Five Minutes vs. Five Years: Interview With Swift Boat Vet George Elliott
Dean
** Dean's World Exclusive ** ** Must Credit Dean's World **
I was pleased recently to have an in-depth conversation with retired US Navy Captain George Elliott. We talked about his career in the military and his involvment in the group known as Swift Boat Veterans and POWs for Truth.
The retired Captain Elliott served for decades with the U.S. Navy and won a number of combat and non-combat citations, most of which he is (as I discovered) reluctant to talk about let alone brag about. I also had the pleasure of speaking a few times with his lovely wife, who was helpful in making sure I got our transcribed interview right. --Dean
Dean's World: Thank you for talking to me, Captain Elliott. Can you give me some basic details on when and where you served?
George Elliott: Well I graduated from the US Naval Academy in 1959. I went into the academy directly after High School here in Delaware and served at many different stations over the next 26 years as a commissioned officer, retiring in 1985 with a rank of Captain.
Dean's World: How long were you in Viet Nam?
GE: From August of 1968 through July of 1969.
DW: How long did you know Kerry?
GE: He served at my command at An Thoi--Coastal Division 11---well there were 5 days in December wherein I barely knew he was there, then he returned in January 1969 and departed on the 26th of March. Actually I don't know the exact date but I use the date of 26th of March because that is the last day my fitness report covers him.
DW: But you did know him personally then obviously.
GE: Oh yes.
DW: Are you receiving any sort of compensation for your activities against Senator Kerry?
GE: No, absolutely not. I'm... we've had some of our hotel rooms and bills paid when we've gone to Washington, but I've made a personal committment to donate to the organization whatever I think my expenses are, and a little more.
DW: So you make nothing at all?
GE: Absolutely nothing.
DW: What do you do for a living?
GE: I'm currently retired. I worked for about 10 years after I retired from the United States Navy and now I am a volunteer in my small town of Lewes, Delaware. I'm a member of the Rotary Club, was president of the Lewes Historical Society for seven years and am now a member of the board of directors of a maritime museum here in Lewes. It is a lightship--the former Boston Lightship. I also play a little golf--but certainly not for a living!
DW: How about politics? Do you have much background in politics?
GE: I've avoided it like the plague, but I vote every election.
DW: Are you a Republican?
GE: No I'm not. I'm registered as an independent voter and have never voted a straight ticket in my life that I recall. I have not always voted for one party or the other on the national ticket--presidents, senators, congressmen, so forth.
DW: Is it true that you campaigned on behalf of Senator Kerry in the 1990s, and if so, why are you involved in this effort against him now?
GE: "Campaign" is the wrong word. In 1996 a Boston Globe reporter named, Warsh I believe it was, in 1996, he wrote an article that very strongly implied that John Kerry, in the Silver Star incident, had simply executed a wounded Viet Cong soldier. In Warsh's words, he had isssued a "coup de grace," which we found deeply offensive. So, with several members of John Kerry's crew, Admiral Zumwalt and Captain Adrian Lonsdale and I went to speak out against accusations of war crimes by the Navy.
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We went to Boston to support Kerry in this accusation of a war crime. It was as much to defend the Navy and my outfit as it was to stand with John Kerry. This was a specious inference and we couldn't let it stand. It had very little to do with politics in my view.
In my opening remarks at the press conference on the piers down at the old Boston Navy Yard in Massachussetts, my remarks were, "I am not here to support Senator Kerry, I am here to support Lt(jg) Kerry." And I made that distinction for two reasons. First I didn't want anyone to think I was a carpetbagger there to inject myself into a campaign in Massachussetts, and second I wanted to make it clear that I was there to defend the Navy against accusations of war crimes.
DW: Were you aware of what Kerry said about war crimes in his testimony before Congress in the early 1970s?
GE: Absolutely. At that time I think most of us considered that in the past. As long as John Kerry was a Massachussetts Senator we had no, I had no reason to interject myself into any campaign he was running or not running.
