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The Douglas Brinkley show: a historian who trumpets the greatness of John Kerry.


AT around 8:30 P.M. on March 15, retired admiral Roy Hoffmann Rear Admiral Roy F. "Latch" Hoffmann, U.S. Navy (retired) is Chairman of Swift Boat Veterans for Truth, established May 4 2004, in opposition to John Kerry's candidacy for U.S. President.  was sitting at his desk in Richmond, Va., when the phone rang. He picked up the receiver and heard a familiar voice. It was John Kerry Editing of this page by unregistered or newly registered users is currently disabled due to vandalism. . The two men weren't close, but they had served together in Vietnam, when the admiral was a captain and the senator a lieutenant. Kerry wanted to discuss some urgent business: the negative portrayal of Hoffmann in Douglas Brinkley's bestselling new book Tour of Duty: John Kerry and the Vietnam War Vietnam War, conflict in Southeast Asia, primarily fought in South Vietnam between government forces aided by the United States and guerrilla forces aided by North Vietnam. .

"He said I'd been unfairly maligned ma·lign  
tr.v. ma·ligned, ma·lign·ing, ma·ligns
To make evil, harmful, and often untrue statements about; speak evil of.

adj.
1. Evil in disposition, nature, or intent.

2.
 and that he respected me and thought I was a good leader in Vietnam," recalls Hoffmann. "I told him it sure as hell doesn't look like it."

No, it sure as hell doesn't. Brinkley's book--basically an authorized account of Kerry's life through the early 1970s--portrays Hoffmann as a shameful villain who represented everything Kerry despised about the military and Vietnam. "The senator told me he hadn't even read the entire book," says Hoffmann. "He wanted to know if there was anything that should be corrected when a revised version Revised Version
n.
A British and American revision of the King James Version of the Bible, completed in 1885.


Revised Version
Noun
 comes out." (Kerry also may want to revise his own phone records: When Hoffmann checked the caller ID A telephone company service that sends the caller's telephone number between the first and second ring of the call. If the calling number is not blocked, the calling number is displayed on the handset or base station of the called party. , it read "H. J. Heinz III"--the name of Teresa Heinz Maria Teresa Thierstein Simões-Ferreira Heinz Kerry (born October 5, 1938) is an American philanthropist, the widow of the late U.S. Senator H. John Heinz III, and the wife of Senator John Kerry.  Kerry's first husband, the Pennsylvania senator who died in 1991.)

Kerry's offer to Hoffmann was at once strange and expected. It was strange because Brinkley, a history professor at the University of New Orleans History
UNO was founded in 1958 as the New Orleans branch of Louisiana State University, originally as "Louisiana State University in New Orleans" or "LSUNO", but became more independent and changed the name to "University of New Orleans" in 1974.
, insists in an "author's note" that Kerry "exerted no editorial control on the manuscript." So why was the senator acting like a fact checker A fact checker is the person who checks factual assertions in news copy to determine their veracity and correctness. The job requires general knowledge, but more important it requires the ability to conduct quick and proper research. ? But the call was no shock, because Brinkley already had phoned Hoffmann, after hearing that the admiral was telling fellow swift-boat veterans that Brinkley's account contained numerous distortions and errors. "Brinkley wanted me to cooperate in correcting the manuscript," says Hoffmann. "I refused because he had made no effort whatsoever to document his claims the first time around."

Documenting claims, of course, is not the primary purpose of Tour of Duty. Instead, the book serves as Kerry's campaign biography. Brinkley has an impressive resume: He has written books on Dean Acheson, Jimmy Carter, and the Ford Motor Company. He appears regularly on TV talk shows as that rarefied rar·e·fied also rar·i·fied  
adj.
1. Belonging to or reserved for a small select group; esoteric.

2. Elevated in character or style; lofty.


rarefied
Adjective

1.
 species of pundit An expert or knowledgeable person. From "pandit" in Hindi. See guru. , the "presidential historian," and wrote The American Heritage History of the United States--a plum assignment for any professor who seeks a popular audience. But he is also passionately devoted to just about every liberal cause and cliche--and, in Tour of Duty, it shows.

