Eyewitnesses report former Nebraska Senator Bob Kerry rounded up unarmed
women and children in Vietnam, and ordered his troops to open fire.

Does Sentator Kerry deserve Lethal Injection too?

Perhaps on Pay Per View with the proceeds going to the surviving relatives
of his victims.

-----
   
NEW YORK (AP) -- Former Nebraska Sen. Bob Kerrey says he is ashamed that
as a Navy SEAL he led a 1969 combat mission during which unarmed
Vietnamese women and children were killed.
   
Though a member of Kerrey's SEAL unit and a Vietnamese woman who said she
witnessed the killings allege the civilians were herded together and
massacred, the former Nebraska governor maintains the raid was by and
large carried out in self-defense.
   
''To describe it as an atrocity, I would say, is pretty close to being
right, because that's how it felt and that's why I feel guilt and shame
for it,'' Kerrey said, according to a partial transcript of a ''60 Minutes
II'' segment scheduled for broadcast Tuesday.
   
Kerrey was later awarded a Bronze Star for the Feb. 25, 1969, raid in the
Mekong Delta. The citation says 21 Viet Cong were killed and enemy weapons
were captured or destroyed. Kerrey's squad, in reporting to military
superiors, didn't mention killing civilians. Witness' and official
accounts of the number of dead varies from 13 to more than 20.
   
''We herded them together in a group. We lined them up and we opened
fire,'' Gerhard Klann told ''60 Minutes II.''
   
Kerrey, who has not ruled out a run for president in 2004, said he is
haunted by the 32-year-old memory of the raid.

[Gee, he didn't look too haunted before the press found out about it, 
 did he?]
   
''I have lived with this privately for 32 years,'' Kerrey told the Omaha
World-Herald in an interview published Wednesday. ''I can't keep it
private any more. My conscience tells me some good should come from
this.''
   
Neither Kerrey nor Klann returned calls Wednesday from The Associated
Press.
   
Kerrey, who earned the nation's highest valor award, the Medal of Honor,
for a later SEAL action, talked about the raid publicly for the first time
last week in a speech to ROTC students at Virginia Military Institute in
Lexington, Va.
   
Kerrey said the mission took place on a moonless night, when he was a
25-year-old lieutenant leading a seven-man commando team. He said Klann
and another one of his men killed several people they came upon at the
start of the raid because they believed they were a threat. Kerrey said he
had not ordered the killings but took responsibility for them.
   
About 15 minutes later, Kerrey said, shots were fired at his squad and his
men returned fire.
   
''But when the fire stopped, we found that we had killed only women,
children and older men. It was not a military victory. It was a tragedy
and I had ordered it,'' said Kerrey, who has since said he counted about
14 bodies.
   
Klann's version of the shooting, and an account from Pham Tri Lanh, who
said she saw the raid, were reported as part of a joint effort by CBS News
and The New York Times. The Times will publish the story in its Sunday
magazine and posted it on its Web site Wednesday.
   
Klann said that at the start of the raid he killed an old man with
Kerrey's help and that he does not remember anyone shooting at their team.
Instead, he said the commandos assembled about 15 villagers for
questioning and that Kerrey ordered the men to open fire.
   
Lanh, then the 30-year-old wife of a Viet Cong soldier, said she witnessed
the shooting.
   
''They shot these two old women and they fell forward and they rolled over
and then they ordered everybody out from the bunker and they lined them up
and they shot all of them from behind,'' Lanh told CBS News.
   
Mike Ambrose, a third member of the commando team, ''wholeheartedly''
denied rounding up villagers and shooting them. Ambrose, like Kerrey, said
he remembered the unit being fired on.
   
''It got ridiculous pretty much once the guns got going. I was in survival
mode. It was dark, you're not seeing much but movement and shadows. You
couldn't tell if they were women or men,'' Ambrose told the Times
magazine. The four remaining members of Kerrey's team declined to comment.
   
Kerrey said his memory may differ from the rest of the team due to the
passing years and the fog of war.
   
''Gerhard I will not contradict,'' Kerrey said. ''So if that's his view I
don't contradict it. It's not my memory of it and as to the eyewitness
(she) is, at the very least, sympathetic to the Viet Cong.''
   
Kerrey, a Democrat, served one term as governor of Nebraska and two terms
as senator. He recently became president of New School University in New
York.
   
He told the magazine he wasn't afraid to accept his responsibility for the
incident and is under no illusions about the repercussions.
   
''It's going to be very interesting to see the reaction to the story,''
Kerrey said. ''I mean, because basically you're talking about a man who
killed innocent civilians.''

--    
Eric Michael Cordian 0+
O:.T:.O:. Mathematical Munitions Division
"Do What Thou Wilt Shall Be The Whole Of The Law"

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