DW: I've also been asked why it is you guys took 30 years to come forward with your allegations against the Senator. Do you have any response to that?
GE: Absolutely I have a response. First of all as I just said, when Kerry was a politician in Massachussetts, representing Massachussetts, we had no stake in that game. Now that he wants to be Commander In Chief, we have a big stake in the game. His actions over the years were despicable and dishonorable. It's now a national position that he's seeking.
DW: The Boston Globe's Michael Kranish accused you of changing your story on Senator Kerry, and claimed you retracted part of your accusations. Can you tell me about that incident?
GE: Yes. When Michael Kranish called that day he had my affidavit which was required to be signed in order to get the book published and to get the commercials on the air. And he referred to a phrase in that affidavit where I said that I was never informed that he had simply shot a wounded Viet Cong in the back. Now those words "shot in the back," those words sort of stuck in my craw because it was reminiscent of Warsh's words that all he had done was execute a Viet Cong. That was the sole issue I had. Quite frankly it was a true statement even with that in there. I was never informed he had simply shot a wounded Viet Cong in the back. But again the phrasing had the harshness of a war crime.
However, if you read Kranish's own interview with John Kerry as published in the Boston Globe, or the biography of John Kerry by "the reporters who knew him best," on page 102 you will read in Kerry's own words in describing the events of that day, and there is no way any rational person could conclude that John Kerry did anything other than shoot a fleeing man in the back.
DW: And that would be a crime?
GE: No, absolutely not. Even given that. This is a combat situation, the man was armed and the fact that he was shot in the back has nothing to do with anything other than the tragedies of combat, at least for that guy and his family. It is not a war crime.
DW: Wait. As I read the Kranish piece (Editor's Note: The referenced interview may be read here on the Boston Globe web site), Kerry specifically denies shooting the guy in the back.
GE: Kerry says "He was running away with a live B-40, and, I thought, poised to turn around and fire it." Now, unless the man was running backwards and poised to turn around I conclude there is no way a rational person could conclude that John Kerry did anything other than shoot a fleeing man in the back.
I had read the Boston Globe biography of John Kerry and the incident did not register at the time. However, Michael Kranish took my words and implied that I said it was a mistake to sign the affidavit against Kerry. But that's not what I was talking about, and Kranish knew at the time that there should have been no concern about those words because he had written them himself.
Like I said, being a cagey reporter he had no obligation to tell me that and he didn't when he wrote his story.
Now the story that he wrote, the words that he has in the story that are in quotation marks, those are words that I said. So I was not misquoted. What he did however is, following the words in quotations, he has reached conclusions that misrepresented my feelings and they are not quotations or words that I said. Those are his conclusions. That's what I took issue with, they in fact did not reflect my true feelings.
DW: I'm still a little confused.
GE: He took words that I actually said, put them in quotations, they were all correct. For example, in his story Kranish goes all the way back to 1996. One of the sentences in his story was something like "The affadavit also contradicted earlier material.... saying that Kerry acted properly and deserved the Silver Star." Now that is a true statement. But that does not contradict the fact that there has been a lot of information to come to light since then to shed new light on that action.
This is the same argument that people have used against me when they bring up that I wrote a decent fitness report for Kerry in 1969 and now have changed. Certainly it would change given what's been published...and other things that have since been disputed.
Brinkley's book Tour of Duty brought an awful lot of things to light that people who served with Kerry had no idea about.
DW: I've heard it suggested that you and others are merely being manipulated and misled by a group of big-money Republicans. What do you think of such allegations?
GE: Well I have spoken in public several times, I have had several interviews, I have had calls and talked to reporters on many occasions. I have never had anyone ever tell me what to say. I am told by our steering group members that yes, we have received some fairly large donations on occasion but those donations come with a caveat from us, "look this is our campaign, this is what we're saying, we are not taking any words from you. We'll create our ads and do everything ourselves." And I believe those guys. I don't believe we need anyone to tell us what to say. We are all saying what we believe.
