John McCain: When "Tokyo Rose" Ran for President
What Was John McCain's True Wartime Record in Vietnam?
Ron Unz •With Sen. John McCain so much in the headlines these days due to his harsh criticism of the foreign policy positions of Donald Trump, a few people suggested that I republish myarticle from a couple of years ago exploring McCain’s own very doubtful military record.
Given the massive media coverage of rather fanciful allegations that the Russians are blackmailing Trump, perhaps similar resources should be devoted to investigating a much more plausible case of blackmail, and one that is far better documented.
Although
the memory has faded in recent years, during much of the second half of
the twentieth century the name “Tokyo Rose” ranked very high in our
popular consciousness, probably second only to “Benedict Arnold” as a
byword for American treachery during wartime. The story of Iva Ikuko
Toguri, the young Japanese-American woman who spent her wartime years
broadcasting popular music laced with enemy propaganda to our suffering
troops in the Pacific Theater was well known to everyone, and her trial
for treason after the war, which stripped her of her citizenship and
sentenced her to a long prison term, made the national headlines.
The actual historical facts
seem to have been somewhat different than the popular myth. Instead of a
single “Tokyo Rose” there were actually several such female
broadcasters, with Ms. Toguri not even being the earliest, and their
identities merged in the minds of the embattled American GIs. But she
was the only one ever brought to trial and punished, although her own
radio commentary turned out to have been almost totally innocuous. The
plight of a young American-born woman alone on a family visit who became
trapped behind enemy lines by the sudden outbreak of war was obviously a
difficult one, and desperately taking a job as an English-language
music announcer hardly fits the usual notion of treason. Indeed, after
her release from federal prison, she avoided deportation and spent the
rest of her life quietly running a grocery shop in Chicago. Postwar
Japan soon became our closest ally in Asia and once wartime passions had
sufficiently cooled she was eventually pardoned by President Gerald
Ford and had her U.S. citizenship restored.
Despite
these extremely mitigating circumstances in Ms. Toguri’s particular
case, we should not be too surprised at America’s harsh treatment of the
poor woman upon her return home from Japan. All normal countries
ruthlessly punish treason and traitors, and these terms are often
expansively defined in the aftermath of a bitter war. Perhaps in a
topsy-turvy Monty Python world, wartime traitors would be given medals,
feted at the White House, and become national heroes, but any real-life
country that allowed such insanity would surely be set on the road to
oblivion. If Tokyo Rose’s wartime record had launched her on a
successful American political career and nearly gave her the presidency,
we would know for a fact that some cruel enemy had spiked our national
water supply with LSD.
The
political rise of Sen. John McCain leads me to suspect that in the
1970s some cruel enemy had spiked our national water supply with LSD.
My
earliest recollections of John McCain are vague. I think he first
came to my attention during the mid-1980s, perhaps after 1982 when he
won an open Congressional seat in Arizona or more likely once he was
elected in 1986 to the U.S. Senate seat of retiring conservative icon
Barry Goldwater. All media accounts about him seemed strongly favorable,
describing his steadfastness as a POW during more than five grim years
of torture by his Vietnamese jailers, with the extent of his wartime
physical suffering indicated by the famous photo
showing him still on crutches as he was greeted by President Nixon many
months after his return from enemy captivity. I never had the slightest
doubts about this story or his war-hero status.
McCain’s public image took a beating at the end of the 1980s when he became one of the senators caught up in the Keating Five financial scandal,
but he managed to survive that controversy unlike most of the others.
Soon thereafter he became prominent as a leading national advocate of
campaign finance reform, a strong pro-immigrant voice, and also a
champion of normalizing our relations with Vietnam, positions that
appealed to me as much as they did to the national media. By 2000 my
opinion had become sufficiently favorable that I donated to his underdog
challenge to Gov. George W. Bush in the Republican primaries of that
year, and was thrilled when he did surprisingly well in some of the
early contests and suddenly had a serious shot at the nomination.
However, he then suffered an unexpected defeat in South Carolina, as the
large block of local military voters swung decisively against him.
According to widespread media reports, the main cause was an utterly
scurrilous whispering campaign by Karl Rove and his henchmen, which even
included appalling accusations that the great war-hero candidate had
been a “traitor” in Vietnam. My only conclusion was that the filthy lies
sometimes found in American politics were even worse than I’d ever
imagined.
