Wednesday, November 15, 2017

McCain’s Deathbed Secret Just Came Out About What He Did To Men He Was In Captivity With

McCain’s Deathbed Secret Just Came Out About What He Did To Men He Was In Captivity With



McCain’s Deathbed Secret Just Came Out About What He Did To Men He Was In Captivity With











The biggest traitor in Washington D.C. might be none
other than Senator John McCain. Disturbing information continues to
emerge about his direct ties to Muslim terrorists and the London bomber,
and how he’s owned and funded by Saudi terrorists and George Soros.
Ever since Trump got into office, McCain has done everything in his
power to subvert the President of the United States, which is a federal
crime. As McCain continues to garner the sympathy of many Americans who
still falsely believe he’s a Vietnam “war hero,” it’s time that we
finally set the record straight about the unbelievable things McCain did
during his time in the military, before McCain dies and nauseating
tributes are made about his “service” in Vietnam.


It’s important to note that due to McCain’s familial ties to high
ranking Naval commanders during his time in service (his father and
grandfather were both four-star admirals), the majority of McCain’s
massive catastrophes and scandals in the Navy were completely buried,
and his military records sealed.


We reported several weeks ago
how John McCain was solely responsible for the horrifying atrocity
aboard the USS Forrestal Aircraft Carrier on July 31 1967, where
McCain’s cocky maneuver of doing a “wet start” of his plane would go on
to kill 134 sailors, in the deadliest loss of life the Navy has ever
seen. But because of McCain’s daddy being a 4-star admiral, the entire
incident was buried, and the Navy never officially put blame on anyone
for the tragedy. Astonishingly, McCain would not only be allowed to
continue serving in the Navy, but would go on to be responsible for the
deaths of numerous other men, in a scandal that has been successfully
buried for decades.


USS Forrestal Aircraft Carrier
Three months after the bloody tragedy on the USS Forrestal Aircraft
Carrier, John McCain was sent on a bombing mission over Hanoi in October
of 1967 when he was shot down and captured by the North Vietnamese,
where he’s go on to be a prisoner of war until 1973. After being
released from captivity, McCain would use his POW story and veteran
status to rise to political prominence, where his image as a “Vietnam
war hero” would go on to propel him to be elected as a United States
Senator.


John “Songbird” McCain is welcomed back as a hero by President Nixon
But a “hero” is the last thing that John McCain was or will ever be.
What most people don’t know is the massive government scandal that
McCain helped hide, as he’d go on for decades to tirelessly work to bury
stunning information about American prisoners over in Vietnam who
unlike him, didn’t return home. Using his position as a senator, McCain
would be behind the scenes quietly pushing and sponsoring federal laws
that would keep the most damning information about our POWs buried
through classified documents.



The secrets that John McCain has sought to hide about Vietnam
POWs are massive. Despite sworn testimony by two Defense Secretaries of
“the men left behind” in Vietnam, McCain continued to push the massive
lie that there were no survivors, much to the horror of POW families who
were frantic to know the truth about what happened to their loved ones.
Enormous amounts of government documents indicate that hundreds of
prisoners held in Vietnam were not returned when President Nixon signed
the peace treaty in January of 1973. Only 591 in Hanoi were released,
among them, Navy combat pilot John S. McCain.


After the war, President Nixon promised the Vietnamese a $3.25
billion in “postwar reconstruction” aid “without any political
conditions.” But there was a catch to this promise, where Nixon had
included that Congress would have to approve these funds; approval that
never happened. Furious that the American government had double-crossed
them, Nanoi decided to keep the remaining hundreds of American
prisoners, because their ransom money (post war provisions) never came.


CIA whistleblowers said that the government wanted to keep these
missing men a secret, because as more years passed, it became more and
more difficult for the government to admit that it knew about the
prisoners that were left behind. Years later, CIA officials admitted
that their intel indicated that the remaining POWs were eventually
executed by the Vietnamese, as they were no longer useful bargaining
chips.


