James_Gritz James_Gritz

James Gritz - Definition and Overview

James "Bo" Gritz (born January 18, 1939 in Enid, Oklahoma) was the most decorated Green Beret officer during the Vietnam War. The Rambo character was based on him. He remained a Green Beret officer until he resigned his commission in 1979.

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Attempts to locate prisoners of war

During the 1980s Gritz undertook a series of private trips into Southeast Asia, purportedly to locate United States prisoners of war which some believed were still being held by the Socialist Republic of Vietnam. Those missions were controversial and failed to locate any live POWs.

Drug trafficing allegations

Gritz became increasingly interested in conspiracy theories starting in 1986 after a trip to Burma to interview drug kingpin Kun Sah regarding possible locations of U.S POWs. Gritz returned from Burma with a videotaped interview of Kun Sah purporting to name several officials in the Reagan administration involved in narcotics trafficking in Southeast Asia. He believed that those same officials were involved in a coverup of missing U.S. POWs.

During this period, Gritz established contacts with the Christic Institute, a leftist group which was then pursuing a lawsuit against the U.S. government over charges of drug trafficking in both Southeast Asia and Central America. He also established increasing contacts with conspiracy theorists of the right.

Conspiracy theorist

In 1989, Gritz established the Center For Action, which was active on a number of issues, mostly pertaining to conspiracy theories. Attempting to build bridges among conspiracy theorists and other activists of both the left and right, in 1990 he held a conference in Las Vegas, Nevada called "Freedom Call '90". Speakers at that conference included October Surprise researcher Barbara Honegger, Bill Davis of the Christic Institute, conspiracy theorist Eustace Mullins, and several others. This newfound interest in conspiracy theories proved to be as controversial as Gritz's earlier missions searching for POWs, especially after allegations surfaced of anti-Semitism directed at one of the speakers, Eustace Mullins.

Anti-war Activities

During the 1991 Persian Gulf War, Gritz was an outspoken opponent of that war, and linked it to a conspiracy theory alleging plans to implement a one-world government, known as the "new world order". He appeared on Pacifica Radio stations in California as a guest several times, and for a short time was in demand as a speaker to left-wing and anti-war audiences. However, during this period he also became closely associated with the Christian Patriot movement on the right, and spoke at conferences sponsored by Christian Identity pastor Pete Peters. When these associations became known to those on the left, especially after the publication of a report by the Los Angeles-based group People Against Racist Terror calling Gritz a "front man for fascism", left-wing audiences lost interest in Gritz, and the Christic Institute and Pacifica Radio cut off any further association.

Author

Gritz is the author of two books. The first, A Nation Betrayed, was published in 1989 and contained Gritz's allegations of drug trafficking and a POW coverup, based on the Kun Sah interview. The second, Called To Serve, was published in 1992 and expanded on the previous book to cover a wide range of conspiracy theories, including the assassination of John F. Kennedy and allegations of a new world order.

Presidential Candidate

In 1992, Gritz ran for President of the United States on the Populist Party ticket. He received 106,152 votes nationwide, or 0.1% of the popular vote. In two states he had a respectable showing for a third party candidate: Utah, where he received 3.84% of the vote, and Idaho, where he received 2.13% of the vote. The relatively high support in those two states can probably be attributed to his having converted to Mormonism. His running on the Populist Party ticket created further controversy, because of that party's past ties to David Duke and Willis Carto. Also during 1992, Gritz attracted national attention as the mediator during the government standoff with Randy Weaver at Ruby Ridge, Idaho.

Controversial Activities

In 1993, Gritz changed his emphasis again and began offering a course called SPIKE (Specially Prepared Individuals for Key Events), which taught paramilitary and survivalist skills. He also established a community in Idaho called Almost Heaven. Both of these proved to be even more controversial than his past activities, attracting charges from anti-racist watchdog groups that he was trying to build a community of Christian Identity believers and train them in paramilitary skills for a showdown with the government.

Subsequent Activities

The Mormon church responded to his newfound activities by expelling Gritz and several of his supporters. He eventually cut his ties to the Almost Heaven community and returned to Nevada. In 1998, Gritz began an unfruitful search for abortion clinic bombing suspect Eric Rudolph. This alienated many of his supporters on the far right. Also in 1998, Gritz made a failed suicide attempt while facing a divorce. He continues today with a website but his influence within the Christian Patriot movement and among conspiracy theorists has greatly diminished, the POW issue is no longer considered credible, while any interest the left had in him was gone by 1992, leaving him largely without an audience.

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