Many failed programs such as the Job Corps, were
replaced by the Comprehensive Emploment Training Act; which in turned
was replaced by the Job Partnership Training Act, when CETA was
determined by CONgress to be a failure.
Larry Elder, Ten Things You Can't Say in America, (New York: St. Martin's Press, 2000), 163.
11/23/1964
- The United States Air Force (private mercenaries), under orders from
Commander-in-Chief Lyndon Johnson, drops Belgian mercenaries into the
Republic of Congo (Zaire) during a revolt against the dictator Joseph
Kasavubu.
NOTE: This is the first time the United States has
invaded the Republic of Congo, whereas the Republic of Congo has never
invaded the U.S.
While the United States Armed Forces (private
mercenaries) are in Vietnam 'defending freedom,' the supreme court, of
the corporate United states, hands down United States v. Powell:
"[T]he
Commissioner [of Internal Revenue] need not meet any standard of
probable cause to obtain enforcement of [an Internal Revenue Service
summons], either before or after the three-year statute of limitations
... has expired. ... The burden of showing an abuse of the court's
process is on the taxpayer."
U.S. v. Powell, 379 U.S. 48, 57 (1964).
12/14/1964
- The supreme court, of the corporate United states, decides Heart of
Atlanta Motel v. United States, upholding as lawful the Civil Rights
Act of 1964, which bans racial discrimination in interstate commerce.
Heart of Atlanta Motel v. U.S. 379 U.S. 241, 250, 253, 258 (1964).
While
the United States Armed Forces (private mercenaries) are in Vietnam
'defending freedom,' the supreme court hands down McClung v.
Katzenbach, extending the Civil Rights Act of 1964 to businesses
primarily involved in intrastate commerce.
McClung v. Katzenbach, 379 U.S. 294, 297, 300, 302 (1964).
3/8/1965
- Operation Rolling Thunder: 35 hundred United States Marines (private
mercenaries)'the first combat troops of the Vietnamese-American
War/First Vietnamese Civil War/Second Vietnam War'arrive at Da Nang.
NOTE:
During this time, Democratic (socialist/fascist) President Lyndon
Johnson started receiving telegrams from many United States
enemy/subject/citizens'exercising their Right to Petition as expressed
by Article I of Amendment'voicing their opposition to his involving the
U.S. in the Second Vietnamese Civil War. Johnson ordered the Federal
Bureau of Investigation to conduct background checks on dozens of them.
Irwin and Debi Unger, LBJ: A Life, (New York: John Wiley, 1999), 347.
3/24/1965
- The first student 'teach-in' against the Vietnamese-American War is
held at the University of michigan. This is the same place at which
President Lyndon Johnson gave his 'Great Society Speech,' just ten
months previous. Over three thousand students, and several hundred
faculty attended this first teach-in.
Postscript: The teach-in
movement quickly spread most college campuses throughout the nation. In
the early stages, the department of state dispatch 'truth teams' to
these meetings, to communicate the views of President Lyndon Johnson;
but they we usually shouted down, and forced to leave.
NOTE: The
editors are not aware of that at any time during the 'teach-ins' that
the constitutional arguments against foreign wars were ever discussed.
Irwin and Debi Unger, LBJ: A Life, (New York: John Wiley, 1999), 315-16, 348.
This
is true to my recollection, and I think the reason was these events
were staged by socialists, and they have no love for the limits
established by the Constitution. What they wanted was visceral
reaction, not rational idealism, which would undermine their Marxist
dialectic. '' JL
7/28/1965 - Commander-in-Chief Lyndon Johnson
announces that he is increasing the number of United States Armed
Forces (private mercenaries) in the kleptocratic (rule by thieves)
Republic of (South) Vietnam from 75,000 to 125,000.
'Today in History,' Orange County (California) Register, 28 July 2006, News:13.
1/12/1966
- Democratic (socialist/fascist) President Lyndon Johnson, at the
reconvening of the Democratic 26th counterfeit congress (elected within
the provisions of the fraudulent 17th amendment), announces the United
States military presence in South Vietnam will continue until communist
aggression is ended.
'Today in History,' Orange County (California) Register, 12 January, 2001, Accent:2.
3/31/1966
- David Paul O'Brien, and three others, deliberately violate the
Universal Military Training and Service Act by publicly burning their
draft (involuntary servitude) cards. Their intention is to call
attention to the unlawfulness of the Vietnamese-American War/Second
Vietnam War by putting the UMTSA on trial.
U.S. v. O'Brien, 391 U.S. 367, 369, 375 (1968).
