Twitchy Presents: Bill Clinton’s 'Rules for Politics' - The X Extended Edition
Absolutely VILE Lefties Continue to Smear Pete Hegseth As a White Supremacist Because...
SHE FOUGHT: Listen to the Absolutely Heartbreaking Opening Statements in the Laken Riley...
The Party's OVER! Politico Says Lobbyists 'Used to Getting Their Way' Fear RFK...
We Feel SO MUCH Safer Knowing the FBI Is Investigating Offensive Text Messages...
Republicans Seek Removal of Security Clearances for Intel Lapdogs Who Lied About Hunter...
Democrats: So Left-Wing They Fly in Circles
Donald Trump Names Karoline Leavitt White House Press Secretary
SAD COMMIE NOISES: Chicago City Council UNANIMOUSLY Rejects Mayor Brandon Johnson's $300M...
She's SUPER SERIOUS, Y'all! AOC Warns RFK Jr. Running HHS Will Take Us...
I'd Like to Teach the World to CRINGE! New AI Coca-Cola Ad Has...
CRUEL Britannia! Care Worker Jailed NINE MONTHS for 'Crime' of Filming Riot Aftermath
Trump Just Crossed an Election Threshold That's a 'First Ever for a Republican...
X Marks the Ad Spot! Big Win for Elon Musk and Free Speech...
'Move the F**K On': Justine Bateman Goes OFF on Scolds Lecturing Her About...

Howard Dean curses out President Trump, notes his brother's death in Laos in 1974

In response to The Atlantic article, former Vermont Gov. Howard Dean tweeted at President Trump, “F*ck you” and noted that his brother was captured and executed in Laos in 1974:

Advertisement

We assumed it was this alleged anecdote that triggered Dean:

But. . .

For those of you who don’t know this story, Charlie was captured in Laos and executed in 1974 but he wasn’t serving in the U.S. military at the time. He was in Laos on vacation.

From CNN in 2003 when his remains were identified and sent back to the U.S.:

The candidate’s younger brother, Charles Dean, and Australian Neil Sharman were killed in Laos in September 1974, according to a statement from the Joint POW/MIA Accounting Command.

The two were civilians and not associated with Vietnam War-era combat operations going on in the region at the time, the statement said. The remains were to be identified at a lab in Hawaii.

And:

In an article on the Sharman family’s reaction to the recovery, Australia’s Herald Sun newspaper quoted Sharman’s brother Ian as saying the two men had been handcuffed and executed and their bodies thrown into a bomb crater.

The newspaper said the men had been arrested as suspected spies as they traveled along the Mekong River in Laos.

Advertisement

Charlie and Sharman were reportedly taken off a ferry “in a dispute over a camera” and held for three months before being killed. From the Baltimore Sun:

But McGovern’s sound defeat by President Richard M. Nixon disillusioned and angered Charles Dean, who decided to head off on a backpacking trip to Asia.

At the time he was seized by Communist Laotian forces, Charles Dean was 24 years old and had been backpacking through Australia and Asia for about a year. During a trip down the Mekong River, he and Sharman were taken off a ferry and held by Communist forces in a dispute over a camera he was carrying, according to Howard Dean.

He was held in a local police camp for at least three months, and managed to smuggle out a photo of himself, which eventually reached the U.S. Embassy in the Laotian capital.

This piece in the Boston Globe speculated that Charlie “saw too much” during his trip up the river:

Charlie Dean had worked for McGovern, an antiwar candidate who surpassed even his brother Howard in ardor, and Charlie Dean would have been intensely aware of what had taken place in Laos. By 1974 the CIA’s secret war was no longer a secret, and the Hmong tribesmen, whom the CIA had armed and sent into battle against the Pathet Lao and North Vietnamese, were on the run.

1974 was not the height of the Indochina war, as some press accounts have said. It was an in-between time, after Henry Kissinger’s “peace is at hand” in 1973 and before the final communist takeover in 1975. In 1974 there was a pause in the war and much confusion as a coalition of communists, neutralists, and rightists formed a government. We who were there at that time did not think it overly foolish to try to move about the country. But foreign forces were supposed to leave the country, which the North Vietnamese had not, and it might have been that Charlie Dean saw too much to be let go.

Advertisement

Now, we get that Howard hates Trump, but Dean’s tweet certainly makes it sound like Charlie was killed fighting for the U.S. in the war and that’s not true.

***

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Twitchy Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement