MCViewPoint

Opinion from a Libertarian ViewPoint

Posts Tagged ‘POW coverup’

Sen. John McCain – So Which Is Worse, Brain Cancer Or Being Left To Rot In A Cambodian Prison Camp?

Posted by M. C. on July 20, 2017

http://tucson.com/news/local/sen-john-mccain-diagnosed-with-malignant-brain-tumor/article_e8277172-6cde-11e7-baba-3bd459ef9b97.html

McCain is lucky, again.

http://www.elusivetruth.com/tag/pave-spike/

One of the sharpest critics of the Pentagon’s performance was an insider, Air Force Lt. Gen. Eugene Tighe, who headed the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) during the 1970s. He openly challenged the Pentagon’s position that no live prisoners existed, saying that the evidence proved otherwise. McCain was a bitter opponent of Tighe, who was eventually pushed into retirement.

On one occasion, a Pentagon photo expert refused to go along. It was a missing man’s name gouged into a field, he said, not trampled grass or paddy berms. His bosses responded by bringing in an outside contractor who found instead, yes, shadows and vegetation. This refrain led Bob Taylor, a highly regarded investigator on the Senate committee staff who had examined the photographic evidence, to comment to me: “If grass can spell out people’s names and secret digit codes, then I have a newfound respect for grass.”

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McCain and the POW Cover-Up | The American Conservative

Posted by M. C. on February 19, 2017

http://www.theamericanconservative.com/articles/mccain-and-the-pow-cover-up/

The men McCain and Kerry left to die.

When you hear the pathological warmongering neocon McCain spew his lies about Trump and his prowar agitation against Russia bear the following excerpts from Ron Unz’ The American Conservative article in mind.

Included in the evidence that McCain and his government allies suppressed or sought to discredit is a transcript of a senior North Vietnamese general’s briefing of the Hanoi politburo, discovered in Soviet archives by an American scholar in 1993. The briefing took place only four months before the 1973 peace accords. The general, Tran Van Quang, told the politburo members that Hanoi was holding 1,205 American prisoners but would keep many of them at war’s end as leverage to ensure getting war reparations from Washington.

In a private briefing in 1992, high-level CIA officials told me that as the years passed and the ransom never came, it became more and more difficult for either government to admit that it knew from the start about the unacknowledged prisoners. Those prisoners had not only become useless as bargaining chips but also posed a risk to Hanoi’s desire to be accepted into the international community. The CIA officials said their intelligence indicated strongly that the remaining men—those who had not died from illness or hard labor or torture—were eventually executed. Read the rest of this entry »

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