3/15/1967
- Democratic (socialist/fascist) President Lyndon Johnson, in a speech
to the legislature of the confederate state of tennessee, says,
'America is committed to the defense of South Vietnam until an
honorable peace can be negotiated'.Despite the obstacles to victory, we
shall stay the course.'
4/4/1967 - Reverend Martin Luther
King, Jr., President of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference,
delivers his 'Beyond Vietnam' speech at Riverside Community Church, in
New York City:
"They must see
Americans as strange liberators. The Vietnamese people proclaimed their
own independence in 1945 after a combined French and Japanese
occupation, and before the Communist revolution in China. They were led
by Ho Chi Minh. Even though they quoted the American Declaration of
Independence in their own document of freedom, we refused to recognize
them. ... They watch as we poison their water, as we kill a million
acres of their crops. They must weep as the bulldozers roar through
their areas preparing to destroy the precious trees. They wander into
the hospitals, with at least twenty casualties from American firepower
for one 'Vietcong'-inflicted injury. So far we may have killed a
million of them'mostly children. They wander into the towns and see
thousands of the children, homeless, without clothes, running in packs
on the streets like animals. They see the children, degraded by our
soldiers as they beg for food. They see the children selling their
sisters to our soldiers, soliciting for their mothers. ... I would
encourage all ministers of draft [involuntary servitude] age to give up
their ministerial exemptions and seek status as conscientious objectors
(pacifists). These are the times for real choices and not false ones.
We are at the moment when our lives must be placed on the line if our
nation is to survive its own folly. Every man of humane convictions
must decide on the protest that best suits his convictions, but we must
all protest."
6/1/1967 - David Braum, Jan 'Barry'
Crumb and Mark Donnelly co-found Vietnam Veterans against the War, in
New York City, to further oppose violations of Article IV, Section 4,
by the United States government, and to help war veterans deal with the
effects of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder.
6/23/1967 - A
coalition of 80 anti-war groups, in Los Angeles, california'where
Democratic (socialist/fascist) President Lyndon Johnson is speaking at
a thousand 'dollar' a plate dinner'protest against the
Vietnamese-American War/Second Vietnam War. The L.A. Police Department
expected the crowd to be between one and two thousand, but over ten
thousand march. The ensuing riot embarrasses the President and the
L.A.P.D., and results in Johnson's virtual isolation in the White House
for the rest of his presidency.
Kenneth Reich, 'A Bloody March, that Shook L.A.' Los Angeles Times, 23 June 1997, A1, 23.
6/24/1967
- The New Deal III/Great Society (1964-68) continues: to pay for the
Great Society and the Vietnamese-American War/Second Vietnam War,
Democratic (socialist/fascist) President Lyndon Johnson signs the
Silver Certificate Act: the secretary of the treasury is directed to
remove all United States Treasury Notes from circulation. On June 24,
1968, those may no longer be redeemed for silver (lawful Money). The
Federal Reserve (central) Bank monopoly on the issuing of credit is
restored.
Silver Certificate Act of 1967, 81 Public Statutes
at Large 77 (1967). U.S. President, Lyndon B. Johnson (June 24, 1967),
'Acts Approved by the President, Approved June 26, 1967, S. 1352,'
Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents, 3 (July 3, 1967): 955.
7/31/1967
- During debate on United States involvement in the Vietnamese-American
War/First Vietnamese Civil War/Second Vietnam War, Democratic
(socialist/fascist) senator Wayne Morse, of oregon, reminds the senate,
'You cannot amend the Constitution by failing to follow its clauses.
... C[ON]gress cannot destroy it by ignoring it.'
Mr.
Morse, Debate on the Vietnam Conflict, (July 31, 1967), U.S. Congress,
90th Congress, 1st session, Congressional Record, volume 113, part 15,
(Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1873-present), 20709.
8/16/1967 - Democratic (socialist/fascist) President Lyndon Johnson:
Our
nation was not born easily. There were times in those years of the 18th
century when it seemed as if we might not be born at all. Given that
background, we ought not to be astonished that this struggle in Vietnam
continues. We ought not to be astonished that that nation, wracked by a
war of insurgency and beset by its neighbors to the north, has not
already emerged, full-blown, as a perfect model of two-party democracy.
9/4/1967
- The Cold War contniues: Voters in the kleptocratic Republic of
(South) Vietnam elect, Lieutenant General Nguyen Van Thieu, of the Army
of the Republic of Vietnam, as president, with 80% of the vote
(affirmation of the status quo). The United States Army (private
mercenaries) guarded the polling places to ensure a free and fair
election.
9/15/1967 - Democratic (socialist/fascist) President
Lyndon Johnson, speaking from the White House, claims that, 'What
happens in Vietnam is extremely important to the nation's freedom and
it is extremely important to the United States' security.'
