At a ceremony honoring veterans and senior citizens who sent presents to soldiers overseas, Attorney General Richard Blumenthal of Connecticut rose and spoke of an earlier time in his life.
“We have learned something important since the days that I served in Vietnam,”
Mr. Blumenthal said to the group gathered in Norwalk in March 2008.
“And you exemplify it. Whatever we think about the war, whatever we call
it — Afghanistan or Iraq — we owe our military men and women unconditional support.”
There was one problem: Mr. Blumenthal, a Democrat now running for the United States Senate( he won),
never served in Vietnam. He obtained at least five military deferments
from 1965 to 1970 and took repeated steps that enabled him to avoid
going to war, according to records.
The deferments allowed Mr. Blumenthal to complete his studies at Harvard; pursue a graduate fellowship in England; serve as a special assistant to The Washington Post’s publisher, Katharine Graham; and ultimately take a job in the Nixon White House.
In
1970, with his last deferment in jeopardy, he landed a coveted spot in
the Marine Reserve, which virtually guaranteed that he would not be sent
to Vietnam. He joined a unit in Washington
that conducted drills and other exercises and focused on local
projects, like fixing a campground and organizing a Toys for Tots drive.
Many
politicians have faced questions over their decisions during the
Vietnam War, and Mr. Blumenthal, who is seeking the seat being vacated
by Senator Christopher J. Dodd, is not alone in staying out of the war.
Sometimes
his remarks have been plainly untrue, as in his speech to the group in
Norwalk. At other times, he has used more ambiguous language, but the
impression left on audiences can be similar.
In
an interview on Monday, the attorney general said that he had misspoken
about his service during the Norwalk event and might have misspoken on
other occasions. “My intention has always been to be completely clear
and accurate and straightforward, out of respect to the veterans who
served in Vietnam,” he said.
But
an examination of his remarks at the ceremonies shows that he does not
volunteer that his service never took him overseas. And he describes the
hostile reaction directed at veterans coming back from Vietnam,
intimating that he was among them.
In
2003, he addressed a rally in Bridgeport, where about 100 military
families gathered to express support for American troops overseas. “When
we returned, we saw nothing like this,” Mr. Blumenthal said. “Let us do
better by this generation of men and women.”
At
a 2008 ceremony in front of the Veterans War Memorial Building in
Shelton, he praised the audience for paying tribute to troops fighting
abroad, noting that America had not always done so.
“I served during the Vietnam era,” he said. “I remember the taunts, the insults, sometimes even physical abuse.”
Mr.
Blumenthal, 64, is known as a brilliant lawyer who likes to argue cases
in court and uses language with power and precision. He is also savvy
about the news media and attentive to how he is portrayed in the press.
But
the way he speaks about his military service has led to confusion and
frequent mischaracterizations of his biography in his home state
newspapers. In at least eight newspaper articles published in
Connecticut from 2003 to 2009, he is described as having served in
Vietnam.
The
New Haven Register on July 20, 2006, described him as “a veteran of the
Vietnam War,” and on April 6, 2007, said that the attorney general had
“served in the Marines
in Vietnam.” On May 26, 2009, The Connecticut Post, a Bridgeport
newspaper that is the state’s third-largest daily, described Mr.
Blumenthal as “a Vietnam veteran.” The Shelton Weekly reported on May
23, 2008, that Mr. Blumenthal “was met with applause when he spoke about
his experience as a Marine sergeant in Vietnam.”
And
the idea that he served in Vietnam has become such an accepted part of
his public biography that when a national outlet, Slate magazine,
produced a profile of Mr. Blumenthal in 2000, it said he had “enlisted in the Marines rather than duck the Vietnam draft.”
It does not appear that Mr. Blumenthal ever sought to correct those mistakes.
In
the interview, he said he was not certain whether he had seen the
stories or whether any steps had been taken to point out the
inaccuracies.
“I
don’t know if we tried to do so or not,” he said. He added that he
“can’t possibly know what is reported in all” the articles that are
written about him, given the large number of appearances he makes at
military-style events.
He
said he had tried to stick to a consistent way of describing his
military experience: that he served as a member of the United State
Marine Corps Reserve during the Vietnam era.
Asked
about the Bridgeport rally, when he told the crowd, “When we returned,
we saw nothing like this,” Mr. Blumenthal said he did not recall the
event.
An
aide pointed out that in a different appearance this year, Mr.
Blumenthal was forthright about not having gone to war. In a Senate
debate in March, he responded to a question about Iran
and the use of military force by saying, “Although I did not serve in
Vietnam, I have seen firsthand the effects of military action, and no
one wants it to be the first resort, nor do we want to mortgage the country’s future with a deficit that is ballooning out of control.”
On
a less serious matter, another flattering but untrue description of Mr.
Blumenthal’s history has appeared in profiles about him. In two largely
favorable profiles, the Slate article and a magazine article in The
Hartford Courant in 2004 with which he cooperated, Mr. Blumenthal is
described prominently as having served as captain of the swim team at
Harvard. Records at the college show that he was never on the team.
Mr.
Blumenthal said he did not provide the information to reporters, was
unsure how it got into circulation and was “astonished” when he saw it
in print.
Mr.
