John F. Kerry's political ambitions were molded early, and he found a role model in his family's friend, the other JFK, quite early as well.
After finishing his undergrad degree Kerry initially trying to get a deferment to study abroad. But Vietnam had heated up, and deferments were harder to get. With no deferment and a draft number likely to put him in Army fatigues, he volunteered for the Navy, where his role model had served. After a desultory year on a ship, he realized he had no "Profile in Courage" to capitalize on, so he volunteered for an assignment closer to the action.
He volunteered for Swifts because (a) that was as close as the Vietnam War had to JFK's PT-109 and (b) unlike the River Patrol Force and the Mobile Riverine Force, the Swifts were coastal patrol vessels, so they weren't considered as risky. He got his orders in the Summer of 1968 and went to Coronado to train, arriving at a Coastal Division in late November 1968.
Unfortunately for him, on November 5, 1968, VADM Elmo Zumwalt, who had taken command of Naval Forces Vietnam in the Fall, issued OPLAN 111-69. That OPLAN set in motion the "South-East Asian Lake, Ocean, River, and Delta Strategy" or SEALORDS. One of Admiral Zumwalt's changes under SEALORDS was that Swifts were no longer coastal patrols, but were assigned to the inland waterways alongside the River Patrol Force and the Mobile Riverine Force.
So our intrepid JFK wannabe suddenly finds himself searching sampans upriver rather than cruising around China Beach. Three Purple Hearts come in rapid succession, for minor wounds which cause him no lost duty. One was described as a little scratch (LCDR Grant Hibbard, Kerry's commander to whom he reported his wound, stated
later "I've had thorns from a rose that were worse."). In March 1969, after four months on two different boats, he's on his way back to the world.
A cushy gig as an Admiral's aide gives him time to evaluate what direction to take his future political ambitions.
Soon he is off active duty, joining the anti-war movement , and calling his fellow servicemembers war criminals and his government's policies deliberate in that regard. When the anti-war movement starts to get out of hand and contemplate political assassinations, he steps back and seeks to preserve his political viability. He leaves VVAW, but doesn't tell anyone about the threats against political leaders and later claims to not recall being at the meeting where the assassinations were discussed.
On reaching political office, he earns one of the most liberal voting records possible. On defense issues, he can be relied on to oppose almost any program. The issue that really motivates him in the 1980s is banning testing of anti-satellite weapons. He also supports a nuclear freeze, unilateral cuts of US chemical weapons stockpiles, an end to SDI and cuts of cruise missiles, ICBMs and other strategic programs. Apparently, the only WMDs he ever got exercised about were American ones.
Of course, if you think America is the kind of place that purposefully sends its soldiers off to act "in a fashion reminiscent of Genghis Khan", naturally you would consider the US to be the rogue state in need of reining in by the international community.
In the 1990s, the Clinton Administration cuts in defense aren't deep enough, and Sen. Kerry drafts a bill to cut more programs across the board, including $1.5 billion from the intelligence budget. He later claims he was trying to press for efficiency and better resource allocation (“What we were trying to do, some of us, was push the funding not into technical means. There was a fascination always with satellites, listening devices, not with human intelligence. I’ve always been somebody who has felt that we needed human intelligence, that’s our failure.… I wanted to reduce spending from national technical means and change the culture of our intelligence gathering.") But the actual text of his proposal says only "[r]educe the Intelligence budget by $300 million in each of fiscal years 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, and 2000." Nothing about pushing funding in any direction; just straight cuts.
Senator McCain's defense of Kerry, that GOP charges that his votes against various defense programs are spurious because many Senators end up opposing omnibus bills laden with pork even while supporting specific programs within the bill, rings hollow. S. 1290, the proposal that sought the $1.5 billion intelligence budget cuts and other caps on defense and related spending, was authored by Kerry. It wasn't a take-it-or-leave-it bill Kerry found himself presented with, where conscience dictated that he vote against the pork even if that meant voting against all those wonderful weapons he really supported. This bill reflected Kerry's views and Kerry's priorities. A list of all the caps and cuts Kerry wanted can be seen in my post
here.
The medal flap - demostrating his political extremism and opportunism, his inability to keep his stories straight and his sheer arrogance when confronted with his character flaws - is a metaphor for his entire public life.