10/21/1967
- In the District of Columbia, the Student Mobilization Committee
hosts a protest of 'tens of thousands' of United States
enemy/subject/citizens against the Vietnamese-American War/Second
Vietnam War.
10/26/1967 - While the United States Armed Forces
(private mercenaries) are in Vietnam 'defending freedom,' United States
Army Lieutenant General Lewis B. Hershey (private mercenary), Director
of the Selective Service, orders that the conscription (involuntary
servitude) deferments of anti-war protesters be cancelled.
B. Drummond Ayers, Jr., 'Hershey Pledges Draft Crackdown,' New York Times, 8 November 1967, 1, 8.
11/6/1967
- While the United States Armed Forces (private mercenaries) are in
Vietnam 'defending freedom,' the supreme court, of the corporate United
states, refuses to hear Mora v. McNamara, in an attempt 'make the
[Vietnamese-American] War go away by ... refusing to hear the cases of
three obscure Army Privates' who have raised Constitutional arguments
against the war.
Mora v. McNamara, 389 U.S. 934, 935 (1967).
11/15/1967
- United States Army General William Westmoreland (private mercenary)
announces, 'I have never been more encouraged by my four years in
Vietnam.'
Howard Zinn, A People's History of the United States, (New York: Harper Colophon, 1980; HarperPerenial, 1980), 535.
11/21/1967
- United States Army General William C. Westmoreland (private
mercenary), commander of the Military Assistance Command Vietnam,
speaking to the National Press Club, says, '[A] new phase [of the
Vietnamese-American War] is starting ... we have reached an important
point where the end begins to come into view.'
Postscript: Later at a televised news conference Westmoreland uses the phrase, 'light at the end of the tunnel.'
12/23/1967
- In a speech to United States Armed Forces (private mercenaries) in
South Vietnam, Commander-in-Chief Lyndon Johnson praises their
sacrifices made to preserve the freedom of United States
enemy/subject/citizens: 'This time it is a test of will: whether we
have the vision and the steady hand to see us through a grave challenge
to our freedom and our liberty. You have met the challenge.'
Remarks
to Service Personnel and Award of Distinguished Service Medal and Medal
of Freedom to Military and Civilian Leaders, Cam Rah Bay Vietnam, U.S.
President, Lyndon B. Johnson (1967) 2:1184-85.
1/8/1968 -
While the United States Armed Forces (private mercenaries) are in
Vietnam 'defending freedom,' Richard Bissell, former Chief of
Clandestine operations for the Central Intelligence Agency, speaking to
the Council on Foreign Relations, states the complete Charter of the
CIA is, and out of necessity remains, a secret. This means the nation
has no way of knowing if the activities of the CIA are lawful, illegal
or otherwise.
Marchetti, et. al. 47, 305, 357, 370.
1/18/1968
- While the United States Armed Forces (private mercenaries) are in
Vietnam 'defending freedom,' Democratic (socialist/fascist) President
Lyndon Johnson orders the Central Intelligence Agency and the Federal
Bureau of Investigation to investigate singer-actress Eartha Kitt,
after she criticized the Vietnamese-American War/Second Vietnam War at
a White House luncheon hosted by Mrs. Johnson. The investigation is
conducted in such a way that it ends Kitt's career.
Lasky, 209-10.
1/31/1968
- The Tet (Chinese New Year) Offensive begins: on the first day of a
negotiated, temporary cease fire, Viet Cong guerillas, under the
co-ordination of Senior General Vo Nguyen Giap, of the Army of
communist, North Viet Nam, begin a nation-wide attack on United States
positions throughout kleptocratic (rule by thieves) South Vietnam.
2/25/1968
- The Tet Offensive ends: United States Armed Forces in South Vietnam
win a critical'albeit Pyrrhic'victory over the Vietcong guerillas,
virtually obliterating it as an effective fighting force. But WE THE
PEOPLE are no longer willing to accept the price of a military
settlement to the Vietnamese-American War/First Vietnamese Civil
War/Second Vietnam War.
Postscript: The hollow victory of Tet, and
intensified domestic opposition to the war prompts Democratic
(socialist/fascist) President Lyndon Johnson to withdraw his bid for
re-election a month later.
