-Caveat Lector-

<A
HREF="http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/politics/campaigns/wh2000/stories/b
ush072899.htm">Washingtonpost.com: At Height of Vietnam, Bush
</A>
-----
From: Daniel Hopsicker <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

the reporter of this pose story, george lardner jr., is a well-known CIA
asset.
He was, for example,  alone with david ferrie  until 4 AM on the night he
died.
I'd have said "died mysteriously," but that would be gilding the lilly.

Om
K
-----
 At Height of Vietnam, Bush Picks Guard
George W. Bush, right, during his Harvard years. (Harvard Yearbook)
By George Lardner Jr. and Lois Romano
Washington Post Staff Writers
Wednesday, July 28, 1999; Page A1


Two weeks before he was to graduate from Yale, George Walker Bush
stepped into the offices of the Texas Air National Guard at Ellington
Field outside Houston and announced that he wanted to sign up for pilot
training.
It was May 27, 1968, at the height of the Vietnam War. Bush was 12 days
away from losing his student deferment from the draft at a time when
Americans were dying in combat at the rate of 350 a week. The unit Bush
wanted to join offered him the chance to fulfill his military commitment
at a base in Texas. It was seen as an escape route from Vietnam by many
men his age, and usually had a long waiting list.

Bush had scored only 25 percent on a "pilot aptitude" test, the lowest
acceptable grade. But his father was then a congressman from Houston,
and the commanders of the Texas Guard clearly had an appreciation of
politics.

Bush was sworn in as an airman the same day he applied. His commander,
Col. Walter B. "Buck" Staudt, was apparently so pleased to have a VIP's
son in his unit that he later staged a special ceremony so he could have
his picture taken administering the oath, instead of the captain who
actually had sworn Bush in. Later, when Bush was commissioned a second
lieutenant by another subordinate, Staudt again staged a special
ceremony for the cameras, this time with Bush's father the congressman �
a supporter of the Vietnam War � standing proudly in the background.

Bush's father went on to run for senator in 1970 against Lloyd Bentsen
Jr. � a prominent Texas Democrat whose own son had been placed in the
same Texas Guard unit by the same Col. Staudt around the same time as
Bush. On Election Day, before the polls closed, Guard commanders
nominated both George W. Bush and Lloyd Bentsen III for promotion to
first lieutenant � even as the elder Bentsen was defeating the elder
Bush.

Three decades later, as Bush begins a campaign for the presidency that
has invited new scrutiny of his life, Staudt and other Guard commanders
insist no favoritism was shown to him. But others active in Texas
politics in the 1960s say the Texas National Guard was open to
string-pulling by the well-connected, and there are charges that the
then-speaker of the Texas legislature helped George W. gain admittance.

Vietnam was clearly a crucible for Bush, as it was for Bill Clinton, Al
Gore and most other men who left college in the late 1960s. Bush
maintains that he joined the National Guard not to avoid service in
Vietnam but because he wanted to be a fighter pilot. Rather than be
drafted and serve in the infantry � an assignment Bush has acknowledged
he did not want � he agreed to spend almost two years in flight training
and another four years in part-time service.

That commitment, in turn, was to frame a period of aimlessness and drift
that Bush now calls his "nomadic" years: As the war and the youth
culture of the 1960s rocked America, Bush partied and dated with gusto,
dabbled half-heartedly in business and politics, and flew jets part
time. Apart from his Guard commitment, he was unemployed for stretches
that lasted for months. His last job before he returned to the East to
attend Harvard Business School, as a social worker helping poor
children, was arranged by his father after George W. drunkenly
confronted him one night and challenged him to a fight.

Even after returning to the elite classrooms of the Ivy League, Bush
seemed adrift compared with his classmates. But Harvard offered the
beginnings of a self-discipline � his mother called it "structure" �
that was to propel him back to Texas with an ambition to build his own
future.