I would also tell you that we now have over 100,000 individual contributions via the internet through our web site. Those are not 100,000 big money Republicans. These are people whose average donation is somewhere in the 60 to 70 dollar range. John O'Neill said once on television we would certainly take some of George Soros' millions if he'd like to send some our way.
DW: Do you endorse everything in John O'Neill's book about the Senator? For example, specifically in chapter 4, the book accuses him of more or less murdering a child in Viet Nam.
GE: The Sampan Incident? Sir, I can put you in touch with the man who actually pulled the trigger on that child that night. He's now one of our members. His name is Steve Gardner. His testimony of the event is the basis for that part of the book, and I believe O'Neill characterizes it as a tragedy, but it was also a false report that John Kerry submitted about that incident.
DW: Do you intend to keep speaking out against Kerry if he is elected in November?
GE: Once it's over it's over. I have no reason to continue, the American people will vote and make their choice. I don't know that I---I would not continue to oppose a sitting American President if the people put him there.
DW: Has the Senator ever apologized to you for his statements about war crimes and atrocities supposedly committed everywhere with the full support of all levels of command in Viet Nam?
GE: Never.
DW: If he did apologize would you accept it?
GE: If he tried to apologize between now and the time of the election, no. Win or lose on the 2nd of November, if he were to stand up and apologize to me and the hundreds of thousands of other veterans that he has offended over the years, I would accept his apology.
DW: Do you think that anyone who protested the Viet Nam war was fink? Are you simply mad at Kerry for protesting the war?
GE: Of course not, of course not. Every American's born with the right to criticize their government. Even Jane Fonda, she didn't have to fight to earn that right, it's a birthright.
What is not a birthright is lying in order to support your protest. And there's absolutely no question in any of our minds that John Kerry lied when he was before Congress. There's no question that he met with the enemy in Paris. And these are things that he does not have a right to do.
DW: Would you use the word "treason" to describe any of that?
GE: No I wouldn't go that far, but in my own mind it comes damned close.
DW: Have you received much support from other vets not in your group?
GE: Absolutely. Not only vets but just ordinary people. Relatives of men lost in Viet Nam or family members who had someone who served. I have received important support from everywhere. A lot of people, not just the 100,000 who donated but the many who have supported us and continue to.
DW: How about harassment?
GE: I haven't had too much of that actually. A couple of radio interviews, you get call-ins that try to drown you out, but I wouldn't consider that harassment. A few pieces of mail, but as long as they sign their name you don't take it too criticially. They have their views.
There's a lot of letters on both sides in the newspapers, and some of those are very negative but many are factual and in support of us.
DW: Is there anything else you'd like to add?
GE: I don't know if this is the place to put this, but, there's one thing that concerns me very greatly, and that is the approach taken by what's currently known as the mainstream media. And I am not saying this to bash the mainstream media, but I think that if they continue to act in such a partisan way that it's not good for this country.
A free and unfettered press is an absolute necessity for this country to survive in the manner that was intended by the forefathers. But if the mainstream press continues acting in such a partisan way that they lose the support of a major part of the population, who is going to get us the real trut? Who is going to beat on the doors of congressmen and secretaries if various departments to answer the people's questions?
You see much of the population veering away from the three TV networks. Of course I don't believe everything on the internet but there's a part on there today about the ABC News director which, if it's even halfway true, it's very telling.
I have very grave concerns about the American people being able to trust what the mainstream media says unless something changes. Maybe our swift boat guys, maybe this will be a greater legacy, will be what we've exposed about the mainstream media than anything we've said about Senator Kerry. I'll give you an example. The closest example to our cause is the fact that CBS admits that they've been five years chasing down President Bush's national guard records. And they haven't spent five minutes trying to find John Kerry's records!
