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-Caveat Lector-

Bush fell short on duty at Guard

Records show pledges unmet

By The Globe Spotlight Team

Boston Globe
September 8, 2004
http://www.boston.com/news/nation/articles/2004/09/08/bush_fell_short_on_duty_at_guard/

This article was reported by the Globe Spotlight Team --
reporters Stephen Kurkjian, Francie Latour, Sacha
Pfeiffer, and Michael Rezendes, and editor Walter V.
Robinson. It was written by Robinson.

In February, when the White House made public hundreds
of pages of President Bush's military records, White
House officials repeatedly insisted that the records
prove that Bush fulfilled his military commitment in the
Texas Air National Guard during the Vietnam War.

But Bush fell well short of meeting his military
obligation, a Globe reexamination of the records shows:
Twice during his Guard service -- first when he joined
in May 1968, and again before he transferred out of his
unit in mid-1973 to attend Harvard Business School --
Bush signed documents pledging to meet training
commitments or face a punitive call-up to active duty.

He didn't meet the commitments, or face the punishment,
the records show. The 1973 document has been overlooked
in news media accounts. The 1968 document has received
scant notice.

On July 30, 1973, shortly before he moved from Houston
to Cambridge, Bush signed a document that declared, "It
is my responsibility to locate and be assigned to
another Reserve forces unit or mobilization augmentation
position. If I fail to do so, I am subject to
involuntary order to active duty for up to 24 months. .
. " Under Guard regulations, Bush had 60 days to locate
a new unit.

But Bush never signed up with a Boston-area unit. In
1999, Bush spokesman Dan Bartlett told the Washington
Post that Bush finished his six-year commitment at a
Boston area Air Force Reserve unit after he left
Houston. Not so, Bartlett now concedes. "I must have
misspoke," Bartlett, who is now the White House
communications director, said in a recent interview.

And early in his Guard service, on May 27, 1968, Bush
signed a "statement of understanding" pledging to
achieve "satisfactory participation" that included
attendance at 24 days of annual weekend duty -- usually
involving two weekend days each month -- and 15 days of
annual active duty. "I understand that I may be ordered
to active duty for a period not to exceed 24 months for
unsatisfactory participation," the statement reads.

Yet Bush, a fighter-interceptor pilot, performed no
service for one six-month period in 1972 and for another
period of almost three months in 1973, the records show.

The reexamination of Bush's records by the Globe, along
with interviews with military specialists who have
reviewed regulations from that era, show that Bush's
attendance at required training drills was so irregular
that his superiors could have disciplined him or ordered
him to active duty in 1972, 1973, or 1974. But they did
neither. In fact, Bush's unit certified in late 1973
that his service had been "satisfactory" -- just four
months after Bush's commanding officer wrote that Bush
had not been seen at his unit for the previous 12
months.

Bartlett, in a statement to the Globe last night,
sidestepped questions about Bush's record. In the
statement, Bartlett asserted again that Bush would not
have been honorably discharged if he had not "met all
his requirements." In a follow-up e-mail, Bartlett
declared: "And if he hadn't met his requirements you
point to, they would have called him up for active duty
for up to two years."

That assertion by the White House spokesman infuriates
retired Army Colonel Gerald A. Lechliter, one of a
number of retired military officers who have studied
Bush's records and old National Guard regulations, and
reached different conclusions.

"He broke his contract with the United States government
-- without any adverse consequences. And the Texas Air
National Guard was complicit in allowing this to
happen," Lechliter said in an interview yesterday. "He
was a pilot. It cost the government a million dollars to
train him to fly. So he should have been held to an even
higher standard."

Even retired Lieutenant Colonel Albert C. Lloyd Jr., a
former Texas Air National Guard personnel chief who
vouched for Bush at the White House's request in
February, agreed that Bush walked away from his
obligation to join a reserve unit in the Boston area
when he moved to Cambridge in September 1973. By not
joining a unit in Massachusetts, Lloyd said in an
interview last month, Bush "took a chance that he could
be called up for active duty. But the war was winding
down, and he probably knew that the Air Force was not
enforcing the penalty."

But Lloyd said that singling out Bush for criticism is
unfair. "There were hundreds of guys like him who did
the same thing," he said.

Lawrence J. Korb, an assistant secretary of defense for
manpower and reserve affairs in the Reagan
administration, said after studying many of the
documents that it is clear to him that Bush "gamed the
system." And he agreed with Lloyd that Bush was not
alone in doing so. "If I cheat on my income tax and
don't get caught, I'm still cheating on my income tax,"
Korb said.

After his own review, Korb said Bush could have been
ordered to active duty for missing more than 10 percent
of his required drills in any given year. Bush,
according to the records, fell shy of that obligation in
two successive fiscal years.

Korb said Bush also made a commitment to complete his
six-year obligation when he moved to Cambridge, a
transfer the Guard often allowed to accommodate
Guardsmen who had to move elsewhere. "He had a
responsibility to find a unit in Boston and attend
drills," said Korb, who is now affiliated with a liberal
Washington think tank. "I see no evidence or indication
in the documents that he was given permission to forgo
training before the end of his obligation. If he signed
that document, he should have fulfilled his obligation."

The documents Bush signed only add to evidence that the
future president -- then the son of Houston's
congressman -- received favorable treatment when he
joined the Guard after graduating from Yale in 1968. Ben
Barnes, who was speaker of the Texas House of
Representatives in 1968, said in a deposition in 2000
that he placed a call to get young Bush a coveted slot
in the Guard at the request of a Bush family friend.

Bush was given an automatic commission as a second
lieutenant, and dispatched to flight school in Georgia
for 13 months. In June 1970, after five additional
months of specialized training in F-102 fighter-
interceptor, Bush began what should have been a four-
year assignment with the 111th Fighter-Interceptor
Squadron.

In May 1972, Bush was given permission to move to
Alabama temporarily to work on a US Senate campaign,
with the provision that he do equivalent training with a
unit in Montgomery. But Bush's service records do not
show him logging any service in Alabama until October of
that year.

And even that service is in doubt. Since the Globe first
reported Bush's spotty attendance record in May 2000, no
one has come forward with any credible recollection of
having witnessed Bush performing guard service in
Alabama or after he returned to Houston in 1973. While
Bush was in Alabama, he was removed from flight status
for failing to take his annual flight physical in July
1972. On May 1, 1973, Bush's superior officers wrote
that they could not complete his annual performance
review because he had not been observed at the Houston
base during the prior 12 months.

Although the records of Bush's service in 1973 are
contradictory, some of them suggest that he did a flurry
of drills in 1973 in Houston -- a weekend in April and
then 38 days of training crammed into May, June, and
July. But Lechliter, the retired colonel, concluded
after reviewing National Guard regulations that Bush
should not have received credit -- or pay -- for many of
those days either. The regulations, Lechliter and others
said, required that any scheduled drills that Bush
missed be made up either within 15 days before or 30
days after the date of the drill.

Lechliter said the records push him to conclude that
Bush had little interest in fulfilling his obligation,
and his superiors preferred to look the other way.
Others agree. "It appears that no one wanted to hold him
accountable," said retired Major General Paul A. Weaver
Jr., who retired in 2002 as the Pentagon's director of
the Air National Guard.

(c) Copyright 2004 Globe Newspaper Company.
_______________________________________________________

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DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
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CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are unwelcomed. Substance—not soap-boxing—please!   These are
sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'—with its many half-truths, mis-
directions and outright frauds—is used politically by different groups with
major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
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