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Republican's
Dishonorable Charge
Now even John McCain
has condemned the Swift Boat Veterans' outrageous attack on John
Kerry's Vietnam record.
By Joe Conason
August 6, 2004 | "Dishonest
and dishonorable" is how John McCain described the attack ad
now appearing on television in several swing states, courtesy of
the Swift Boat Veterans for Truth. Dishonest because the men who
appear in the ad make false claims about John Kerry's wartime
conduct and decorations. Dishonorable because these men have
waited three decades to publicize their slurs, with partisan
motives, during a presidential campaign.
With his passionate denunciation
of the swift boat commercial and its sponsors, McCain again
displayed the dignity and self-respect that once elevated him
above other politicians. Calling on President Bush to repudiate
the ugly anti-Kerry ad, McCain took a step back from his awkward
embrace of the Republican ticket last month. "I can't
believe the president would pull such a cheap stunt," he told
reporters, while acknowledging that he didn't know whether Bush
strategists were involved.
The response of the Bush spokesmen
was bland but telling. They saw no reason to disavow or endorse
the swift boat ads. White House press secretary Scott
McClellan said that the president has never questioned Sen.
Kerry's military service (as if he is in any position to do so).
Although he suggested that all the "unregulated soft
money" advertising should cease, he pointedly refused to
condemn the swift boat ad. "The Bush-Cheney campaign has
never and will never question John Kerry's service during
Vietnam," echoed campaign press secretary Steve Schmidt.
When the White House and the
Bush-Cheney campaign declined to follow his lead, the Arizona
senator could hardly have been surprised. Nobody who understands
American politics as well as McCain has any illusions about the
game that the Republicans are playing here. It is a strategy that
dates back to the racially inflammatory Willie Horton ad aired by
an "independent" group in 1988, and that was used
against McCain himself in 2000 when another
"independent" group aired ads against him during the
Republican primaries.
The Republican orientation of the
Swift Boat Veterans organization is transparently obvious, despite
the inclination of some journalists to pretend otherwise. From
stern to bow, they're strictly GOP.
As previously noted
in this space, the group was organized last spring with the
assistance of Merrie Spaeth, a Republican public relations
executive from Houston whose late husband, Tex Lezar, ran for
Texas lieutenant governor on George W. Bush's ticket in 1994.
Its guiding spirit is John E.
O'Neill, a partner in Lezar's law firm and an early protégé of
Nixon-era dirty trickster Charles Colson. (O'Neill's latest
contribution to the cause is a book titled "Unfit for
Command," selling fast thanks to promotion by the Drudge
Report.) Its Web site was put up courtesy of William
Franke , a St. Louis businessman with longstanding ties to
Attorney General John Ashcroft and the Missouri Republican Party.
Its chief financiers, according to the group's last quarterly IRS
filing, are Houston builder Bob J. Perry and the Crow family, both
major Republican donors from Texas.
Last November, the Dallas Morning
News profiled the mysterious Perry. During the past four years, he
has given more than $5 million to candidates and causes, nearly
all of them Republican and extremely conservative. The article
didn't say whether Perry himself ever served in the military. The
Crow family, a clan of megadevelopers based in Dallas, are close
Bush friends as well as generous backers. Harlan Crow is also a
trustee of the George
H.W. Bush Presidential Library Foundation.
In short, the financial supporters
of the Swift Boat Vets are not exactly strangers to George W. Bush
and Karl Rove.
Among the other leaders featured
on the Swift Boat Vets' site
are Alvin A. "Andy" Horne; Weymouth D. Symmes, also
listed as the group's contact on its IRS filings; and Bill Lannom.
Horne is a former Houston prosecutor who was once short-listed by
former Sen. Phil Gramm, R-Texas, for an appointment as U.S.
attorney. Symmes is a retired banker from Missoula, Mont., who
along with his wife has donated more than $5,000 to Republican
candidates and committees since 2000 (including $1,000 to
Bush-Cheney 2004).
Lannom works for Iowa
athletic-wear company owned by his staunchly Republican family. As
his mother once explained
to a local historian, "We've all been active, all my sons
have been active in politics." She charmingly recalled that
the Lannoms' antagonism toward Democrats dates all the way back to
FDR.
The hired help employed by the
Swift Vets committee is thoroughly partisan, too. Aside from
Spaeth and Thomas Rupprath, the private
detective she recommended to provide research services, the
group's IRS filing names several experienced Washington political
operatives. The June 30 filing shows payments to Robert A. Hahn, a
right-wing Internet activist and Web designer who also runs
something called the Free
Republic Network (apparently an affiliate of the extremist
Free Republic Web site); and to Tom Wyld, a Navy veteran and
former director of public relations for the NRA Institute for
Legislative Action, the lobbying arm of the National Rifle
Association.
The White House has deniability,
to be sure, if charged with complicity in this campaign. The
question is whether its deniability is plausible -- or risible.
As for the accuracy of the
Republican veterans' accusations, they can be tested against the
testimony of the men who served under Kerry's command -- all of
whom but one have repeatedly endorsed his courage, his decency,
and his candidacy. Denigration of Kerry's record should also be
measured against the sterling evaluations that he received during
the actual time of his service, including by Adm. Roy Hoffman, who
now chairs the Swift Boat Veterans group.
No doubt the Republicans hope that
attacking Kerry will distract from important issues they would
prefer not to discuss or debate. But their campaign is backfiring,
as drawing fresh attention to Vietnam does not flatter the
candidate who avoided service there.
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