He has not released his records. The last I heard him say on the news was "I have released all the records I have in my possession." He always has a caveat for anything he says like that. But you will notice that one telling piece of paper that hasn't been released is the original writeup/recommendation for the Silver Star. He did release a recommendation that I wrote for the Bronze star. That's out there. The Silver Star recommendation is not there.
Even a reasonably competent news person would in my view ask "where is that?" It's as controversial as the bronze star. It's not there.
Where are his discharge papers? He has not put up a copy of his discharge from the naval reserve. That should have taken place in 1978 when his service in all forms was completed.
The press seems to have no interest in this.
They continue to call us liars when we mention these things. The facts in John Kerry's own words, as written in Tour of Duty from his own diaries, indicate to anyone who'd look at it twice can see that the third purple heart was a fraud. The shrapnel wound was admittedly from throwing a grenade into a bin of rice. They joked about getting shrapnel and rice into his butt. That's in his own book, Tour of Duty. So why are we liars to point it out? And why are reporters so interested in Bush's National Guard service but willing to call us liars when we've got eyewitnesses, sworn affidavits, and Kerry's own words backing us up? What is the world coming to if the people can no longer trust the press to tell them the truth and look at all candidates equally?
The Swift Boat Vets for Truth have recently merged with another Viet Nam veterans group, POWs for Truth. The latest ad from the combined group, featuring statements from the wives of former POWs, can be found here.
To see all the ads put out by the Swift Boat Vets and POWs for Truth, click here. If you would like to sign a petition urging Senator Kerry to release his military records and come clean about his military and post-war activities, you can find that petition right here.
A book documenting the group's claims about young Lieutenant Junior Grade and later Senator Kerry is now available. It is written by the man who took over Kerry's boat after Kerry left Viet Nam, and with the full support of a majority of the men who personally served with Kerry. It is entitled Unfit For Command, and can be purchased at any reputable book store, including Amazon. It is currently a national bestseller.
For those looking to learn more from the Swift Boat Vets and POWs for Truth, I will soon be interviewing Steve Gardner, the longest-serving member of Kerry's swift boat in Viet Nam, and asking him about some of the more inflammatory charges brought against and by this group. --Dean
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- From Kerry's Own Boat: Interview With Swift Boat Vet Steve Gardner
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- Lawrence O'Donnell Meltdown
- Latest Swift Vets Ad Preview
- Five Minutes vs. Five Years: Interview With Swift Boat Vet George Elliott
- Interview With Swift Boat Vet Van Odell


GE: He took words that I actually said, put them in quotations, they were all correct. For example, in his story Kranish goes all the way back to 1996. One of the sentences in his story was something like "The affadavit also contradicted earlier material.... saying that Kerry acted properly and deserved the Silver Star." Now that is a true statement. But that does not contradict the fact that there has been a lot of information to come to light since then to shed new light on that action.
They continue to call us liars when we mention these things. The facts in John Kerry's own words, as written in 








I did email Michael Kranish and the Boston Globe's ombudsman to see if they had a response.
Did you try contacting the Kerry campaign in Washington DC? I would have started there.
Once again, an outstanding interview.
Excellent. Makes me look back on my own military service with some pride. Thank You
Another great interview! Thanks!
Ditto on all the compliments you've gotten...
All,
For those that aren't Academy grads (and all other officers, hope I don't slight anyone), I can't impress upon you the offense of being accused of being a liar. Especially, when you've decided to stand by your statements (not hedging, but speaking quickly you may make a statement that could be either misinterpreted or you could actually misspeak).
People calling Capt. Elliot a liar might have well called him a rapist or child molester. I am not exagerating; they're challenging his honor directly! It's an outrage.
JFH: Well yes, and that's what they're doing to Kerry, yes? This is why having so many of them willing to do it is so disturbing, and should be worthy of attention and not mere dismissal.