2/27/1968 - 'The most trusted
man in America,' Walter Cronkite, television news-anchor for the
Columbia Broadcasting System, closes his nightly report with an
impromptu editorial against continued United States involvement the
Vietnamese-American War/First Vietnamese Civil War/Second Vietnam War:
"Tonight,
back in more familiar surroundings in New York, we'd like to sum up our
findings in Vietnam, an analysis that must be speculative, personal,
subjective. Who won and who lost in the great Tet offensive against the
cities? I'm not sure. The Vietcong did not win by a knockout, but
neither did we. The referees of history may make it a draw. Another
standoff may be coming in the big battles expected south of the
Demilitarized Zone. Khesanh could well fall, with a terrible loss in
American lives, prestige and morale, and this is a tragedy of our
stubbornness there; but the bastion no longer is a key to the rest of
the northern regions, and it is doubtful that the American forces can
be defeated across the breadth of the DMZ with any substantial loss of
ground. Another standoff. On the political front, past performance
gives no confidence that the Vietnamese government can cope with its
problems, now compounded by the attack on the cities. It may not fall,
it may hold on, but it probably won't show the dynamic qualities
demanded of this young nation. Another standoff."
. . .
We have
been too often disappointed by the optimism of the American leaders,
both in Vietnam and Washington, to have faith any longer in the silver
linings they find in the darkest clouds. They may be right, that
Hanoi's winter-spring offensive has been forced by the Communist
realization that they could not win the longer war of attrition, and
that the Communists hope that any success in the offensive will improve
their position for eventual negotiations. It would improve their
position, and it would also require our realization, that we should
have had all along, that any negotiations must be that -- negotiations,
not the dictation of peace terms. For it seems now more certain than
ever that the bloody experience of Vietnam is to end in a stalemate.
This summer's almost certain standoff will either end in real
give-and-take negotiations or terrible escalation; and for every means
we have to escalate, the enemy can match us, and that applies to
invasion of the North, the use of nuclear weapons, or the mere
commitment of one hundred, or two hundred, or three hundred thousand
more American troops to the battle. And with each escalation, the world
comes closer to the brink of cosmic disaster.
. . .
To
say that we are closer to victory today is to believe, in the face of
the evidence, the optimists who have been wrong in the past. To suggest
we are on the edge of defeat is to yield to unreasonable pessimism. To
say that we are mired in stalemate seems the only realistic, yet
unsatisfactory, conclusion. On the off chance that military and
political analysts are right, in the next few months we must test the
enemy's intentions, in case this is indeed his last big gasp before
negotiations. But it is increasingly clear to this reporter that the
only rational way out then will be to negotiate, not as victors, but as
an honorable people who lived up to their pledge to defend democracy,
and did the best they could.
NOTE: Many credit'or
blame'Cronkite's editorial as the point at which public opinion turned
from supporting to opposing the war. President Lyndon Johnson is said
to have lamented, 'We've lost Cronkite.'
3/16/1968 - The My
Lai Massacre: Soldiers of the United States Army (private mercenaries)
kill over one hundred unarmed Vietnamese civilians.
David Wallechinsky and Irving Wallace, eds., The People's Almanac, (Garden City, New York: Doubleday, 1975), 643.
5/27/1968
- While the United States Armed Forces (private mercenaries) are in
Vietnam 'defending freedom,' the supreme court, of the corporate United
states, hands down United States v. O'Brien, refusing to recognize
draft involuntary servitude) card burning as Free Speech: '[W]hen
'speech' and 'non-speech' elements are combined in the same course of
conduct...regulating the nonspeech element can justify...limitations on
[the] First Amendment....'
U.S. v. O'Brien, 391 U.S. 367, 375 (1968).
2/25/1969
- The Thanh Phong Massacre: United States Navy Lieutenant Joseph Robert
'Bob' Kerry (private mercenary), in command of a seven man SEa, Air and
Land (SEAL) Team, summarily executes twenty-one unarmed old men, women
and children under the mistaken belief that they are Viet Cong guerilla
combatants.
Postscript: Kerry is eventually awarded the Bronze
Star for his heroism in this event by the same government that trained
him and sent him there in one of its many foreign and/or undeclared
wars.
John J. Goldman, 'Kerry
Tells of '69 Vietnam Raid That Killed Civilians,' Los Angeles Times, 26
April 2001, A1, 19. A.J. Langguth, 'Death, Taxes and Bob Kerry,' Los
Angeles Times, 6 May 2001, M1, 2.
3/16/1969 -
'Operation Menu' begins: de facto Commander-in-Chief Nixon, Esq.,
orders the United States Air Force (private mercenaries) to secretly
bomb North Vietnamese Army bases in Cambodia'which expands the
Vietnamese-American War/First Vietnamese Civil War/Second Vietnam War
into an officially neutral nation.
Shawcross, 19-23.
6/6/1969
- The circuit court of appeals for the District of Columbia decides
National Student Association v. Hershey: actions by municipal draft
boards to reclassify college students with deferments as eligible for
the military involuntary servitude) draft because they protested
against the Vietnamese-American War/First Vietnamese Civil War/Second
Vietnam War are unlawful.
