To: TimF who wrote (184499 ) 3/11/2004 1:32:46 AM From: tejek Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1575352 "The records indicate that, despite his move to Alabama, Bush met his obligation to the Guard in the 1972-73 year. At that time, Guardsmen were awarded points based on the days they reported for duty each year. They were given 15 points just for being in the Guard, and were then required to accumulate a total of 50 points to satisfy the annual requirement. In his first four years of service, Bush piled up lots of points; he earned 253 points in his first year, 340 in his second, 137 in his third, and 112 in his fourth. For the year from May 1972 to May 1973, records show Bush earned 56 points, a much smaller total, but more than the minimum requirement (his service was measured on a May-to-May basis because he first joined the Guard in that month in 1968). Bush then racked up another 56 points in June and July of 1973, which met the minimum requirement for the 1973-74 year, which was Bush's last year of service. Together, the record "clearly shows that First Lieutenant George W. Bush has satisfactory years for both '72-'73 and '73-'74, which proves that he completed his military obligation in a satisfactory manner," says retired Lt. Col. Albert Lloyd, a Guard personnel officer who reviewed the records at the request of the White House."66.216.126.164 ; It sounds like a lot of double talk to me. From the NRO article:"Those records have not quieted the most determined of the president's enemies — no one who watches the Democratic opposition really believed they would — but they do make a strong case that Bush fulfilled his duties and met the requirements for Air National Guard officers during his service from 1968 to 1973." Huh? A strong case? Why is it not a definitive case? Why is the case not strong enough to stop the questions? Shouldn't it have been a definitive case for someone who was planning to be in public office?"The records show that Bush kept up his rigorous schedule of flying through the spring of 1972: He was credited for duty on ten days in March of that year, and seven days in April. Then, as Bush began his fifth year of service in the Guard, he appears to have stepped back dramatically. The records indicate that he received no credit in May, June, July, August, and September 1972. In October, he was credited with two days, and in November he was credited with four. There were no days in December, and then six in January 1973. Then there were no days in February and March." There are gaps in his service that he claims were made up in Alabama........but no one from the Alabama unit remembers him showing up at meetings. This is at the heart of the AWOL issue and the NRO article tries to combat the claim with a fairly lame response:"What seems most likely is that Bush was indeed at Dannelly, but there was not very much for a non-flying pilot to do. Flying fighter jets involves constant practice and training; Bush had to know when he left Texas that he would no longer be able to engage in either one very often, which meant that he would essentially leave flying, at least for some substantial period of time. In addition, the 187th could not accommodate another pilot, at least regularly. "He was not going to fly," says Turnipseed. "We didn't have enough airplanes or sorties to handle our own pilots, so we wouldn't have done it for some guy passing through."" So he couldn't fly in Alabama. Where was he? He supposedly spent a year in the Alabama unit. Why doesn't anyone remember him? The NRO article speculates as to why and its weak speculation at that. And you wonder why many are not buying it?On the other hand, showing up for drills was still meeting one's responsibility to the Guard. And, as 1973 went along, the evidence suggests that Bush stepped up his work to make up for the time he had missed earlier. In April of that year, he received credit for two days; in May, he received credit for 14 days; in June, five days; and in July, 19 days. "Stepped up his work" . Such BS....this is the military. They make it sound like Bush was doing the Air Guard a favor.He was given an honorable discharge after serving five years, four months, and five days of his original six-year commitment. I wonder how many other guys got out 8 months early out of the military so they could go to grad school? Sad.........even if most of this is not true, do you really think this is the military record of a leader? This issue keeps dying because the WH makes a feeble attempt to respond and then ignores the questions that ensue. It will be back in a few months. ted