http://snipurl.com/8q3k

President Bush acknowledged for the first time on Thursday that he had
miscalculated post-war conditions in Iraq, The New York Times reported...


http://www.nytimes.com/2004/08/28/politics/28rumsfeld.html

In his first comments on the two major investigative reports issued this
week at the Pentagon, Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld on Thursday
mischaracterized one of their central findings about the American
military's treatment of Iraqi prisoners by saying there was no evidence
that prisoners had been abused during interrogations...

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Still Unreported: The Pay-off in Bush Air Guard Fix
Saturday, August 28, 2004
by Greg Palast

In 1968, former Congressman George Herbert Walker Bush of Texas, fresh
from voting to send other men’s sons to Vietnam, enlisted his own son in a
very special affirmative action program, the ‘champagne’ unit of the Texas
Air National Guard.  There, Top Gun fighter pilot George Dubya was
assigned the dangerous job of protecting Houston from Vietcong air attack.

This week, former Lt. Governor Ben Barnes of Texas 'fessed up to pulling
the strings to keep Little George out of the jungle. "I got a young man
named George W. Bush into the Texas Air Guard - and I'm ashamed."


THE PAY-OFF

That’s far from the end of the story. In 1994, George W. Bush was elected
governor of Texas by a whisker. By that time, Barnes had left office to
become a big time corporate lobbyist. To an influence peddler like Barnes,
having damning information on a sitting governor is worth its weight in
gold – or, more precisely, there’s a value in keeping the info secret.

Barnes appears to have made lucrative use of his knowledge of our
President’s slithering out of the draft as a lever to protect a
multi-billion dollar contract for a client.  That's the information in a
confidential letter buried deep in the files of the US Justice Department
that fell into my hands at BBC television.

Here's what happened. Just after Bush's election, Barnes' client GTech
Corp., due to allegations of corruption, was about to lose its license to
print money: its contract to run the Texas state lottery. Barnes, says the
Justice Department document, made a call to the newly elected governor's
office and saved GTech's state contract.

The letter said, "Governor Bush ... made a deal with Ben Barnes not to
rebid [the GTech lottery contract] because Barnes could confirm that Bush
had lied during the '94 campaign."

In that close race, Bush denied the fix was in to keep him out of 'Nam,
and the US media stopped asking questions. What did the victorious
Governor Bush's office do for Barnes? According to the tipster, "Barnes
agreed never to confirm the story [of the draft dodging] and the governor
talked to the chair of the lottery two days later and she then agreed to
support letting GTech keep the contract without a bid."

And so it came to pass that the governor's commission reversed itself and
gave GTech the billion dollar deal without a bid.

The happy client paid Barnes, the keeper of Governor Bush’s secret, a fee
of over $23 million. Barnes, not surprisingly, denies that Bush took care
of his client in return for Barnes’ silence.  However, confronted with the
evidence, the former Lt. Governor now admits to helping the young George
stay out of Vietnam.

Take a look at the letter yourself - with information we confirmed with
other sources - at
http://www.gregpalast.com/ulf/documents/draftdodgeblanked.jpg

Frankly, I don’t care if President Bush cowered and ran from Vietnam.  I
sure as hell didn’t volunteer … but then, my daddy didn’t send someone
else in my place.  And I don’t march around aircraft carriers with
parachute clips around my gonads talking about war and sacrifice.

More important, I haven't made any pay-offs to silence those who could
change my image from war hero to war zero.


"Time Warner Won't Let Us Air This"

By the way: I first reported this story in 1999, including the evidence of
payback, in The Observer of London. US media closed its eyes. Then I put
the story on British television last year in the one-hour report, "Bush
Family Fortunes." American networks turned down BBC's offer to run it in
the USA. "Wonderful film," one executive told me, "but Time Warner is not
going to let us put this on the air." However, US networks will take cash
for advertisements calling Kerry a Vietnam coward.

The good news is, until Patriot Act 3 kicks in, they can't stop us selling
the film to you directly. The updated version of "Bush Family Fortunes,"
with the full story you still can't see on your boob tube, will be
released next month in DVD. See a preview at
http://www.gregpalast.com/bff-dvd.htm


For more on our president’s war years and the $23 million payment, read
this excerpt from the New York Times bestseller, The Best Democracy Money
Can Buy. http://www.gregpalast.com/detail.cfm?artid=233&row=1.

Subscribe to Greg Palast's reports at http://www.GregPalast.com

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