SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Pastimes : Impeachment=" Insult to all Voters" -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: the gator who wrote (2118)2/21/1999 8:31:00 PM
From: JBL  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 2390
 
Gator,

Be my guest and trash this man :

1992 Affidavit by Lt. Col. Holmes: Regarding Bill Clinton's Draft Evasion

Lt. Col. Holmes a highly decorated officer of the United States Army, survivor of the Bataan Death March and 3-1/2 years as a
POW of the Japanese, served 32 years in the army before retiring with 100% disability.

His decorations include the Silver Star, 2 Brone Stars, 2 Legions of Merit, the Army Commendation Medal and many others.
During the Vietnam War, he personally inducted both of his own sons into the service -- one for 3 years as a regular army
enlisted man, and the other as a commissioned officer (after he had completed ROTC training).

Affidavit

There have been many unanswered questions as to the circumstances surrounding Bill Clinton's involvement with the ROTC
department at the University of Arkansas. Prior to this time I have not felt the necessity for discussing the details.

The reason I have not done so before is that my poor physical health (a consequence of participation in the Bataan Death
March and the subsequent 3-1/2 years interment in Japanese POW camps) has precluded me from getting into what I felt was
unnecessary involvement

However, present polls show that there is imminent danger to our country of a draft dodger becoming Commander-in-Chief of
the Armed Forces of the United States. While it is true, as Mr. Clinton has stated, that there were many others (who) avoided
serving their country in the Vietnam War, they are not aspiring to be president of the United States.

The tremendous implications of the possibility of his becoming Commander-in-Chief of the United states Armed Forces
compels me now to comment on the facts concerning Mr. Clinton's evasion of the draft. This account would not have been
imperative had Bill Clinton been completely honest with the American public concerning this matter.

But as Mr. Clinton replied on a news conference this evening (Sept. 5) after being asked another particular about his dodging
the draft, Almost everyone concerned with these incidents are dead. I have no more comments to make. Since I may be the
only person living who can give a firsthand account of what actually transpired, I am obligated by my love for my country and
my sense of duty to divulge what actually happened and make it a matter of record.

Bill Clinton came to see me at my home in 1969 to discuss his desire to enroll in the ROTC program at the University of
Arkansas. We engaged in an extensive, approximately two (2) hour interview

. At no time during this long conversation about his desire to join the program did he inform me of his involvement, participation
and actually organizing protests against the United States involvement in South East Asia. He was shrewed (sic) enough to
realize that had I been aware of his activities, he would not have been accepted into the ROTC program as a potential officer in
the United States Army.

The next day I began to receive telephone calls regarding Bill Clinton's draft status. I was informed by the draft board that it was
of interest to Senator Fullbright's (sic) office that Bill Clinton, a Rhodes Scholar, should be admitted to the ROTC program. I
received several such calls. The general message conveyed by the draft board to me was that Senator Fullbright's (sic) office
was putting pressure on them and that they needed my help. I then made the necessary arrangements to enroll Mr. Clinton into
the ROTC program at the University of Arkansas

. I was not saving him from serving his country, as he erroneously thanked me for in his letter from England (dated Dec. 3,
1969). I was making it possible for a Rhodes Scholar to serve in the military as an officer. In retrospect I see that Mr. Clinton
had no intention of following through with his agreement to join the Army ROTC program at the University of Arkansas or to
attend the University of Arkansas Law School.

I had explained to him the necessity of enrolling at the University of Arkansas as a student in order to be eligible to take the
ROTC program at the University. He never enrolled at the University of Arkansas, but instead enrolled at Yale after attending
Oxford

I believe that he purposely deceived me, using the possibility of joining the ROTC as a ploy to work with the draft board to
delay his induction and get a new draft classification.

The Dec. 3 letter written to me by Mr. Clinton, and subsequently taken from the files by Lt. Col. Clint Jones, my executive
officer, was placed into the ROTC files so that a record would be available in case the applicant should again petition to enter
the ROTC program. The information in that letter alone would have restricted Bill Clinton from ever qualifying to be an officer in
the United States Military

. Even more significant was his lack of veracity in purposefully defrauding the military by deceiving me, both in concealing his
anti-military activities overseas and his counterfeit intentions for later military service.

These actions cause me to question both his patriotism and his integrity. When I consider the calibre, the bravery, and the
patriotism of the fine young soldiers whose deaths I have witnessed, and others whose funerals I have attended.

When I reflect on not only the willingness but eagerness that so many of them displayed in their earnest desire to defend and
serve their country, it is untenable and incomprehensible to me that a man who was not merely unwilling to serve his country, but
actually protested against its military, should ever be in the position of commander-in-chief of our armed forces.

I write this declaration not only for the living and future generations, but for those who fought and died for our country. If space
and time permitted I would include the names of the ones I knew and fought with, and along with them I would mention my
brother Bob, who was killed during World War II and is buried in Cambridge, England (at the age of 23, about the age Bill
Clinton was when he was over in England protesting the war)

I have agonized over whether or not to submit this statement to the American people. But, I realize that even though I served my
country by being in the military over 32 years, and having gone through the ordeal of months of combat under the worst of
conditions followed by years of imprisonment by the Japanese, it is not enough.

I'm writing these comments to let everyone know that I love my country more than I do my own personal security and
well-being. I will go to my grave loving these United States of America and the liberty for which so many men have fought and
died. Because of my poor physical condition this will be my final statement. I will make no further comments to any of the media
regarding this issue.

Eugene J. Holmes Colonel, U.S.A., Ret. September 1992