As he drifted, Bush struggled with his own feelings about Vietnam and
the turmoil he saw around him in America. Over time, he now says, he
became disillusioned with the war, even as he believed that he should
support the government that waged it. "In a sense he was trying to
remain a centrist in a time when there wasn't anything left at the
center," said Craig Stapleton, who is married to Bush's cousin and has
been a confidant of Bush's for 25 years. "All of the sudden everybody
moves and you're still standing in the center. He didn't dodge the
military. But he didn't volunteer to go to Vietnam and get killed,
either."

Grabbing a Slot in the National Guard


------------------------------------------------------------------------
Bush learned that there were pilot openings in the Texas Air National
Guard during Christmas vacation of his senior year at Yale, when he
called Staudt, the commander of the 147th Fighter Group, and, he said,
"found out what it took to apply."
"He recalls hearing from friends while he was home over the Christmas
break that the Guard was looking for pilots and that Colonel Staudt was
the person to contact," said his communications director, Karen Hughes.
She said Bush did not recall who those friends were.

Retired Col. Rufus G. Martin, then personnel officer in charge of the
147th Fighter Group, said the unit was short of its authorized strength,
but still had a long waiting list, because of the difficulty getting
slots in basic training for recruits at Lackland Air Force Base in San
Antonio. Martin said four openings for pilots were available in the
147th in 1968, and that Bush got the last one.

Staudt, the colonel who twice had himself photographed with Bush, said
his status as a congressman's son "didn't cut any ice." But others say
that it was not uncommon for well-connected Texans to obtain special
consideration for Air Guard slots. In addition to Bush and Bentsen, many
socially or politically prominent young men were admitted to the Air
Guard, according to former officials; they included the son of then-Sen.
John Tower and at least seven members of the Dallas Cowboys.

"The well-to-do kids had enough sense to get on the waiting list,"
Martin said. "Some [applicants] thought they could just walk in the door
and sign up."

One address for those seeking help getting in was Ben Barnes, a Democrat
who was then the speaker of the Texas House and a protege of Gov. John
B. Connally. A top aide to Barnes, Nick Kralj, simultaneously served as
aide to the head of the Texas Air National Guard, the late Brig. Gen.
James M. Rose.

An anonymous letter addressed to a U.S. attorney in Texas, produced in a
discovery proceeding for an ongoing lawsuit, charged that Barnes
assisted Bush in getting into the Guard. The suit was brought by the
former director of the Texas Lottery Commission, who believes Barnes,
now a lobbyist, may have played a role in his dismissal.

In a deposition for the suit, Kralj confirmed that he would get calls
from Barnes or his chief of staff, Robert Spelling, "saying so-and-so is
interested in getting in the Guard." Kralj said he would then forward
the names to Gen. Rose.

In an interview, Barnes also acknowledged that he sometimes received
requests for help in obtaining Guard slots. He said he never received
such a call from then-Rep. Bush or anyone in the Bush family.

However, when asked if an intermediary or friend of the Bush family had
ever asked him to intercede on George W.'s behalf, Barnes declined to
comment. Kralj, in his deposition, said he could not recall any of the
names he gave to Gen. Rose.

Hughes, Bush's spokeswoman, said: "The governor has no knowledge of
anyone making inquiries on his behalf."

Martin and others said Bush was quickly accepted because he was willing
to sign up for the intensive training and six years of service required
of fighter pilots. "It was very difficult to find someone who would
commit himself to the rigorous training that was required," says Martin.


Bush, said Staudt, "said he wanted to fly just like his daddy."

Bush's father had volunteered for service in World War II at the age of
18 and was shot down while flying combat missions in the Pacific
theater. By enlisting in the Guard, his son not only avoided Vietnam but
was able to spend much of his time on active duty in his home town of
Houston, flying F-102 fighter interceptors out of Ellington Air Force
Base.

In discussing his own decision, he has always said his main
consideration was that he wanted to be a pilot, and the National Guard
gave him a chance to do that. In 1989 he tried to describe his own
thought process to a Texas interviewer. "I'm saying to myself, 'What do
I want to do?' I think I don't want to be an infantry guy as a private
in Vietnam. What I do decide to want to do is learn to fly."

