Some
of the documents are after the article.
Paperlessarchives.com Publishes 20,000 Pages of John
Kerry - VVAW FBI Files
The listing for a set of selected VVAW FBI
files highlighting the time John Kerry was a member, along with copies of Kerry's military records and correspondences from
the CIA, can be found at http://www.paperlessarchives.com/john_kerry.html
Paperless Archives (www.paperlessarchives.com) has announced the publishing of 20,000 pages of FBI Files related
to Senator John Kerry. These FBI files include coverage of John Kerry's activity as a leader of the anti-Vietnam War group,
Vietnam Veterans Against the War. These FBI files have been the subject of great discussion and news coverage recently, yet
few have actually ever seen a single page of the documents. Paperless Archives (www.paperlessarchives.com) has now made it possible for everyone to obtain and review
copies of these files.
LOS ANGELES, CA (PRWEB) June 10, 2004 -- Paperless Archives
(www.paperlessarchives.com) has announced the publishing of 20,000 pages of FBI Files related
to Senator John Kerry. These FBI files include coverage of John Kerry's activity as a leader of the anti-Vietnam War group,
Vietnam Veterans Against the War.
These FBI files have been the subject of great discussion
and news coverage recently, yet few have actually ever seen a single page of the documents. Paperless Archives (www.paperlessarchives.com) has now made it possible for everyone to obtain and review
copies of these files.
Most of this material was originally released in 1999 to
author and historian Gerald Nicosia, after seeking their release under the Freedom of Information Act in 1988. This set released
in June 2004, contains pages of documents not released to Nicosia in 1999.
The documents date from 1967 to 1976. They are composed
of memos, reports, investigation summaries, confidential informant accounts, newspaper and wire service articles, and Vietnam
Veterans Against the War bulletins and flyers. The files give broad coverage to activities of VVAW members such as Scott Camil,
Al Hubbard, and the person who has become its most well known member, John Kerry
Although there were many anti-war groups at the time, The
Vietnam Veterans Against the War seems to have gathered more attention from the FBI than most others. The sight of uniforms,
medals, and missing limbs caused a greater stir along all sectors of the ideological spectrum of opinion about the Vietnam
War. There also may have been a feeling in the FBI, that members of the VVAW were more dangerous than hippies, because VVAW
members had military training and had seen combat. The files show the United States domestic intelligence infrastructure's
level of concern about the possibility of subversion and sedition, among those who were strongly critical of American Vietnam
policy.
John Kerry first became
familiar with the VVAW through his sister Peggy, in 1969. After deciding not to run for Congress in 1970, Kerry went to Paris,
site of the Vietnam War peace negotiations, and met with Viet Cong representatives. After his return, he began speaking at
VVAW events. John Kerry became one the Vietnam Veteran's Against the War's most publicly recognizable figures. Especially
after his appearance before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee in April 1971. As a veteran who was decorated with a Silver
Star, Bronze Star, and three Purple Hearts, Kerry garnered attention and consideration, that other anti-Vietnam War protestors
could not achieve. Kerry went on to become one of the members of VVAW's national steering committee.
The coverage of Kerry is mostly intermittently spread across
memos dating from 1971. Much of the clandestine surveillance is composed of reporting made by unnamed confidential informants.
The files chronicle: John Kerry's rise in status as a member of the Vietnam Veterans Against the War, A growing ideological
conflict with the more militant direction the VVAW was heading in, Travel to Paris for talks with the North Vietnamese peace
negotiation delegation, the "Kansas City" meeting, Kerry's pitched battle with VVAW leader Al Hubbard, and Kerry's dissolution
as a leader of the VVAW in 1971.
Heavy surveillance of the group continues after Kerry leaves
the group. The files document FBI accusations of a conspiracy to riot during the 1972 Republican National Convention and the
passing of classified information to a Japanese communist leader. A member of the Connecticut chapter of the VVAW was arrested
with an explosive device en route to a speech given by Vice President Spiro Agnew.
The listing for a set of selected VVAW FBI files highlighting
the time John Kerry was a member, along with copies of Kerry's military records and correspondences from the CIA, can be found
at http://www.paperlessarchives.com/john_kerry.html
About Paperless Archives
Paperless Archives, www.paperlessarchives.com, provides access to thousands of pages of once secret historical
documents, photos, and recordings.
Materials cover Presidencies, Historical Figures, Historical
Events, Celebrities, Organized Crime, Politics, Military Operations, Famous Crimes, Intelligence Gathering, Espionage, Civil
Rights, Serial Killers, World War I, World War II, Korean War, Vietnam War, and more.
Source material from Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI),
Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), National Security Agency (NSA), Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA), Secret Service, National
Security Council, Department of Defense, Joint Chiefs of Staff, Department of Justice, National Archive Records and Administration,
and Presidential Libraries.