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IN THE MILITARY
Navy denies
flag allegations
Says Clinton won't change
regulations to placate communists


By Geoff Metcalf
© 2000 WorldNetDaily.com

A spokesman for the U.S. Navy has officially denied allegations, raised in 
a WorldNetDaily report, that President Clinton will alter long-standing 
Navy regulations to allow the U.S. flag to be flown in a subordinate 
position to that of communist Vietnam.
WorldNetDaily reported Wednesday that, according to highly placed and 
credible Navy sources, President Clinton plans to visit the People's 
Republic of China and the People's Republic of Vietnam on a U.S. Navy 
destroyer before the end of his term. The Naval officers, who spoke on 
condition of anonymity, said the president also plans to alter 
long-standing naval regulations and tradition in order to allow the 
American flag to be flown below that of Vietnam when the vessel sails into 
the communist nation's territorial waters.
Although U.S. Navy regulations and traditions dating back to before the 
Revolutionary War prescribe that no country's flag be displayed in a 
position superior to that of the U.S. flag, Vietnam reportedly has a rule 
demanding that the Vietnamese flag shall always fly in a superior position 
to any other country's flag. Thus the alleged planned pandering on the part 
of the president not to offend the sensibilities of Vietnam's totalitarien 
government.
WND contacted several government agencies in an effort to get official 
response to two basic questions:
·       Does President Clinton intend to visit China and Vietnam before 
leaving office?
·       Has the secretary of the Navy been instructed to amend Navy 
regulations in order to permit the flag of Vietnam to fly in a superior 
position to the U.S. flag?
In response, Alan P. Goldstein, assistant chief of information for 
technology integration in the Navy's Office of Information in the Pentagon 
answered WND's questions in writing:
"The Navy is not aware of any planned trips by the President to China or 
Vietnam aboard a Navy ship. I have also read the article in the Internet 
publication and can assure you that there are no plans to change the 
regulations governing the flying of the U.S. flag on U.S. Navy warships. 
Federal statutes determine Navy Regulations on the flying of the national 
ensign on Navy vessels, and are not subject to alteration by the Department 
of the Navy."
Highly placed Navy sources believe this action on the president's part 
would further devastate already tenuous Navy morale. The results of a 
record-breaking WorldNetDaily reader poll (over 99 percent of 15,000+ 
respondents said they would be either "outraged" or "ashamed" if "the U.S. 
Navy dips the American flag to the flags of Vietnam and China") indicate 
those expressed concerns may be an understatement.
Goldstein included excerpts from Navy regulations that apply:
Navy Regulations, 1990, Chapter 12
Section 1277, Paragraph 1: "When the national ensigns of two or more 
nations are required to be displayed from the same masthead, the United 
States national ensign, if required, shall be displayed to starboard of all 
others. The national ensigns of other nations shall be displayed, starboard 
to port, in alphabetical order of the names of the nations in the English 
language; except that the ensign of a foreign nation within whose waters 
the ship is located, if displayed, shall be to starboard of other foreign 
ensigns.
Paragraph 3:
"In rendering honors, the national ensign of one nation shall not be 
displayed above that of another nation at the same masthead."
Section 1279, Paragraph 3:
"When dressing or full-dressing ship in honor of a foreign nation, the 
national ensign of that nation shall replace the United States national 
ensign at the main, or at the masthead in the case of a single-masted ship; 
provided that when a ship is full-dressed or dressed in honor of more than 
one nation, the ensign of each nation shall be displayed at the main, or at 
the masthead in a single-masted ship."
Paragraph 6:
"Ships not under way shall be dressed or full-dressed from 0800 until 
sunset. Ships under way shall not be dressed or full-dressed."
Sources have emphasized that the alleged plans were reported in high-level 
briefings, and that although concerns for career advancement and military 
politics have intimidated them, they were anxious that the story be 
reported in the hope "disinfectant sunshine" would kill the plans.
Related story:"American flag dips to Vietnam, China?"



Geoff Metcalf is a staff reporter for WorldNetDaily.

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