THE NATION
For a Top 'Swiftie,' This One's Personal
John O'Neill, a key architect of the anti-Kerry veterans group, has loathed
Kerry since they both returned from Vietnam.
By Scott Gold Times Staff Writer August 28, 2004
HOUSTON — Thirty-three years ago, fresh from combat in Vietnam, John O'Neill
parted his hair neatly, put on his only suit, stared into a television camera
and made it clear how much he detested John Kerry. Not Democrats. Not liberals.
John Kerry.
"This man," O'Neill said during a 1971 debate with Kerry on "The Dick Cavett
Show," "has attempted the murder of the reputations of 2.5 million of us,
including the 55,000 dead in Vietnam."
President Nixon had recruited O'Neill to counter Kerry, who had come home from
Vietnam convinced that the war was a military and moral mistake. Much of the
nation was starting to agree with that assessment, and in O'Neill, Nixon found
an articulate spokesman for his policies.
Today, O'Neill, a high-dollar attorney in Houston with two grown children and an
admirable golf handicap, is back on the national stage. After disappearing from
the public eye for three decades, he has
emerged as a chief architect of an attack on the military credentials of
Massachusetts Sen. John F. Kerry, the Democratic presidential nominee.
The effort has had a surprising effect
on the campaign; a Los Angeles Times poll this week showed that O'Neill's
organization, Swift Boat Veterans for
Truth, has eroded Kerry's support by questioning whether he deserved his war
medals.
The Swift boat group has run ads that claim Kerry lied about the military
service that earned him several combat medals. Numerous questions have been
raised about the group's honesty and credibility. O'Neill, who has been accused
of inconsistencies, has acted as a spokesman for the group, provided it with
critical legal advice and written a book about Kerry titled "Unfit for Command."
In an hour long interview this week, the 58-year-old O'Neill sought to distance
himself from the Republican Party operatives and partisans who have been linked
to the campaign against Kerry. Wearing a monogrammed shirt, he spoke in his
firm's swank, 18th-floor offices overlooking City Hall and decorated with
paintings of Venice, Italy.
He portrayed himself as a political
independent — a Reagan Democrat, he said, if he had to have a label.
Although he typically supports GOP candidates, he says,
he voted for Democrat Al Gore in 2000.
And although the "Swifties" have agreed to focus on Kerry and not to discuss
President Bush, O'Neill made it clear he
is no great fan of the president, whom he has described to several friends as an
"empty suit."
He has become, effectively, a single-issue voter in this election, akin to an
otherwise liberal Roman Catholic who cannot bring himself to vote for a
pro-choice candidate. O'Neill's single issue is simple:
He despises Kerry. Whether Bush
benefits from the campaign, he said, is a distant concern.
"I know everybody thinks politics is the most important thing in the world,"
O'Neill said. "But it's not."
After Kerry returned from Vietnam, he famously asked a Senate committee: "How do
you ask a man to be the last man to die for a mistake?" His purpose, Kerry said
then and says today, was to call for an end to the war, not to indict those who
fought it.
O'Neill, however, felt that Kerry had impugned the integrity of every soldier
who had fought in Southeast Asia. The
son of a Navy admiral and the grandson of a naval academy instructor, O'Neill
had been taught since he was young to support U.S. troops — no matter who sent
them to fight, no matter the circumstances of the war. Kerry, he said, violated
an unspoken military creed.
O'Neill had been asked to publicly
resurrect those concerns several times during Kerry's rise to prominence, but he
had always declined, saying that it wasn't worth revisiting a painful period of
his life to intervene in a Senate race. But when it became clear that Kerry had
become a serious contender for the presidency, O'Neill was persuaded to speak up
because he "couldn't stomach" the idea of Kerry being commander in chief.
O'Neill said he believed, in hindsight,
that legitimate questions were raised about the war. He said that some who
voiced concerns — such as Al Gore Sr., a Tennessee senator who jeopardized his
career by announcing his opposition — were brave and even patriotic. But O'Neill
did not believe Kerry was brave. He said Kerry was an opportunist who used
Vietnam to advance his political ambitions.
"I've lived a happy life, sure, but at least 15 of my friends died there,"
O'Neill said. "What I'm dealing with is a set of values that are above and
beyond politics. And if following the truth — coming forward — elects Bush, we
can accept that."
Some of O'Neill's closest friends are
among those who question his crusade. But they say it is merely a reflection of
his tenacity.
"He develops legal lockjaw," said Gerry
Birnberg, a prominent Houston lawyer, a friend of 20 years and the chairman of
the Harris County Democratic Party. "All of this relates entirely and
exclusively to his personal feeling of outrage — with which I do not agree at
all — about Kerry's opposition to the war. That indelibly and irreversibly
formed his image of Kerry. It is an image that he cannot and will not get over."
O'Neill has many connections to GOP politics. He was invited to speak at the
1972 Republican convention in support of Nixon. Bush's father unsuccessfully
nominated O'Neill for a judgeship. One of his law partners was Bush's general
counsel when Bush was governor of Texas.
But his record is more complex than
those of some of the others backing the Swift boat campaign. In this year's
election, O'Neill said, his choice among all the candidates, regardless of
party, would have been Sen. John Edwards (D-N.C.), who is now Kerry's
running mate.
Although O'Neill's firm has close to ties to the oil and gas industries,
he has worked largely as a plaintiff's
lawyer — taking cases on behalf of people allegedly wronged by big companies.
He once represented a group of elderly
and disabled hot dog vendors — in a company called Hot Diggity Dog — who said
they had been wrongfully shut down by superstores. In 2001, he won a
$429-million judgment on behalf of investors who fell victim to an elaborate
securities fraud.
"The idea that anybody is telling John
O'Neill what to do or what to say — nothing could be farther from the truth,"
said David K. Bissinger, a partner at O'Neill's firm. "He doesn't follow any
particular ideology. If he thinks the law is being broken, or if he thinks there
is a miscarriage of justice, John is there."
Others see nothing noble about O'Neill's campaign.
The Kerry camp has pointed to inaccuracies in O'Neill's book and inconsistencies
in statements he has made over the years. O'Neill, for instance, wrote that
Kerry lied when he said he was in Cambodia as part of a secret war linked to
Vietnam. No Americans were in Cambodia, O'Neill has said. But O'Neill told Nixon
in 1971 that he was also "in Cambodia."
O'Neill said his statements have remained consistent, that he was speaking in
general terms to Nixon and meant that he was near Cambodia, not across the
border. The Kerry campaign's accusations, however, have left some in Texas
wondering whether O'Neill is as independent as he claims.
"I just think it is sad that we have people who served together in Vietnam —
maybe not next to each other, but together — trashing each other," said U.S.
Rep. Gene Green, a Houston Democrat.
"I don't think it's good for the country."
Copyright 2004 Los Angeles Times