National Student Association v. Hershey, 412 F.2d 1103, 1115, 1116, 1119, 1120 (Cir. D.C. 1969).
10/15/1969
- MORATORIUM DAY: Two million United States enemy/subject/citizens
gather around the nation to protest the Second Vietnam War (First
Vietnamese Civil War/Vietnamese-American War).
Zinn, 'The New History,' Zinn Reader, 540-41.
11/3/1969
- Republican (fascist/socialist) de facto President Nixon, Esq.,
delivers his 'Silent Majority' speech to the nation, in which he
claims, 'North Vietnam cannot defeat or humiliate the United States.
Only Americans can do that.'
NOTE: While the meaning of this
passage'when taken in context with the rest of the speech'clearly means
that it is not the efforts of the communists that will defeat the U.S.
Armed Forces in the Vietnamese-American War/First Vietnamese Civil
War/Second Vietnam War, it is the anti-war movement within the U.S.
that could ultimately lower military morale to the point that 'defeat'
is inevitable. Taken out of context, the editors agree that it could be
interpreted as:
Neither Tojo, Hitler, Stalin, Mao, Ho, Khomeni, or
Saddam Hussein could humiliate America. Nor can Osama bin Laden,
deprive Americans of Trial by a Fully Informed Jury; the Freedoms of
Religion, Speech, Assembly, Press; the right of arms for self-defense;
the right of privacy; the freedom to travel'only elected Americans who
disregard their oaths to 'protect and defend the Constitution for the
united States, from all enemies, foreign and domestic' can do that.
Kurnow, 684.
1/1/1970
- De facto Commander-in-Chief Nixon, Esq., awards the CONgressional
Medal of Honor to United States Navy Lieutenant Joseph Robert 'Bob'
Kerry (private mercenary), for his role in the Thanh Phong Massacre.
John J. Goldman, 'Kerry Tells of '69 Vietnam Raid That Killed Civilians,' Los Angeles Times, 26 April 2001, A1, 19. The exact day for this event is not known.
4/2/1970
- The legislature of the commonwealth of massachusetts passes Public
Act 164, exempting its residents from being required to fight in an
undeclared, foreign war (the Vietnamese-American War/First Vietnamese
Civil War/Second Vietnam War). NOTE: Were massachusetts to
exercise its lawful powers as a State, its legislature would order its
two U.S. Senators to vote against continued funding for the Second
Vietnam War (First Vietnamese Civil War/Vietnamese-American War).
According to Article I, Section 3, Clause 1, Senators are to be elected
to represent their State legislatures in the District of Columbia as a
government. This is how the State governments are able to participate
in the federal process, how power in the District of Columbia is
diffused, and how the unbridled passions of the people, through their
House of Representatives, can be held in check.
Massachusetts, Public Act 164, Acts and Resolves, (Boston: F.X. Doren, Secretary of the Commonwealth, 1970), 77-78.
4/30/1970
- De facto Commander-in-Chief Nixon, Esq., orders the United States
Armed Forces (private mercenaries) to invade Cambodia, and destroy the
North Vietnamese Army there'which further expands the
Vietnamese-American War/First Vietnamese Civil War/Second Vietnam War.
Postscript:
As a result of the expansion of the war into Cambodia, more bombs were
dropped on that nation killing an estimated 750,000 Cambodian
nationals, and paving the way for the radicalization of the Cambodian
peasantry and their acceptance of Pol Pot and the murderous Khmer
Rouge. When the Khmer Rouge took control of Cambodia in 1975, they
began a four-year killing spree that cost the lives of another
1,500,000 Cambodians.
Chalmers
Johnson, Blowback: The Costs and Consequences of American Empire, (New
York: Metropolitan Books, 2000), 63. Dwight W. Murphy, ''Kent State':
Revisited,' Journal of Social, Political and Economic Studies, Summer
1993, 236.
5/1/1970 - Kent State (Federal enclave of
Ohio) University students, protesting Commander-in-Chief Nixon's
expansion of the Vietnamese-American War/First Vietnamese Civil
War/Second Vietnam War into Cambodia, bury a copy of the Constitution,
saying 'it was 'dead.''
John Kifner, 'Troops Subdue Students in Ohio,' New York Times, 4 May 1970, 11.
Republican
(fascist/socialist) President Nixon calls those United States
enemy/subject/citizens that are protesting his unlawful prosecution of
a foreign war 'bums.'
Robert Semple, 'Nixon Says Violence Invites Tragedy,' New York Times, 5 May 1970, 16.
5/2/1970
- Kent State (Federal enclave of Ohio) University students, continuing
their protest against the unlawful Vietnamese-American War/First
Vietnamese Civil War/Second Vietnam War, burn the campus building
housing the Reserve Officer Training Corps (private mercenaries) unit.