It takes a special kind of author to claim that Kerry's private journals compare with the literature of World War I poet Wilfred Owen; Brinkley pulls it off with a straight face. He also refuses to question anything his hero does. One of the most important moments in Kerry's early career came during the medal-throwing protest against Vietnam: Did Kerry throw away his own medals and ribbons or somebody else's? Brinkley devotes just a few sentences to this controversial episode; the rest of the time he's busy hailing the young Kerry's marvelous potential. On page 62, we read of Kerry the "Kennedyite." Three pages later, there's Kerry being "Kennedyesque." And did you know that the initials of John Forbes Kerry are JFK?

The book reads like a celebrity profile from a glossy entertainment magazine, albeit an excruciatingly long one, coming in at 546 pages. It is sometimes said that journalists make lousy historians. Tour of Duty is a case of the exact opposite: a historian making a lousy journalist. The book bears many of the hallmarks of the ink-stained trade: It's topical, its interviews constitute a large portion of the research, and its writing took place in a hurry to meet a deadline. The book simply had to be in stores before the Democratic primaries. Journalists at the Boston Globe landed the first serious blows. Brinkley claimed to have interviewed "every single one" of Kerry's swift-boat crewmates. It turns out he missed a guy named Steven Gardner, who happens to be the one fellow who is less than worshipful wor·ship·ful  
adj.
1. Given to or expressive of worship; reverent or adoring.

2. Chiefly British Used as a respectful form of address.
 of his former commander. "I would have talked to Gardner, but I couldn't find him," Brinkley explained. When others did reach Gardner this spring, Brinkley scrambled to catch up. Instead of interviewing him, however, Brinkley warned Gardner against criticizing Kerry in public. Then, in an article posted on Time magazine's website, he accused Gardner of inventing stories and playing "politics."

Brinkley also failed to speak with Lieutenant Commander Grant Hibbard, who made the memorable observation that Kerry won his first Purple Heart for a wound that resembled "a scrape from a fingernail fin·ger·nail
n.
The nail on a finger.
." In an article for Salon.com, however, Brinkley saw fit to accuse Hibbard of "grouching" and to label him a "blowhard." The doctor who treated Kerry's injury, Louis Letson, might have been able to clear things up. In a written statement, Letson described "a small piece of metal sticking very superficially in the skin.... It did not require probing to find it, did not require any anesthesia to remove it, and did not require any sutures to close the wound. The wound was covered with a bandaid." Brinkley does not include any of these inconvenient details in Tour of Duty; for such a long book, the account of Kerry's first Purple Heart is curiously truncated.

Brinkley did manage to talk to Adm. Hoffmann for the book--and then disparaged him in its pages as a promotion-hungry naval officer NAVAL OFFICER. The name of an officer of the United States, whose duties are prescribed by various acts of congress.
     2. Naval officers are appointed for the term of four years, but are removable from office at pleasure. Act of May 15, 1820, Sec. 1, 3 Story, L.
 who participated in outrageous "cowboy antics" and launched "ludicrous missions aimed at sacrificing the best Americans to satisfy a president's geopolitical ge·o·pol·i·tics  
n. (used with a sing. verb)
1. The study of the relationship among politics and geography, demography, and economics, especially with respect to the foreign policy of a nation.

2.
a.
 ambitions." To drive the point home, Brinkley resorted to a stock image from Hollywood, comparing Hoffmann to "the rough-hewn colonel in the movie Apocalypse Now who boasted that he 'loved the smell of napalm in the morning.'" A few chapters later, Brinkley repeats himself, equating Hoffmann with "Robert Duvall's brutish brut·ish  
adj.
1. Of or characteristic of a brute.

2. Crude in feeling or manner.

3. Sensual; carnal.

4.
 character in Apocalypse Now, who said he liked the 'sweet smell of napalm in the morning.'"

