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« The Whining Of The Jersey Girls | Main | For The Record »

"A Fingernail Scratch"

This story has been around for a while, but now it's appearing in major newspapers. It will be interesting to see if it develops any legs. If so, it could take a lot of the wind out of Kerry's "wounded in Vietnam" persona.

During the Vietnam War, Purple Hearts were often granted for minor wounds. "There were an awful lot of Purple Hearts--from shrapnel, some of those might have been M-40 grenades," said George Elliott, who served as a commanding officer to Kerry during another point in his five-month combat tour in Vietnam. (Kerry earlier served a noncombat tour.) "The Purple Hearts were coming down in boxes." Under Navy regulations, an enlistee or officer wounded three times was permitted to leave Vietnam early, as Kerry did. He received all three purple hearts for relatively minor injuries -- two did not cost him a day of service and one took him out for a day or two...

...Back at the base, Kerry told Hibbard he qualified for a Purple Heart, according to Hibbard. Thirty-six years later, Hibbard, reached at his retirement home in Florida, said he can still recall Kerry's wound, and that it resembled a scrape from a fingernail. "I've had thorns from a rose that were worse," said Hibbard, a registered Republican who said he was undecided on the 2004 presidential race.

It has an appearance (at least to me) of a deliberate attempt to get a "million-dollar wound" that would get him home early, while burnishing his presidential credentials in a Navy gunboat, a la the original JFK. It's certainly a better way of "maintaining his political viability" than Clinton, but it doesn't look great, particularly considering that Max Cleland, who lost three limbs, didn't get a Purple Heart at all (though apparently his injury wasn't a direct result of combat).

Posted by Rand Simberg at April 14, 2004 10:46 AM
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Despite the heated remarks of some Democrats, Max Cleland himself told me his wounds were not the result of combat. He was running for a state office in Georgia back in the early '80s when I met him. He told me that he was behind the lines getting off of a helicopter when he saw a hand grenade on the ground. He didn't know if it belonged to him or to another soldier who was also aboard the chopper. Cleland stooped to pick up the hand grenade when it went off.

Not a combat wound, so no Purple Heart.

Posted by Juan Paxety at April 14, 2004 12:55 PM

Note to self:

Don't pick up dropped hand grenades, run like hell instead.

Posted by Mike Puckett at April 16, 2004 08:48 AM


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