Although
in the aftermath of the 9/11 attacks, I turned sharply against McCain
due to his support for an extremely bellicose foreign policy, I never
had any reason to question his background or his integrity, and my
strong opposition to his 2008 presidential run was entirely on policy
grounds: I feared his notoriously hot temper might easily get us into
additional disastrous wars.
Everything suddenly changed in June 2008 when I read a long article by an unfamiliar writer on the leftist Counterpunch
website. Shocking claims were made that McCain may never have been
tortured and that he instead spent his wartime captivity collaborating
with his captors and broadcasting Communist propaganda, a possibility
that seemed almost incomprehensible to me given all the thousands of
contrary articles that I had absorbed over the decades from the
mainstream media. How could this one article on a small website be the
truth about McCain’s war record and everything else be total falsehood?
The evidence was hardly overwhelming, with the piece being thinly
sourced and written in a meandering fashion by an obscure author, but
the claims were so astonishing that I made some effort to investigate
the matter, though without any real success.
However, those new doubts about McCain were still in my mind a few months later when I stumbled upon Sidney Schanberg’s massively documented expose
about McCain’s role in the POW/MIA cover up, a vastly greater scandal.
This time I was presented with a mountain of hard evidence gathered by
one of America’s greatest wartime journalists, a Pulitzer Prize winning
former top editor at The New York Times. In the years since
then, other leading journalists have praised Schanberg’s remarkable
research, now giving his conclusions the combined backing of four New York Times
Pulitzer Prizes, while two former Republican Congressmen who had served
on the Intelligence Committee have also strongly corroborated his
account.
In 1993 the front page of the New York Times broke the story that a Politburo transcript found in the Kremlin archives fully confirmed the existence of the additional POWs, and when interviewed on the PBS Newshour
former National Security Advisors Henry Kissinger and Zbigniew
Brzezinski admitted that the document was very likely correct and that
hundreds of America’s Vietnam POWs had indeed been left behind. In my
opinion, the reality of Schanberg’s POW story is now about as solidly
established as anything can be that has not yet received an official
blessing from the American mainstream media. And the total dishonesty of
that media regarding both the POW story and McCain’s leading role in
the later cover up soon made me very suspicious of all those other
claims regarding John McCain’s supposedly heroic war record. Our
American Pravda is simply not to be trusted on any “touchy” topics.
I
have no personal knowledge of the Vietnam War myself nor do I possess
expertise in that area of history. But after encountering Schanberg’s
expose in 2008, I soon got in touch with someone having exactly those
strengths, a Vietnam veteran who later became a professor at one of our
military service academies. At first, he was quite cagey regarding the
questions I raised, but once he had read through Schanberg’s lengthy
article, he felt he could respond more freely and he largely confirmed
the claims, partly based on certain information he personally possessed.
He said he found it astonishing that in these days of the Internet the
POW scandal had not attracted vastly more attention, and couldn’t
understand why the media was so uniformly unwilling to touch the topic.
He
also had some very interesting things to say about John McCain’s
wartime record. According to him, it was hardly a secret in veterans’
circles that McCain had spent much of the war producing Communist
propaganda broadcasts since these had regularly been played in the
prisoner camps as a means of breaking the spirits of those American POWs
who resisted collaboration. Indeed, he and some of his friends had
speculated about who currently possessed copies of McCain’s damning
audio and video tapes and wondered whether they might come out during
the course of the presidential campaign. Over the years, other Vietnam
veterans have publicly leveled similar charges,
and Schanberg had speculated that McCain’s leading role in the POW
cover up might have been connected with the pressure he faced due to his
notorious wartime broadcasts.
In late September 2008 another fascinating story appeared in my morning New York Times.
An intrepid reporter decided to visit Vietnam and see what McCain’s
former jailers thought of the possibility that their onetime captive
might soon reach the White House, that the man they had spent years
brutally torturing could become the next president of the United States.
To the journalist’s apparent amazement, the former jailers seemed
enthusiastic about the prospects of a McCain victory, saying that they
hoped he would win since they had become such good friends during the
war and had worked so closely together; if they lived in America, they
would certainly all vote for him. When asked about McCain’s claims of
“cruel and sadistic” torture, the head of the guard unit dismissed those
stories as being just the sort of total nonsense that politicians,
whether in America or in Vietnam, must often spout in order to win
popularity. A BBC correspondent reported the same statements.
