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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: SecularBull who wrote (77867)11/16/2000 12:38:41 PM
From: Mao II  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 769669
 
How about this, lead from a lengthy story in the Boston Globe 5/24/00:
"After George W. Bush became governor in 1995, the Houston Air National Guard unit he had
served with during the Vietnam War years honored him for his work, noting that he flew an
F-102 fighter-interceptor until his discharge in October 1973.

And Bush himself, in his 1999 autobiography, ''A Charge to Keep,'' recounts the thrills of
his pilot training, which he completed in June 1970. ''I continued flying with my unit for
the next several years,'' the governor wrote.

But both accounts are contradicted by copies of Bush's military records, obtained by the
Globe. In his final 18 months of military service in 1972 and 1973, Bush did not fly at all.
And for much of that time, Bush was all but unaccounted for: For a full year, there is no
record that he showed up for the periodic drills required of part-time guardsmen. Bush, who
declined to be interviewed on the issue, said through a spokesman that he has ''some
recollection'' of attending drills that year, but maybe not
consistently.

From May to November 1972, Bush was in Alabama working in a US Senate campaign, and was
required to attend drills at an Air National Guard unit in Montgomery. But there is no
evidence in his record that he did so.

And William Turnipseed, the retired general who commanded the Alabama unit back then, said
in an interview last week that Bush never appeared for duty there. After the election, Bush
returned to Houston. But seven months later, in May 1973, his two superior officers at
Ellington Air Force Base could not perform his annual evaluation covering the year from May
1, 1972 to April 30, 1973 because, they wrote, ''Lt. Bush has not been observed at this unit
during the period of this report.''