"Columbia
Agrees to Halt Classes One Day Action Tomorrow Will Protest Troop Move;
Violence on Campuses," New York Times, 3 May 1970, 5.
5/14/1970
- Jackson, mississippi police kill two Jackson State University
students who had been protesting the Vietnamese-American War/First
Vietnamese Civil War/Second Vietnam War.
5/31/1970 - De facto
Commander-in-Chief Richard Nixon, Esq., orders he Joint Chiefs of Staff
(private mercenaries) to continue to pursue an aggressive expansion of
the Vietnamese-American War/First Vietnamese Civil War/Second Vietnam
War into Cambodia, but to tell the media that United States Armed
Forces are merely providing support to the Army of the Republic of
(South) Vietnam: 'Publicly we will say one thing, actually we will do
another.'
Cal Woodward, 'Nixon Papers Show Deception on War,' Orange County (California) Register, 17 November 2005, News:16.
6/29/1970
- While the United States Armed Forces (private mercenaries) are
in Vietnam 'defending freedom,' the supreme court, of the corporate
United states, hands down United States v. Sisson: conscientious
objectors may refuse military service'only if such service would
violate their religious (and not political) convictions, such as being
opposed to foreign wars, which happen to be against Article IV, Section
4 of the Constitution.
2/8/1971 - Operation Lamson 719 (named
after an ancient Vietnamese victory over the Chinese) begins: fifteen
thousand inexperienced divisions of infantry of the Army of Vietnam
invade Laos. Their objective to penetrate twenty miles into hostile
Pathet Lao (communist guerilla) territory to the city of Tchepone,
thereby cutting off the Ho Chi Minh Trail (a complex network of roads
and jungle paths), which is the supply line between communist North
Vietnam and the Vietcong guerillas in South Vietnam. This first test of
de facto Commander-in-Chief Nixon's (Esq.) policy of 'Vietnamization'
(the replacement United States Armed Forces (private mercenaries) with
Army of the Republic of (South) Vietnam regulars) seems doomed from the
start as the Military Assistance Command, Vietnam estimated the
operation would require at a seasoned force of twice the size
kleptocratic (rule by thieves) dictator Nguyen Van Thieu was willing to
commit. But what is worse, Thieu has ordered the ARVN to withdraw once
it has sustained three thousand casualties.
Kurnow, 629.
4/17/1971
- Operation Lamson 719 (named after an ancient Vietnamese victory over
the Chinese) ends: Republican (fascist/socialist) de facto President
Nixon, Esq., in a televised address to the nation, says 'Tonight I can
report that Vietnamization [the replacement United States Armed Forces
(private mercenaries) with Army of the Republic of (South) Vietnam
regulars] has succeeded.' The truth is Lamson 719 was miserable
failure. Not only did the ARVN fail to accomplish its stated goal of
cutting off and holding the Ho Chi Minh Trail (the supply line from
communist North Vietnam, through Laos and Cambodia, to the Vietcong
guerillas in kleptocratic (rule by thieves) South Vietnam, but it has
demonstrated that the top commanders in the ARVN, after over a decade
of training at the best military schools in the U.S., have apparently
been willing to apply very little leadership and military skill.
NOTES:
The failure of Lamson 719 was accompanied by massive anti-U.S.
demonstrations in Saigon, by anti communists who feel the eventual
withdrawal of U.S. armed forces will leave South Vietnam unprotected
against re-unification. The growing hostility made it nearly impossible
for U.S. Armed Forces to interact with the South Vietnamese people.
This sense of isolation soon lead many U.S. Armed Forces to turn to
illicit drugs. It was estimated by the Military Assistance Command,
Vietnam that even at the end of 1970 about one-fourth of the troops
were using drugs recreationally (usually heroin).
United States Army
units, during this period, frequently broke down into rival factions,
along racial and/or geographic lines, in which soldiers of African,
European and Hispanic descent; soldiers from the republic of texas and
the 'Deep South'; and soldiers from the Northeast and the republic of
california, would coalesce and make war on each other.
Kurnow, 630-32.
4/22/1971
- Dewey Canyon III: former United States Navy Lieutenant (Junior
Grade) John F. Kerry, recipient of the Silver and Bronze Stars, and
three Purple Hearts, testifies to the senate foreign relations
committee about war crimes committed by United States Armed Forces
(private mercenaries), during the Vietnamese-American War/First
Vietnamese Civil War/Second Vietnam War:
"They
told the stories at times they had personally raped, cut off ears, cut
off heads, taped wires from portable telephones to human genitals and
turned up the power, cut off limbs, blown up bodies, randomly shot at
civilians, razed villages in fashion reminiscent of Genghis Khan, shot
cattle and dogs for fun, poisoned food stocks, and generally ravaged
the countryside of South Vietnam in addition to the normal ravage of
war, and the normal and very particular ravaging which is done by the
applied bombing power of this country. "
. . . .