Asked in a recent interview whether he was avoiding the draft, Bush
said, "No, I was becoming a pilot."

Four months before enlisting, Bush reported at Westover Air Force Base
in Massachusetts to take the Air Force Officers Qualification Test.
While scoring 25 percent for pilot aptitude � "about as low as you could
get and be accepted," according to Martin � and 50 percent for navigator
aptitude in his initial testing, he scored 95 percent on questions
designed to reflect "officer quality," compared with a current-day
average of 88 percent.

Among the questions Bush had to answer on his application forms was
whether he wanted to go overseas. Bush checked the box that said: "do
not volunteer."

Bush said in an interview that he did not recall checking the box. Two
weeks later, his office provided a statement from a former, state-level
Air Guard personnel officer, asserting that since Bush "was applying for
a specific position with the 147th Fighter Group, it would have been
inappropriate for him to have volunteered for an overseas assignment and
he probably was so advised by the military personnel clerk assisting him
in completing the form."

During a second interview, Bush himself raised the issue.

"Had my unit been called up, I'd have gone . . . to Vietnam," Bush said.
"I was prepared to go."

But there was no chance Bush's unit would be ordered overseas. Bush says
that toward the end of his training in 1970, he tried to volunteer for
overseas duty, asking a commander to put his name on the list for a
"Palace Alert" program, which dispatched qualified F-102 pilots in the
Guard to the Europe and the Far East, occasionally to Vietnam, on three-
to six-month assignments.

He was turned down on the spot. "I did [ask] � and I was told, 'You're
not going,'�" Bush said.

Only pilots with extensive flying time � at the outset, 1,000 hours were
required � were sent overseas under the voluntary program. The Air
Force, moreover, was retiring the aging F-102s and had ordered all
overseas F-102 units closed down as of June 30, 1970.

After basic training at Lackland and his commissioning as a second
lieutenant in 1968, Bush got what amounted to a two-month-plus vacation
that enabled him to head to Florida to work for a Republican candidate
for the U.S. Senate, Edward J. Gurney. Put on inactive duty status, Bush
arrived in early September and stayed through Election Day, riding the
press plane, handing out releases, and making sure traveling reporters
woke up in time. He occasionally returned to Houston for weekend Guard
duty.

In late November, Bush was sent to Moody Air Force Base outside
Valdosta, Ga., for year-long undergraduate flight school. Bush impressed
fellow trainees with the way he learned to handle a plane, but he became
a celebrity for something else. In the middle of his training, President
Richard M. Nixon sent a plane down to fetch him for an introductory date
with his older daughter Tricia, according to fellow trainee Joseph A.
Chaney. It did not lead to another date, but the story lives on. So does
memory of the graduation ceremony: Rep. Bush gave the commencement
speech.

In December 1969, George W. returned to Houston to hone his skills and
eventually fly solo on the all-weather F-102, firing its weapons and
conducting intercept missions against supersonic targets. He learned
with a verve that impressed his superiors, becoming the the first
hometown graduate of the 147th's newly established Combat Crew Training
School. The group's public relations office celebrated his solo flight
in March 1970 with a press release that began:

"George Walker Bush is one member of the younger generation who doesn't
get his kicks from pot or hashish or speed. . . . As far as kicks are
concerned, Lt. Bush gets his from the roaring afterburner of the F-102."


Brig. Gen. John Scribner, director of the Texas Military Forces Museum
in Austin, said it was only natural that the Guard would have publicized
Bush's service with special ceremonies and press releases. "That's how
they do things, play it up big, especially since he was a congressman's
son. That was important to the Guard," he said.

No Career in Mind, No Rush to Settle Down


------------------------------------------------------------------------
Bush graduated from Combat Crew Training School on June 23, 1970, having
fulfilled his two years of active duty. But he still flew the F-102
Delta Daggers a few times a month; his unit kept two of the fighters,
fully armed, on round-the-clock alert and needed the pilots to man them.
With no career in mind, Bush was still "looking," as his mother said �
looking for work and looking for his road. He seemed to be in no rush to
settle down, which his mother said was fine by his parents.
Barbara Bush said she recalled that her father-in-law, Prescott Bush,
came to Yale in the late 1940s and told her husband that "�'you don't
have to make up your mind now what you're going to be when you grow
up.'�" She added: "I think we told our children that. . . . I'm sure
George did."