Blumenthal has made veterans’ issues a centerpiece of his public life
and his Senate campaign, but even those who have worked closely with him
have gotten the misimpression that he served in Vietnam.
“It
was a sad moment,” she recalled. “He said, ‘When we came back, we were
spat on; we couldn’t wear our uniforms.’ It looked like he was sad to me
when he said it.”
Ms.
Risley later telephoned the reporter to say she had checked into Mr.
Blumenthal’s military background and learned that he had not, in fact,
served in Vietnam.
The Vietnam chapter in Mr. Blumenthal’s biography has received little attention despite his nearly three decades in Connecticut politics.
But
now, after repeatedly shunning opportunities for higher office, Mr.
Blumenthal is the man Democrats nationally are depending on to retain
the seat they controlled for 30 years under Mr. Dodd, and he is likely
to face more intense scrutiny.
After obtaining Mr. Blumenthal’s Selective Service records through a Freedom of Information Act request, The New York Times asked David Curry, a professor at the University of Missouri-St. Louis and an expert on the Vietnam draft, to examine them.
Mr.
Curry said the records showed that Mr. Blumenthal had received at least
five deferments. Mr. Blumenthal did not dispute that but said he did
not know how many deferments he had received.
Mr. Blumenthal grew up in New York City, the son of a successful businessman who ran an import-export company.
As a young man, he attended Riverdale Country School in the Bronx and showed great promise, along with an ability to ingratiate himself with powerful people.
In 1963, he entered Harvard College, where he met Daniel Patrick Moynihan, who served on the faculty there and guided Mr. Blumenthal’s senior thesis on the failure of government poverty programs.
He received two student deferments during his undergraduate years there, the records show.
After
graduating from Harvard in 1967, military records show, Mr. Blumenthal
obtained another educational deferment and headed to Britain, where he filed stories for The Washington Post and attended Trinity College, Cambridge, on a graduate fellowship.
But in early 1968, President Lyndon B. Johnson,
under pressure over criticism that wealthier young men were avoiding
the draft through graduate school, abolished nearly all graduate
deferments and sharply increased the number of troops sent to Southeast
Asia.
That
summer, Mr. Blumenthal’s draft classification changed from 2-S, an
educational deferment, to 2-A, an occupational deferment — a rare
exemption from military service for men who contended that it was in the
“national health, safety and interest” for them to remain in their
civilian jobs. At the time, he was working as a special assistant to Ms.
Graham, whose son Donald he had befriended at Harvard. Half a year
later, after the election of President Richard M. Nixon,
Mr. Blumenthal went to work in the White House as a senior staff
assistant to Mr. Moynihan, who was Nixon’s urban affairs adviser.
But
at the end of that year, he became eligible for induction after he drew
a low number in a draft lottery held on Dec. 1, 1969. His number was
152, and people with numbers as high as 195 could be drafted, according
to the Selective Service.
Two
months after the lottery, in February 1970, Mr. Blumenthal obtained a
second occupational deferment, according to the records. The status of
people with occupational deferments, however, was growing shakier, with
the war raging and the Nixon administration increasingly uncomfortable
with them.
In
April 1970, Mr. Blumenthal secured a spot in the Marine Corps Reserve,
which was regarded as a safe harbor for those who did not want to go to
war.
“The Reserves were not being activated for Vietnam and were seen as a shelter for young privileged men,” Mr. Curry said.
But
Mr. Blumenthal’s campaign manager, Mindy Myers, said Monday that any
suggestion that he was ducking the war was unfounded, saying he was
engaged in important work. When he worked for Ms. Graham, for example,
he helped teach children in a public school in the Anacostia section of
Washington, for a project she had started there.
“It’s
flat wrong to imply that Richard Blumenthal’s decisions to take a Fiske
Fellowship, teach inner-city schoolchildren and work in the White House
for Daniel Patrick Moynihan were decisions to avoid service when in
fact, while still eligible for a deferment, he chose to enlist in the
Marine Corps Reserves and completed six months of service at Parris
Island, S.C., and then six years of service in the Reserves.”
Mr.
Blumenthal landed in the Fourth Civil Affairs Group in Washington,
whose members included the well-connected in Washington. At the time,
the unit was not associated with the kind of hardship of traditional
fighting units, according to Marine reports from the period and
interviews with about a half-dozen men who served in the unit during the
Vietnam years.
In
the 1970s, the unit’s members were dispatched to undertake projects
like refurbishing tent decks and showers at a campground for
underprivileged Washington children, as well as collecting and
distributing toys and games as part of regular Toys for Tots drives.
Robert
Cole, a retired lieutenant colonel who did active duty overseas in the
1950s and later joined the unit as a reservist, recalled the young men
who joined the unit in the late 1960s and early 1970s. “These kids we
were getting in — a lot of them were worried about the draft,” he said.
After entering Yale Law School in the fall of 1970, Mr. Blumenthal transferred to a Marine Reserve unit in New Haven,
Company C of the Sixth Motor Transport Battalion, Fourth Marine
Division, which conducted occasional military drills, as well as
participating in Christmas toy drives for children and recycling
programs in neighboring communities, according to the unit’s command
reports from the time.
In 1974, Mr. Blumenthal took a position as a law clerk for Justice Harry C. Blackmun of the United States Supreme Court and transferred back to a Washington unit, where he completed his service.
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