Let
us consider the implications of this story. Throughout his entire life
John McCain has been notable for having a very violent temper and also
for holding deep grudges. How plausible does it seem that the men who
allegedly spent years torturing him would be so eager to see him reach a
position of supreme world power?
But
what about the famous photo, showing McCain still on crutches even
months after his release from captivity? In early September 2008,
someone discovered archival footage from a Swedish news crew
which had filmed the return of the POWs, and uploaded it to YouTube. We
see a healthy-looking John McCain walking off the plane from Vietnam,
having a noticeable limp but certainly without any need of crutches.
After returning home he had eventually entered Bethesda Naval Hospital
for corrective surgery on some of his wartime injuries, and that recent
American surgery was what explained his crutches in the photo with
Nixon.
It
is certainly acknowledged that considerable numbers of American POWs
were indeed tortured in Vietnam, but it is far from clear that McCain
was ever one of them. As the original Counterpunch article
pointed out, throughout almost the entire war McCain was held at a
special section for the best-behaving prisoners, which was where he
allegedly produced his Communist propaganda broadcasts and perhaps
became such good friends with his guards as they later claimed.
Top-ranking former POWs held at the same prison, such as Colonels Ted
Guy and Gordon “Swede” Larson, have gone on the record saying they are very skeptical regarding McCain’s claims of torture.
I have taken the trouble to read through John McCain’s earliest claims of his harsh imprisonment, a highly detailed 12,000 word first person account published under his name in U.S. News & World Report
in May 1973, just a few weeks after his release from imprisonment. The
editorial introduction notes the “almost total recall” seemingly
demonstrated by the young pilot just out of captivity, and portions of
the story strike me as doubtful, perhaps drawn from the long history of
popular imprisonment fiction stretching back to Dumas’s Count of Monte Cristo.
Would a young navy pilot so easily develop and remember a “tap code”
to extensively communicate with others across thick prison walls? And
McCain describes himself as having a “philosophical bent,” spending his
years of solitary confinement reviewing in his head all the many history
books he had read, trying to make sense of human history, a degree of
intellectualizing never apparent in his life either before or after.
One
factual detail, routinely emphasized by his supporters, is his repeated
claim that except for signing a single written statement very early in
his captivity and also answering some questions by a visiting French
newsman, he had staunchly refused any hint of collaboration with his
captors, despite torture, solitary confinement, endless threats and
beatings, and offers of rewards. Perhaps. But that original Counterpunch article provided the link to the purported text of one of McCain’s pro-Hanoi propaganda broadcasts as summarized in a 1969 UPI wire service story, and I have confirmed its authenticity by locating the resulting article that ran in Stars & Stripes
at the same time. So if crucial portions of McCain’s account of his
imprisonment are seemingly revealed to be self-serving fiction, how much
of the rest can we believe? If his pro-Communist propaganda broadcasts
were so notable that they even reached the news pages of one of
America’s leading military publications, it seems quite plausible that
they were as numerous, substantial, and frequent as his critics allege
When
I later discussed these troubling matters with an eminent political
scientist who has something of a military background, he emphasized that
McCain’s history can only be understood in the context of his father, a
top-ranking admiral who then served as commander of all American forces
in the Pacific Theater, including our troops in Vietnam. Indeed, the
alleged headline of the UPI wire story had been “PW [Prisoner
of War] Songbird Is Pilot Son of Admiral,” highlighting that connection.
Obviously, for reasons both of family loyalty and personal standing it
would have been imperative for John McCain’s father and namesake to hush
up the terrible scandal of having had his son serve as a leading
collaborator and Communist propagandist during the war and his exalted
rank gave him the power to do so. Furthermore, just a few years earlier
the elder McCain had himself performed an extremely valuable service for
America’s political elites, organizing the official board of inquiry
that whitewashed the potentially devastating “Liberty Incident,” with its hundreds of dead and wounded American servicemen, so he certainly had some powerful political chits he could call in.