"In our opinion,
and from our experience, there is nothing in South Vietnam, nothing
which could happen that realistically threatens the United States of
America. And to attempt to justify the loss of one American life in
Vietnam, Cambodia, or Laos by linking such loss to the preservation of
freedom, which those misfits supposedly abuse is to us the height of
criminal hypocrisy, and it is that kind of hypocrisy which we feel has
torn this country apart. "
Postscript: The next day, Kerry led
a rally of one thousand Vietnam Veterans Against the War. At the end of
the rally many protestors their combat medals and ribbons, berets, ID
tags, photographs of deceased comrades, canes, and one artificial leg
at the Capitol Building. Although Kerry threw his ribbons, and some
medals, it turns out the medals belong to a patient in the Brooklyn,
new york, Veterans Hospital, and an Axis War (World War II) veteran,
neither of whom could make it to Dewey Canyon III. Three decades later,
as Democratic (socialist/fascist) senator of the commonwealth of
massachusetts, Kerry has his combat medals prominently displayed in his
office. Kerry caught the attention of Republican (fascist/socialist) de
facto President Nixon, Esq., who ordered the Federal Bureau of
Investigation to place him under surveillance.
John
M. Glionna, 'FBI Shadowed Kerry During Activist Era,' Los Angeles
Times, 22 March 2004, A1, 12. Stephen Braun, 'Kerry's Lionizing Shift
From Officer to Activist,' Los Angeles Times, 23 April 2004, A1, 22-23.
6/13/1971
- The New York Times begins publishing the 'History of U.S.
Decision-Making on Viet Nam Policy,' a set of documents assembled in
1967, on the orders of Robert Strange McNamara, Secretary of Defense.
The report details the disparate and conflicting strategies used by the
United States to contain communism in Vietnam. The department of
justice files for an immediate injunction against the New York Times,
as the editors have refused all requests from the Federal government to
stop publication. A Federal Grand Jury indicts Daniel Ellsberg, a
former Department of Defense analyst, for espionage'leaking the
material to the media.
NOTE: This report is commonly known today
as the 'Pentagon Papers.' It was never clear why McNamara ordered this
confidential report be compiled. A common explanation is that McNamara
planned on giving it to Democratic (socialist/fascist) de facto senator
Robert Kennedy, Esq., of new york, who was contemplating a bid for the
presidency.
Curt Gentry, J. Edgar Hoover: The Man and the Secrets, (New York and London: W.W. Norton, 1991), 684n. Kurnow, 633.
6/22/1972
- While the United States Armed Forces (private mercenaries) are in
Vietnam 'defending freedom,' Henry Kissinger, National Security Advisor
to Republican (fascist/socialist) de facto President Nixon, Esq.,
confides in Chou En-Lai, Premier of the mainland, communist People's
Republic of ('Red') China, that the U.S. government would accept a
communist victory in the Second Vietnam War/First Vietnamese Civil
War/Vietnamese-American War, as long as there were a 'decent interval'
between that event, and the withdrawal of U.S. Armed Forces.
Postscript:
After this conversation, almost another 2,000 U.S. Armed Forces lost
their lives in Vietnam, before the communist Democratic Republic of
(North) Vietnam won the Third Vietnam War/Second Vietnamese Civil War.
Calvin Woodward, 'Kissinger Revealed In Former Secrets,' Orange County (California) Register, 28 May 2006, News:27, 32-33.
8/1/1972
- While the United States Armed Forces (private mercenaries) are in
Vietnam 'defending freedom,' de facto Commander-in-Chief Nixon, Esq.,
under the authority of the Trading With the Enemy Act of 1917, amended
as 1933, issues Executive Order 11677, declaring a national emergency:
'[I]n view of the national emergencies declared by Proclamation[s] 2914
... and 4074. ... to further ... the foreign policy of the United
States and to aid in fulfilling its international responsibilities.'
Executive Order 11677, 3 Code of Federal Regulations 719, 720 (1971-75).
1/27/1973
- Vietnamese-American War/First Vietnamese Civil War/Second Vietnam War
ends: Henry Kissinger, secretary of state, and Foreign Minister Le Duc
Tho, of communist North Vietnam, sign a cease fire agreement in which
the Democratic Republic of (North) Vietnam agrees to recognize the
independence of kleptocratic (rule by thieves) South Vietnam, and
return all American prisoners of war by April 1. In return the U.S.
pledges to completely withdraw from Vietnam by April 1, and furnish
North Vietnam with 3.25 billion 'dollars' in humanitarian aid. This is
a Bill of Attainder, assessing guilt for a crime through a legislative
rather than a judicial process, which is a violation of Article I,
Section 9, Clause 3.
