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HANOI JANE’S APOLOGY: OLD WHINE IN NEW BOTTLES
With
the publication of Jane Fonda’s autobiography, the public in general
and veterans in particular have once again been insulted by her
contentless “apology” for a single episode in her multi-faceted junket
to Hanoi in July 1972. Fonda’s
charade on “60 Minutes” the other night was simply a robotic reprise of
what she has been repeating as a mantra for years in words carefully
crafted by her spin doctors.
In our 2002“Aid and Comfort”: Jane Fonda in North Vietnam, Erika Holzer and I wrote the following:
[After
the Vietnam War ended], Fonda went on with her life – garnering more
adulation as an actress; becoming a fitness guru; providing untold
millions to her office-seeking politician husband Tom Hayden in support
of an assortment of far-left causes; marrying media billionaire Ted
Turner; establishing herself as a Hollywood icon; piling up award upon
award; and recently pursuing other causes. But she has never been made
to account for her wartime trip to North Vietnam.
Fonda’s seeming apology on Barbara Walters’ TV show “20/20” in 1988 was hollow and insincere – not to mention, incomplete. Her
pose, she told Walters, on a North Vietnamese anti-aircraft gun used to
shoot down American planes was “a thoughtless and cruel thing to have
done.” She was sorry she had hurt the prisoners in the Hanoi Hilton, she
had been “thoughtless and careless.” [This footnote followed the text]: During
an interview in 2000 Fonda told Oprah Winfrey, “I will go to my grave
regretting the photograph of me in antiaircraft carrier [sic] which looks like I was trying to shoot at American planes. That had nothing to do with the context that photograph was taken in. But it hurt so many soldiers. It galvanized such hostility. It was the most horrible thing I could possibly have done. It was just thoughtless. I wasn’t thinking; I was just so bowled over by the whole experience that I didn’t realize what it would look like.” The Washington Times,
July 7, 2000 (commentary by Bruce Herschensohn).
Fonda limiting her
“apology” to the antiaircraft gun incident is yet another example of her
attempt to minimize her activities in North Vietnam. On
February 9, 2001, Fonda was at it again on Walters’ “20/20” show.
Walters said Fonda had been “against the war,” and the actress agreed,
leaving the implication that being against the war justified her
propagandizing for the enemy from its own soil. Yet
millions of loyal Americans, who also opposed the war – including some
much more prominent than Fonda – never traveled to the capitol of a
country that was killing our troops and torturing our prisoners. Fonda said, “It just kills me that I did things that hurt those men,” apparently referring to our POWs. It’s
obvious she never bothered to find out how she hurt “those men” – men
who were injured, sick, debilitated, and treated by their captors in a
manner that in [our] book [we] could hardly bring [ourselves] to
describe. She made no effort to
learn the toll her activities took on the morale of our prisoners and
men still in the field, nor the punishment some received for upholding
their honor and refusing to meet with her. Worse
. . . after repatriation was concluded on April 1, 1973 and the details
of our POWs’ ordeal were revealed, Fonda called the returned POWs
“liars and hypocrites” for reporting that they had been brutally
tortured. Finally, Fonda told Walters and her viewers that hurting the prisoners was “not my intent.” In
[our book] we spend dozens of pages discussing Fonda’s intent. One
wonders what Fonda’s answer would have been if Walters had asked Fonda
what her intent was. So, once more, the Jane and Barbara show
allowed Fonda to offer yet another glib, superficial “apology,” just
like her earlier ones, aimed at convincing the gullible that Hanoi Jane
is truly sorry for what she did in North Vietnam. She is not. She never was. Once the full truth is known, even the gullible will not take seriously any more Fonda “apologies.” [Our text then continued]: What
makes Fonda’s regret ring so hollow and self-serving are her revealing
words in a 1989 interview, in which she stated categorically: “I
did not, have not, and will not say that going to North Vietnam was a
mistake . . . I have apologized only for some of the things that I did
there, but I am proud that I went.” [This footnote followed the text]: Even genuine repentance on Fonda’s part would not have erased . . . what she had done in Hanoi.
· Touring the so-called “War Crimes” museum in
the company of North Vietnamese Communist civilian and military
officials and members of the international press, and there making
pro-Communist and anti-American propaganda statements. . . .
· Touring
a North Vietnamese hospital in the company of North Vietnamese
Communist civilian and military officials and members of the
international press, and there making pro-Communist and anti-American
propaganda statements.
· Touring
dikes and populated areas in the company of North Vietnamese Communist
civilian and military officials and members of the international press,
and there making pro-Communist and anti-American propaganda statements.
· Touring
the North Vietnamese countryside in the company of North Vietnamese
Communist civilian and military officials and members of the
international press, and there making pro-Communist and anti-American
propaganda statements.
· Making
a live broadcast, through the radio facilities of the North Vietnamese
regime, containing pro-Communist, anti-American propaganda, which
broadcast was taped for later replay.
· Touring
a textile center in the company of North Vietnamese Communist civilian
and military officials and members of the international press, and there
making pro-Communist and anti-American propaganda statements.
· Making
a second live broadcast, through the radio facilities of the North
Vietnamese regime, containing pro-Communist, anti-American propaganda,
which broadcast was taped for later replay.
· Meeting with seven captured American airmen and haranguing them with pro-Communist, anti-American propaganda.
· Being interviewed by a French journalist and continuing to make her pro-Communist, anti-American propaganda statements.
· Making
a third live broadcast, through the radio facilities of the North
Vietnamese regime, containing pro-Communist, anti-American propaganda,
which broadcast was taped for later replay.
· Holding a press conference in Hanoi, where she described her activities since arriving in North Vietnam, and continuing to make her pro-Communist, anti-American propaganda statements.
· Making
a fourth live broadcast, through the radio facilities of the North
Vietnamese regime, containing pro-Communist, anti-American propaganda,
which broadcast was taped for later replay.
· Making
two more live broadcasts on one day, through the radio facilities of
the North Vietnamese regime, containing pro-Communist, anti-American
propaganda, which broadcasts were taped for later replay.
· Meeting
with North Vietnamese Vice Premier Nguyen Duy Trinh and continuing to
make her pro-Communist, anti-American propaganda statements.
· In
the company of Communist civilian and military officials and members of
the international press, posing in the control seat of a North
Vietnamese anti-aircraft gun, feigning taking sight on an imaginary
American aircraft, and, by her conduct and words, continuing to make her
pro-Communist, anti-American propaganda statements.
Has anyone heard an “apology” for any of this from Hanoi Jane?
1 comment:
Hanoi Jane is a traitorous, despicable human being who deserves neither honor nor respect. I pay no attention to her and typically changed the channel if I see her, I will not waste my time with a lying communist hag who pretends to be something else.
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