Placed
in this context, John McCain’s tales of torture make perfect sense. If
he had indeed spent almost the entire war eagerly broadcasting Communist
propaganda in exchange for favored treatment, there would have been
stories about this circulating in private, and fears that these tales
might eventually reach the newspaper headlines, perhaps backed by the
hard evidence of audio and video tapes. An effective strategy for
preempting this danger would be to concoct lurid tales of personal
suffering and then promote them in the media, quickly establishing
McCain as the highest profile victim of torture among America’s returned
POWs, an effort rendered credible by the fact that many American POWs
had indeed suffered torture.
Once
the public had fully accepted McCain as our foremost Vietnam war-hero
and torture-victim, any later release of his propaganda tapes would be
dismissed as merely proving that even the bravest of men had their
breaking point. Given that McCain’s father was one of America’s
highest-ranking military officers and both the Nixon Administration and
the media had soon elevated McCain to a national symbol of American
heroism, there would have been enormous pressure on the other returning
POWs, many of them dazed and injured after long captivity, not to
undercut such an important patriotic narrative. Similarly, when McCain
ran for Congress and the Senate a decade or so later, stories of his
torture became a central theme of his campaigns and once again
constituted a powerful defense against any possible rumors of his
alleged “disloyalty.”
And
so the legend grew over the decades until it completely swallowed the
man, and he became America’s greatest patriot and war hero, with almost
no one even being aware of the Communist propaganda broadcasts that had
motivated the story in the first place. I have sometimes noticed this
same historical pattern in which fictional accounts originally invented
to excuse or mitigate some enormous crime may eventually expand over
time until they totally dominate the narrative while the original crime
itself is nearly forgotten. The central theme of McCain’s presidential
campaign was his unmatched patriotism and when he went down to defeat at
the hands of Barack Obama, the widespread verdict was that even the
greatest of war-heroes may still lose an election.
I
must reemphasize that I am not an expert on the Vietnam War and my
cursory investigation is nothing like the sort of exhaustive research
that would be necessary to establish a firm conclusion on this troubling
case. I have merely tried to provide a plausible account of McCain’s
war record and highlight some of the important pieces of evidence that a
more thorough researcher should consider. Unlike the documentation of
the POW cover up accumulated by Schanberg and others, which I regard as
overwhelmingly conclusive, I think the best that may be said about my
reconstruction of McCain’s wartime history is that it seems more likely
correct than not. However, I should mention that when I discussed some
of these items with Schanberg in 2010 and suggested that John McCain had
been the Tokyo Rose of the Vietnam War, he considered it a very apt
description.
John
McCain is hardly the only prominent political figure whose problematic
Vietnam War activities have at times come under harsh scrutiny but
afterwards been airbrushed away and forgotten by our subservient
corporate media. Just as McCain was widely regarded as the most
prominent Republican war-hero of that conflict, his Democratic
counterpart was probably Vietnam Medal of Honor winner Bob Kerrey, a
former Nebraska governor and senator who had run for president in 1992
and then considered doing so again in the late 1990s.
His seemingly unblemished record of wartime heroism suddenly collapsed in 2001 with the publication of a devastating 8,000 word expose in The New York Times Magazine together with a Sixty Minutes II
television segment. Detailed eyewitness testimony and documentary
evidence persuasively established that Kerrey had ordered his men to
massacre over a dozen innocent Vietnamese civilians—women, children, and
infants—for being witnesses to his botched SEAL raid on a tiny
Vietnamese hamlet, an action that somewhat recalled the infamous My Lai
massacre of the previous year though certainly on a much smaller scale.
Kerrey’s initial response to these horrific accusations—that his memory
of the incident was “foggy”—struck me as near-certain proof of his guilt, and others drew similar conclusions.
As
a supposed war-hero and a moderate Democrat, Kerrey had always been
very popular in political circles, but even the once friendly New Republic was shocked
by the alacrity with which pundits and the media sought to absolve him
of his apparent crimes. The revelations also seem to have had no impact
on his tenure as president of the prestigious New School in New York, an
academic institution with an impeccable liberal reputation, which he
held for another decade before leaving to make an unsuccessful attempt
to recapture his old Senate seat in Nebraska. Bob Dreyfuss, a principled
left-liberal journalist, might still characterize him as a “mass murderer” in a 2012 blog post at The Nation,
but for years almost no one in the mainstream media had ever alluded to
the incident in any of the articles mentioning Kerrey’s activities,
just as the media has also totally ignored all of Schanberg’s remarkable
revelations. I suspect that Kerrey’s war crimes have almost totally
vanished from public consciousness.