This doesn't mean that voters should not vote for Kerry anyway. But it's grated on me from day one that people are so quick to dismiss these guys merely as liars and political stooges. That is not right.
Honestly, I continue to maintain that if Kerry had responded differently, basically by acknowledging these guys and saying he was sorry for having offended them and admitting to maybe shooting his mouth off when he was younger, this issue would have been GONE. Instead, the way he handled it was just so bloody negative... and stupid.
It really rankled me, probably because I've got people in my life very important to me who were there in Viet Nam.
Good interview, and a principled stand to boot.
Yours,
Wince
Your grandpa's genes sure fit you well.
Love, Mary Janelle...your Mother
Yes, Outstanding.
Did you see my post about Kerry's Lie?
http://tomgrey.motime.com/1093629194#330293
I think there are 3 things:
1) Kerry IS unfit
2) The Press is too biased, covering for Kerry too much (the point I hope the SwiftVets coverage makes; too bad Sinclair has been intimidated into not airing their program)
3) We are in a Moral Superiority War -- where Peace (and unspoken genocide) is considered more moral than fighting evil.
any responses. None. Came back the next day and my comment was gone.
Tried to log in, but can't, get message> "Error: This account is currently disabled."
Is this just a glitch or censorship?
RE: DW: "Were you aware of what Kerry said about war crimes in his testimony before Congress in the early 1970s?"
Why did Dean provide a link to the swifties propaganda instead of the
Senate Committee on Foreign Relations transcript of Kerry's speech?
The link Dean provides leaves out the first 6 words of Kerry's testimony.
Also 2 paragraphs before need to be looked at to put things into proper
prospective.
The link below will get you to Kerry's testimony on 04/22/71
Kerry Testimony
It's long but worth the effort if you don't want spin.
If Elliott and Odell read the whole transcript they would see that Kerry
never accused them of anything. If Dean had read the transcript he
should have called them on it.
Dean, Elliot and Odell have an agenda.
Remember My Lai !!!!!!
Follow the link below for a personal account of atrocities
during the war.
atrocities
It is neither. It's my blog and you follow my rules or you get the fuck out.
In your initial posting you were both rude and inflammatory. If you want to ask questions, or point me to data you think I haven't seen, feel free. If you're going to act like an asshole, then you're out the door. Capice?
As to your accusation that Elliot and Odell have "an agenda" -- so far you have provided me with no evidence of what that agenda is.
Regarding My Lai: it was an isolated incident so far as any credible source I've ever seen has ever said, and it was nothing Kerry or the his fellow Swift Vets had anything to do with. It was a war crime. Those happen in every war. Those guilty of that were prosecuted and imprisoned, and rightly so, after being turned in by their fellow soldiers.
If you would like to highlight the portions of Kerry's testimony that you feel relevant, feel free. All you need do is quote the relevant sections. I am not going to be baited by someone who makes handwaving generalizations. My purpose in the interview was to ask the common questions that are hurled at these guys, and that's what I did.
If you have questions you would like me to forward to Elliott or Odell, feel free. But if you're just going to hurl snide accusations, get lost.
Nothing in that testimony changes that, or would have changed my questions for Elliott or O'Neill. If you feel something in it should have, feel free to point it out. Without, of course, snide insinuations or accusations.
The sad part to me about this whole thing is that I've long felt that Kerry could have dealt with the fact that the vast majority of vets who served with him are still angry with him with a tact and grace that would have made the issue go away, by simply apologizing for any misunderstandings, admitting that his rhetoric was over the top and that he relayed some false allegations that day, and let it go at that. Instead he's got the vast majority of Viet Nam vets in the country mad as Hell at him still, and he chose to call honorable decorated Veterans who served with him liars. This speaks very poorly of him in my view, and in the view of many others who have family members and loved ones who served in Viet Nam. Including at least one friend of mine who knew Kerry personally as a fellow member of Vietnam Vets Against the War.