Re: The FBI, POWs, Vietnam and Kerry
Date: March 22, 2004
"FBI
Shadowed Kerry During Activist Era
Records show agents and informants found no evidence of illegal activity. The
extent of monitoring in the 1970s troubles the candidate.
By John M. Glionna, Times Staff Writer
As a high-profile activist who crossed the country criticizing the Nixon administration's
role in the Vietnam War, John F. Kerry was closely monitored by FBI agents for
more than a year, according to intelligence documents reviewed by The Times.
In 1971, in the months after the Navy veteran and decorated war hero argued
before Congress against continued U.S. involvement in the conflict, the FBI
stepped up its infiltration of Vietnam Veterans Against the War, the protest
group Kerry helped direct, the files show.
The FBI documents indicate that wherever Kerry went, agents and informants were
following including appearances at VVAW-sponsored antiwar events in Washington;
Kansas City, Mo.; Oklahoma City; and Urbana, Ill. The FBI recorded the content
of his speeches and took photographs of him and fellow activists, and the dispatches
were filed to FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover and President Nixon.
The files contain no information or suggestion that Kerry broke any laws. And
a 1972 memorandum on the FBI's decision to end its surveillance of him said
the agency had discovered "nothing whatsoever to link the subject with
any violent activity."
Kerry, now the presumed Democratic presidential nominee, has long known he was
a target of FBI surveillance, but only last week learned the extent of the scrutiny,
he told The Times. The information was provided by Gerald Nicosia, a Bay Area
author who obtained thousands of pages of FBI intelligence files and who gave
copies of some documents to The Times.
The FBI files shed new light on an early chapter in Kerry's public life and
are another example of the extent to which the U.S. intelligence apparatus monitored
and investigated groups opposed to government policies during the Vietnam era,
especially the Hoover-run FBI.
FBI harassment of some activists and leaders in the antiwar and civil rights
movements including the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. was exposed
after Hoover's death in 1972, and reforms were mandated in the bureau to prevent
such abuses and restore public confidence.
The files reviewed by The Times on Kerry do not show that the FBI engaged in
any illegal actions in its surveillance of him. But the documents also show
the lengths the government went to investigate not only Kerry, but the VVAW
and other antiwar groups.
Intelligence officials referred to the VVAW in their reports as the "New
Left." "Due to abundant indications of subversive influence, we are
actively investigating VVAW," read one FBI report from 1971.
The documents could become an important resource for historians because they
show the extent of U.S. government surveillance directed against an individual
who, three decades later, may become president.
They also suggest that Kerry's memories of some of his antiwar activities, including
the date he left his position on the VVAW national steering committee, were
inaccurate. Kerry has stated that he left the group in the summer of 1971, but
the files show that he did not quit until the late fall of that year.
Kerry said he was troubled by the scope of the monitoring documented in the
papers.
"I'm surprised by [the] extent of it," he said in an interview. "I'm
offended by the intrusiveness of it. And I'm disturbed that it was all conducted
absent of some showing of any legitimate probable cause. It's an offense to
the Constitution. It's out of order."
Kerry told The Times that knowing the scope of the government surveillance against
him had made him more conscious of selecting the right people to run intelligence
agencies. If elected president, he said, he would appoint an attorney general
"who knows how to enforce laws in a way that balances law enforcement with
our tradition of civil liberties."
"Today's FBI isn't the FBI of J. Edgar Hoover. The FBI of today is on the
front lines of the war on terror, and it's critical that they be effective,"
he said. "But the experience of having been spied on for the act of engaging
in peaceful patriotic protest makes you respect the civil liberties and the
Constitution even more."
Kerry said that in 1987, two years after assuming office as a senator from Massachusetts,
he requested and received an FBI dossier on himself. He later told aides it
was "boring," and mostly included news clippings. The senator was
apparently unaware that a much larger file existed that included reports on
his activities as a VVAW leader.
Kerry said he was disturbed by "this extensive component of spying"
on him that wasn't in his file. "If I was the subject of individual surveillance
and individual tape recordings, I'd have thought it would have been released
to me," he said.
Fourteen boxes of FBI files standing 12 feet high have been sitting for five
years at Nicosia's home in Corte Madera.
Many of the files include mention of Kerry, who became the VVAW's most widely
recognized figure after he sought to make the case against the Vietnam War in
testimony to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee in April 1971. His appearance
was widely reported because of his stature as a veteran who had been awarded
a Silver Star and three Purple Hearts. As a lieutenant, Kerry had commanded
swift boats patrolling the sniper-filled rivers across the Mekong Delta.
"The Nixon people viewed antiwar protesters as anti-American subversives,"
said Douglas Brinkley, author of "Tour of Duty," a book that details
Kerry's Vietnam-era exploits. "Because of his record as a war hero, they
feared Kerry's influence with the public."
Many FBI reports on Kerry relied on informants who had infiltrated the VVAW.
One report, filed after a gathering in Oklahoma City on Nov. 8, 1971, described
how 22 veterans gathered to talk about "alleged war atrocities in which
they participated in Vietnam."
The file added: "From four p.m. to five p.m., John Kerry, featured convention
speaker and national spokesman for VVAW, spoke to one hundred to two hundred
people, followed by brief question and answer period. Kerry spoke against the
war and encouraged young people to vote for candidates who will end the war.
He said VVAW members will continue to be active in activities to end the war,
but indicated that VVAW members are against any type of violence."
Other former VVAW members recalled their suspicion that their telephones were
being tapped and their concern that informants had infiltrated their ranks.