It's impossible to read these pages and not conclude that Hoffmann is a real son-of-a-bitch--and indeed, "son-of-a-bitch" is one of the insults Brinkley hurls at Hoffmann (or, to be precise, one he chooses to quote from a source). Yet it's easy to track down a bunch of Hoffmann's old comrades who don't share this low opinion. "Hoffmann was a very strong officer," says former Navy lieutenant Robert Elder. "The Apocalypse Now comparisons are absurd. I don't know Don't know (DK, DKed)

"Don't know the trade." A Street expression used whenever one party lacks knowledge of a trade or receives conflicting instructions from the other party.
 of anybody from Vietnam who acted like Robert Duvall." Adds former Navy lieutenant Andy Horne: "When I read Tour of Duty it has to be with an empty stomach."

There were so many mistakes in the initial printing of the book that its publisher, William Morrow, took the unusual step of issuing a revised version of the book in May, four months after its initial publication. Brinkley originally misspelled Hoffmann's name throughout, using one "n" instead of two. This is corrected in the new version, which is virtually impossible to distinguish from its predecessor: Both are labeled a "first edition." All of the modifications appear to be minor, and a number of spelling mistakes can be found in both books.

At least one major error remains in place. On page 439, Brinkley wrote that a member of the Army's 69th Engineer Battalion witnessed "atrocities" in Vietnam, invoking the vocabulary of anti-war protesters who believed the American soldiers were war criminals. In April, Tom Pardue, a former lieutenant in the 69th Engineers, wrote to Brinkley complaining that his battalion never before had been accused of "atrocities." He demanded a correction. "I lost four of my men in Vietnam," says Pardue. "They can't defend themselves, and I can't remain silent." On May 5, Brinkley called Pardue and left a phone message promising that the book's new edition would remove the word "atrocities." But this change was not made--page 439 in the new edition is a carbon copy of the old one. (Pardue played me a tape recording of Brinkley's phone message; Brinkley refused all requests for an interview.)

The fundamental problem with Tour of Duty, however, goes far beyond botching a few names or dates or words. Brinkley gets the big story wrong. Take the case of the Winter Soldier Investigation
''For other uses, see Winter Soldier (disambiguation)
The "Winter Soldier Investigation" was a media event sponsored by the Vietnam Veterans Against the War intended to publicize war crimes and atrocities by the United States Armed Forces and their allies in the
, the hearings convened by anti-war protesters to publicize the supposed war crimes of GIs. Kerry relied on those hearings to support his infamous Senate testimony of 1971; Brinkley describes the Winter Soldiers as "gallant" and their testimonies as "unsettling un·set·tle  
v. un·set·tled, un·set·tling, un·set·tles

v.tr.
1. To displace from a settled condition; disrupt.

2. To make uneasy; disturb.

v.intr.
." He approvingly cites a reporter who recoiled from "the very commonness, the quotidian quotidian /quo·tid·i·an/ (kwo-tid´e-an) recurring every day; see malaria.

quo·tid·i·an
adj.
Recurring daily. Used especially of attacks of malaria.
 character of atrocity." The only complication is that the claims of the Winter Soldiers have been roundly discredited. Even the New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
 Times has noted that a number of the anti-war veterans "turned out to be frauds." Yet Brinkley, who didn't hesitate to lambaste Steven Gardner as a con artist, fails to question their trustworthiness. His only criticism of their publicity stunt is that it didn't receive the mainstream press attention its organizers had craved.

As a TV regular, Brinkley himself is no stranger to publicity. But he apparently aspires to be something more: the court historian of the Kerry administration, just as Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr. was for JFK. Tour of Duty can be interpreted as Brinkley's job application, and it shows him ready for the assignment, which does not involve recording history dispassionately dis·pas·sion·ate  
adj.
Devoid of or unaffected by passion, emotion, or bias. See Synonyms at fair1.



dis·pas
 so much as defending the court against critics, all the while projecting the image of a fair-minded academic who is the lucky witness of great events.

On January 22, right after Kerry's triumph in Iowa, Tour of Duty was hot off the press. Brinkley appeared on CNBC CNBC Center for the Neural Basis of Cognition (artificial intelligence)
CNBC Consumer News and Business Channel
CNBC Congress of National Black Churches, Inc.
. "I think he'd make a first-rate president," the historian said of Kerry. Then he thought better of such blatant advocacy. "I'm not endorsing anybody, though." Of course not.
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Author:Miller, John J.
Publication:National Review
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Jul 12, 2004
Words:1638
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