Melvyn R. Laird, Secretary of Defense,
announces that the military draft (involuntary servitude) has ended.
From now on voluntary enlistment will be encouraged by disruptions in
the economy caused by the Federal Reserve System, as thise with
marginal work skill sare attracted to military service. (This is
because military ranks are commonly filled with the marginally
employable. In good times enlistments fall, in bad times enlistments
rise.)
NOTE: If North Vietnam wished to receive compensation for
its losses, it should have filed suit in Federal court against those
officials who ordered and carried out the unlawful and foreign war of
aggression against it.
Postscript: Three decades later parts
of Vietnam are uninhabitable due to the more than 18 million gallons of
dioxin (a.k.a. Agent Orange) herbicides (weapons of mass destruction)
dumped upon that nation. Children in affected areas have been
still-born with two heads, others bear little differentiation from the
placenta. About 500,000 children have died prematurely from AO related
diseases. Polio and Down Syndrome are also found in higher incidences
in Vietnam than in any other nation in the world.
David E. Rosenbaum, 'Nation Ends Draft, Turns to Volunteers,' New York Times, 28 January 1973, 1. Kurnow, 686.
5/11/1973
- The Federal court for the central district of california decides
United States v. Ellsberg: judge William M. Byrne dismisses espionage
charges against Daniel Ellsberg, a former Department of Defense
analyst, for leaking the 'Pentagon Papers,' which disclose the
deception on the part of the Johnson administration in starting the
Vietnamese-American War.
'Today in History,' Orange County (California) Register, 11 May 2000, Accent:2.
9/16/1974
- De facto Commander-in-Chief Ford (25th amendment) issues Proclamation
4313, offering amnesty for those who evaded conscription (involuntary
servitude) into and deserted the United States Armed Forces (private
mercenaries) during the Vietnamese-American War/First Vietnamese Civil
War/Second Vietnam War, on the condition that they do two-years
community service for their part in resisting an unlawful foreign war.
Proclamation
4313, Announcing a Program for the Return of Vietnam Draft Evaders and
Military Deserters, U.S. President, Gerald R. Ford, (1974): 138-40.
1/6/1975
- The Second Vietnamese Civil War/Third Vietnam War begins: the Army of
the communist Democratic Republic of (North) Vietnam commences
hostilities against the rival, kleptocratic (rule by thieves) Republic
of (South) Vietnam . The NVA command has estimated that it will take
two years to reunify the nation.
Postscript: Before the month is
out, the NVA captures Phuoc Binh, the capital of the central province
of Phuoc Long, virtually cutting South Vietnam into two pieces.
Kurnow, 687.
4/30/1975
- The Second Vietnamese Civil War/Third Vietnam War ends: General Doung
Van Minh, military dictator of the kleptocratic (rule by thieves)
Republic of (South) Vietnam'the third dictator in a week'surrenders to
Colonel Bui Tin, of the Army of the communist Democratic Republic of
(North) Vietnam. This completes the NVA command's two-year timetable
for the reunification of Vietnam'twenty months ahead of schedule.
NOTES:
There
was probably nothing that could, or should, have been done to stave off
the inevitability of Vietnam's reunification under nationalistic and
communist rule. Had it happened in 1945, instead of 1975, free-market
reforms might have begun to take place in 1954, instead of 1994. And
hundreds of billions of 'dollars' 'recovered' (seized) through the
unlawful income tax, along with the lives of over fifty thousand United
States Armed Forces (private mercenaries), conscripted through the
equally unlawful military draft (involuntary servitude), would not have
been wasted'along with one to one and a half million Vietnamese
nationals.
During the two decade involvement of United States in the
Vietnam Wars, the number of Southeast Asians, in their own nation,
killed by the U.S. was approximately 3,000,000; whereas the number of
Americans, in their own nation, killed by Southeast Asians was
approximately zero.
This ends the U.S.' fourth attempt at
'nation-building'; this one resulting in failure, bringing its
success/failure ratio to (2-2).
Postscript: As a result, the United
States Armed Forces left Thailand as well. It was only after the U.S.
Armed forces left the Thailand that their nation economy stabilized,
and began prospering.
Doug
Bandow, 'Nation-Building's Grim Record,' Orange County (California)
Register, 25 April 2003, Local:7. Chalmers Johnson, Blowback: The Costs
and Consequences of American Empire, (New York: Metropolitan Books,
2000), 63. Kurnow, 687.
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