Vietnam Vet hits out at "Songbird" McCain

You want to read a story about a true American POW hero.

Col. Vernon P. Ligon, Jr. - My father flew with him when Ligon was part of S.A.C. Ligon spent most of his time in solitary confinement at the hands of the Vietnamese. He was older and took it upon himself to take the brunt of the torture to keep the younger guys safe.

Col. Vernon P.
Ligon Jr.

Air Force Pilot, Three-Time POW Survived German, Korean And Vietnamese Prisons

By Bethanne Kelly Patrick
Military.com Columnist

Between Memorial Day and Veteran's Day lies a lesser-known but no less important commemoration. POW/MIA Day, Sept. 15, is a day for remembering the men and women who, like Air Force Col. Vernon P. Ligon Jr., have suffered at the hands of a wartime enemy. All too often, those who become prisoners of war or who are reported missing in action never come home. But Ligon survived captivity and returned -- not only once, but three times from three separate wars.

Ligon was born, raised, and educated in Kentucky and began his military career in March 1942 with the Army Air Corps. During his assignment as a P-47 fighter pilot with the 362nd Fighter Group, he was shot down over Brussels after 35 missions. Ligon was captured and interned in several different German prison camps, including the notorious Stalagluft III. During a forced march, he escaped but was recaptured and taken to a camp near Mosseburg. He was finally released in April 1945.

Rather than making him quit, Ligon's World War II POW experience made him even more determined to continue fighting oppression. In 1950, he returned to Air Force duty as a logistics officer at Clark Air Base in the Philippines. Edward MacLean, a pilot who had served with Ligon during World War II, told Air Force Heritage magazine that, while flying missions in the Korean War, Ligon was incarcerated for a short time in a North Korean POW camp.

Several assignments and another decade later, Ligon was back in the cockpit and assigned to Udorn, Thailand, as commander of the 11th Tactical Reconnaissance Squadron. After 26 missions, he was shot down by a SAM missile while flying over Hanoi and taken to the infamous "Hanoi Hilton," where he endured five and a half years of imprisonment.

"My experiences while interned [in Vietnam] are typical of those of my fellow Americans," Ligon told the authors of "We Came Home" in 1977. While this quiet statement reminds us of the cruelties endured by all the POWs, it does not reveal that Ligon, as one of the highest-ranking and the oldest of the American servicemen held there, was kept separated from his comrades. He spent over four and a half years in isolation. Ligon was released in March 1973, retiring from the Air Force a few years later. He died in 1995.

On POW/MIA Day, it's worth remembering something else Ligon said in his "We Came Home" interview: "There is one thing that will always stand out very vividly in my memory ... the reception that approximately 3,000 wonderful, loyal friends and Americans gave us returnees ... it reaffirmed [our] feelings that the greater part of the American public is patriotic and [cares] about their families, country, and servicemen."
 
AND that vote, does need to be addressed. That is sickening and he needs to be held responsible for it. All Military families deserve to know what happened to their loved ones, and should also be able to bury a body and not an empty casket. Too many soldiers have never come home and we need to know why.

Absolutely.
 
There are many YouTube videos that expose how McCain (like John Kerry) used his power to cover up his record. He stabbed his fellow vets in the back by making sure the US did nothing to get back our POWs.

Many many vets HATE McCain, me being one of them.

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There are many YouTube videos that expose how McCain (like John Kerry) used his power to cover up his record. He stabbed his fellow vets in the back by making sure the US did nothing to get back our POWs.

Many many vets HATE McCain, me being one of them.

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But, of course, the information rarely will ever become actually "public".
 
For the last couple of months that i've been aware of this story, I've been doing a bit of armchair psychology and come to the conclusion that this skeleton in his background is why he is so much of a warmonger now. Perhaps he's trying to compensate, and is casting the veil of suspicion off, by being overly gung-ho now?

RE: Injuries. Yes, when he ejected, he didn't do it right (hey, he only got something like 864th in his class of 869 during his Naval Academy training. Or close to it.). He busted up two arms for not pulling them in to his side, and one knee. It was the need for medical attention to his knee that apparently first started him singing. Apparently he believed that if it wasn't treated, it would go gangrene, and he would lose the leg. Or some such.

Apparently he even flew to Vietnam and personally threatened those with the info not to release it, or ..... (some diplomatic type threat).
This 1991-1993 POW/MIA committee and the vote to suppress info is FAIR GAME.
 
"Song Bird"

Now do you understand why I have called mcCrap this for 9 months. Unfortunately getting the truth through the king makers msm is as difficult as having them admitt Paul is alive.

We need billboards nationwide with all the dirt splattered for all to see.

McCrap is a traitor

Hillary has a muslim lover and first life partner. not to mention nafta and gatt.

Obama is a drug user, gay sex, and his closest advisor is an extremist muslim......yeah that's the president we need while we fight the war on tur!

By the way, the penalty for leaving the muslim faith is death. he was born a muslim, went to school as a muslim and sinc ehe is still breathing, he is a muslim now.
 
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