After the Pentagon’s POW/MIA office was publicly shamed by internal
whistleblowers that there were in fact still men in Vietnam being held
as POWs, the pressure from the families and Vietnam veterans finally
forced the government in 1991 to create the Senate Select Committee on POW/MIA Affairs,
to investigate these allegations. John Kerry was made chairman of the
board, and McCain became its most pivotal member. In the end, this
committee became part of the debunking machine, and McCain would become paramount to sweeping the entire atrocity of these forgotten POWs under the rug.


But what people don’t know is John McCain’s vital role in keeping
this story about these abandoned POWs hidden from the American public,
as a traitor who completely turned his back on his brothers-in-arms who
had remained in captivity by the Vietnamese.


In the 1990s, legislation was proposed to Congress called “the Truth Bill” that
would’ve provided complete transparency about these prisoners and
missing men. But the Pentagon and McCain bitterly opposed the bill, and
it went nowhere. People were predictably outraged over the bill being
shot down, so in an effort for McCain and crooked Pentagon officials to
cover their asses, the McCain Bill,” suddenly appeared several months later.


This bill eventually became law in 1991, but would only create
a bureaucratic maze, making the truth for the families completely
impossible to discover. The provisions of the law explicitly states why
the Pentagon and other agencies are justified for not releasing
information about prisoners held in captivity. Later that year, the
Senate Select Committee was created, and McCain and Kerry would work
together to bury the last renaming evidence on the missing men.


The American Conservative reported on the other ways McCain screwed
over the POWs, by authoring a crippling amendment to the Missing Service
Personnel Act, that stripped away the obligations that commanders were
previously held to of speedily searching for missing men and reporting
these incidents to the Pentagon. The American Conservative reported:


“McCain was also instrumental in
amending the Missing Service Personnel Act, which had been strengthened
in 1995 by POW advocates to include criminal penalties, saying, ‘Any
government official who knowingly and willfully withholds from the file
of a missing person any information relating to the disappearance or
whereabouts and status of a missing person shall be fined as provided in
Title 18 or imprisoned not more than one year or both.’ A year later,
in a closed House-Senate conference on an unrelated military bill,
McCain, at the behest of the Pentagon, attached a crippling amendment to
the act, stripping out its only enforcement teeth, the criminal
penalties, and reducing the obligations of commanders in the field to
speedily search for missing men and to report the incidents to the
Pentagon.”
“About the relaxation of POW/MIA
obligations on commanders in the field, a public McCain memo said, ‘This
transfers the bureaucracy involved out of the [battle] field to
Washington.” He wrote that the original legislation, if left intact,
“would accomplish nothing but create new jobs for lawyers and turn
military commanders into clerks.'”
“McCain argued that keeping the
criminal penalties would have made it impossible for the Pentagon to
find staffers willing to work on POW/MIA matters. That’s an odd argument
to make. Were staffers only “willing to work” if they were allowed to
conceal POW records? By eviscerating the law, McCain gave his stamp of
approval to the government policy of debunking the existence of live
POWs.”
What’s even more sick is how McCain demonized the two Pentagon
chiefs’ sworn testimonies who testified under oath about the men left
behind, while insisting that all the evidence — to include documents,
witnesses, satellite photos — be completely buried. He would go on to
paint the entire story as an “unpatriotic myth” calling the testimony of
anyone coming forward Vietnam’s POW’s the “bizarre rantings of the MIA
hobbyists.” To this day, McCain regularly vilifies those who try to get
their hands on these classified documents (that he’s worked for decades
to conceal) as “hoaxers,” “charlatans,” “conspiracy theorists,” and
“dime-store Rambos.”





Ironically, the very same man who who for decades has been propped up
and hailed a POW war hero and crusader for the interests of other POWs,
is the very same man responsible for their deaths. It’s absolutely sick
how this man, despite his murdering and treasonous and crooked antics
for decades, is to this day regarded as a “hero” in the minds of
millions of Americans. It’s finally time that we set the record straight
on who John “Songbird” McCain truly is before he dies of brain cancer,
and nauseating tributes are made about his “patriotic service” to our
country.