"Once, our national office in Washington called the phone company to say
they couldn't pay the bill," said Bill Crandell, a writer who lives in
Silver Spring, Md. "They were told, 'Don't worry, it's being paid.' "
Crandell said he and others assumed that intelligence agents made sure that
the phone lines remained active, though the FBI files reviewed by The Times
contain no mention of wiretapping.
Ann Barnes, who worked with the VVAW and who now lives in Milwaukee, said the
protesters took the surveillance seriously. "Wherever you went, there'd
be people taking your picture, writing down your license plate, doing what they
did," she said. "At demonstrations, we'd spot the guys tailing us
and say, 'Hey, there's our guys over there.' But we weren't really laughing."
Kerry also recalls the shadow of surveillance. "I wasn't doing anything
that I was worried about," he said. "That was the nature of the FBI
and the dialogue of the times…. People used to joke about it more than
anything, but it was frustrating."
He added: "I remember coming out of a meeting and seeing one of their unmarked
cruisers sitting there. Somebody had left a firearm on the seat, as a form of
intimidation. In Washington, when I walked the streets … I knew there
were surveillance cars. But never to the depth I know about now."
When Nicosia began researching his book "Home to War," a history of
the Vietnam veterans movement, he sent a Freedom of Information request in 1988
to the FBI seeking its VVAW surveillance files.
Eleven years later, in 1999, he received 14 boxes of largely redacted files.
But the release came too late for any significant inclusion in his look at the
VVAW, which was founded in 1967 and drew 10,000 members nationwide.
He had not read the files before allowing The Times to view a portion of them
last week. After a call from Nicosia, Kerry aides came to his home to collect
the same 50 pages of documents copied by The Times.
The files show that Kerry and his activities within VVAW were a subject of FBI
surveillance throughout the summer of 1971, during a time he had said he had
already left the organization.
The documents include evidence that Kerry did not resign from the VVAW's national
steering committee until November 1971, during four days of meetings in Kansas
City. Several Vietnam-era histories and Kerry himself had said
his resignation occurred at a VVAW gathering in St. Louis in July.
Previously, Kerry had denied being at the Kansas City gathering. But the FBI
files, along with interviews with former VVAW members, indicate that he attended
at least some portion of the meetings, using the occasion to resign his post
as one of the group's national coordinators.
"I still have no memory of a Kansas City meeting.
"I have this stark memory of the humidity that day [I resigned from VVAW]….
I just remember forever a dark storm brewing, with these huge thunderhead clouds."
But his recollection was that he resigned at the St. Louis meeting. "And
every reminder we have since then has put it there, including Nicosia's book,"
he said.
But the files include a "priority" memorandum dated Nov. 16, 1971
the day after the VVAW's Kansas City meeting ended from Hoover
to Nixon and other high-ranking administration officials. Quoting a "confidential
source," the report said Kerry was there and had resigned from the VVAW
for personal reasons.
"It's just weird," Kerry said, when asked about the discrepancy. He
attributed his previous assertions to a faulty memory.
For example, he said, "there was a day in where I gave two speeches in
Norman, Okla. I remember the first speech. I don't remember the second. It's
just the nature of memory."
Several VVAW members also distinctly remember Kerry's presence in Kansas City.
"I remember the Kansas City meeting like it was last week," said Barnes.
She said Kerry read an emotional resignation letter while scores of VVAW members
sat around long tables in a church classroom.
"He said he was going into public service, that he was going to run for
office," said Barnes. "It was a short speech, but it was emotional.
Everybody cheered."
Afterward, Barnes recalled, Kerry and others stepped outside the church for
a break, only to see FBI agents taking pictures of them from across the street.
Barnes recalled saying to Kerry: "You've been thinking about this a long
time."
And Barnes recalled Kerry saying: "Yeah, since high school."
The files document other Kerry appearances in 1971.
One report from Oklahoma said, "The entire conference lacked coordination
and appeared to be a platform for John Kerry, national leader of VVAW rather
than for VVAW."
Another concluded that a speech he gave at George Washington University was
"a clear indication that Kerry is an opportunist with personal political
aspirations."
But the reports were not always accurate. In one, an informant reported that
Kerry planned to accompany VVAW co-director Al Hubbard to Paris to meet with
North Vietnamese representatives to negotiate a POW prisoner of war release.
But another FBI file and other historical accounts report that Kerry was critical
of Hubbard for making the trip and for exaggerating aspects of his military
record. "John Kerry again attempted to have Al Hubbard voted off the executive
committee as Kerry stated he did not think Hubbard ever served in Vietnam or
was ever in service," reported one Kansas City informant on the tension
that existed between Kerry and Hubbard.
Kerry recalled his opposition to VVAW leaders meeting with North Vietnamese
officials. "I thought that would be disastrous to the credibility of the
organization," he said, "to the people we were trying to convince
about the war."
Kerry soon left VVAW, which he thought had lost its focus.
"The group achieved a lot of good, but it eventually splintered and diversified
into these various things," he said. "It started to broaden into this
diverse tug of war."
On Friday, the Kerry campaign released pages from the senator's personal FBI
file, including a May, 24, 1972, memorandum in which the agency decided to end
its information- gathering on Kerry's activities.
"It should be noted that a review of the subject's file reveals nothing
whatsoever to link subject with any violent type activity," the report
said. "Thus, considering the subject's apparently legitimate involvement
in politics, it is recommended that no further investigation be conducted regarding
subject until such time as it is warranted."
©2004 Los Angeles Times"
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