We
must always draw an important distinction between the actions of
individual journalists and the behavior of the American media taken as a
whole. I believe that the overwhelming majority of reporters and
editors are honest and sincere, and although their coverage may
sometimes be slanted or mistaken, they do seek to inform rather than to
mislead. Consider how many of the explosive facts discussed above or in
Schanberg’s massive expose were drawn directly from the New York Times
and other leading media outlets. But after those crucial stories run,
the facts they have established often seem to vanish from subsequent
coverage, causing them to be forgotten by most casual readers. Thus, the
detailed account of Kerrey’s apparent massacre of civilians received
the greatest possible initial coverage—a huge cover story in The New York Times Magazine and a top-rated CBS News
television segment—but within a year or so the history had seemingly
been flushed down the memory hole by almost all political reporters. The
facts are still available for interested readers to uncover, but they
must do the work themselves rather than simply relying on the summary
narratives produced by mainstream publications.
The
realization that many of our political leaders may be harboring such
terrible personal secrets, secrets that our media outlets regularly
conceal, raises an important policy implication independent of the
particular secrets themselves. In recent years I have increasingly begun
to suspect that some or even many of our national leaders may
occasionally make their seemingly inexplicable policy decisions under
the looming threat of personal blackmail, and that this may have also
been true in the past.
Consider the intriguing case of J. Edgar Hoover,
who spent nearly half a century running our domestic intelligence
service, the FBI. Over those many decades he accumulated detailed files
on vast numbers of prominent people and most historians agree that he
regularly used such highly sensitive material to gain the upper hand in
disputes with his nominal political masters and also to bend other
public figures to his will. Meanwhile, he himself was hardly immune from
similar pressures. These days it is widely believed that Hoover lived
his long life as a deeply closeted homosexual and there are also serious
claims that he had some hidden black ancestry, a possibility that seems
quite plausible to me given his features. Such deep personal secrets
may be connected with Hoover’s long denials that organized crime
actually existed in America and his great reluctance to allocate
significant FBI resources to combat it.
Today
when we consider the major countries of the world we see that in many
cases the official leaders are also the leaders in actuality: Vladimir
Putin calls the shots in Russia, Xi Jinping and his top Politburo
colleagues do the same in China, and so forth. However, in America and
in some other Western countries, this seems to be less and less the
case, with top national figures merely being attractive front-men
selected for their popular appeal and their political malleability, a
development that may eventually have dire consequences for the nations
they lead. As an extreme example, a drunken Boris Yeltsin freely allowed
the looting of Russia’s entire national wealth by the handful of
oligarchs who pulled his strings, and the result was the total
impoverishment of the Russian people and a demographic collapse almost
unprecedented in modern peacetime history.
An
obvious problem with installing puppet rulers is the risk that they
will attempt to cut their strings, much like Putin soon outmaneuvered
and exiled his oligarch patron Boris Berezovsky. One means of minimizing
such risk is to select puppets who are so deeply compromised that they
can never break free, knowing that the political self-destruct charges
buried deep within their pasts could easily be triggered if they sought
independence. I have sometimes joked with my friends that perhaps the
best career move for an ambitious young politician would be to secretly
commit some monstrous crime and then make sure that the hard evidence of
his guilt ended up in the hands of certain powerful people, thereby
assuring his rapid political rise.
Such
notions may seem utterly absurd, but let us step back and consider
recent American history. Just a few years ago an individual came very
close to reaching the White House almost entirely on the strength of his
war record, a war record that considerable evidence suggests was
actually the sort that would normally get a military man hanged for
treason at the close of hostilities. I have studied many historical eras
and many countries and no parallel examples come to mind.
Perhaps
the cause of this bizarre situation merely lies in the remarkable
incompetence and cowardice of our major media organs, their herd
mentality and their insouciant unwillingness to notice evidence that is
staring them in the face. But we should also at least consider the
possibility of a darker explanation. If Tokyo Rose had nearly been
elected president in the 1980s, we would assume that the American
political system had taken a very peculiar turn.
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