George W. promptly took a one-bedroom apartment at one of the most
attractive complexes in Houston at the time, the Chateaux Dijon. A
popular spot for singles, it offered fancy street lamps and striped
awnings and six pools filled with ambitious secretaries, students and
young businessmen. Bush relished his bachelor life there. He played
hard, plunging into all-day water volleyball games, but left frequently
for 24-hour flight duty in the alert shack at Ellington Field.

"He did some night-flying as I recall," said Don Ensenat, a Yale
classmate who lived with him in Houston. "No alcohol 24 hours before.
They had to keep planes on alert all the time." Bush had to be ready to
scramble in his F-102 after any flying objects that Air Force radars
couldn't figure out.

Coincidentally, Bush's future wife, Laura Welch, a public school
librarian, lived at the Chateaux Dijon too, but they didn't meet. Bush
dated other women frequently, but none steadily.

"He had a couple of girls that were more than one date, but nothing that
looked like a serious romance," Ensenat said. "Dates and the opposite
sex were always high on the agenda. He was always enjoyable to be
around. But we didn't do anything anybody else in their twenties didn't
do."

Ensenat said he never saw Bush use illegal drugs.

That fall, as his father raced Bentsen for the Senate seat, both Bush
and Ensenat, who had already entered law school at the University of
Houston, applied for admission to the University of Texas law school.
Both were rejected, though Ensenat later became a lawyer. Then, after
losing to Bentsen, Bush's father was named ambassador to the United
Nations by President Nixon. The Bushes moved to New York, leaving their
eldest son to rely on his family's old school and corporate ties to find
a job.

Bush called Robert H. Gow, a Yale man who had roomed with the senior
Bush's cousin Ray in college and who had been an executive at the senior
Bush's Zapata Off-Shore Co. In 1969, Gow left Zapata and started
Stratford of Texas, a Houston-based agricultural company with diverse
interests: from cattle to chickens to indoor, non-blooming tropical
plants.

"We weren't looking for someone, but I thought this would be a talented
guy we should hire, and he was available," Gow said. In early 1971, Gow
gave Bush a job as a management trainee. He was required to wear a coat
and tie and dispatched around the country and even to Central America,
looking for plant nurseries that Stratford might acquire. The newly
buttoned-down businessman also moved into a garage apartment that he
shared with Ensenat off Houston's North Boulevard, an old 1920s
neighborhood close to downtown.

"We traveled to all kinds of peculiar places, like Apopka, Florida,
which was named the foliage capital of the world," said Peter C.
Knudtzon, another Zapata alumnus who was Stratford's executive vice
president and Bush's immediate boss.

Once or twice a month, Bush would announce that he had flight duty and
off he would go, sometimes taking his F-102 from Houston to Orlando and
back. "It was really quite amazing," Knudtzon said. "Here was this young
guy making acquisitions of tropical plants and then up and leaving to
fly fighter planes."

Bush learned the ropes quickly, putting in long hours, and fitting in
smoothly � but this wasn't the place for the impatient young man. He
would later refer to his time at Stratford as a dull coat-and-tie job.
Within weeks he was talking to Gow and Knudtzon about his future,
questioning, searching � but never coming to any firm conclusion. His
bosses recall today that he was weighing whether he should pursue public
service or stick it out in the business arena to build some security.

Bush stayed at Stratford only about nine months, and by fall 1971 he was
flirting � albeit very briefly � with running for the state legislature.
The Houston Post reported the possibility in a story that misnamed him
"George Bush Jr."

In the late spring of 1972, Bush was again looking, when he joined
another political campaign. This time he helped longtime family friend
Jimmy Allison work in Alabama on the U.S. Senate campaign of Republican
Winton M. "Red" Blount against longtime Democratic incumbent John J.
Sparkman. Bush moved to Alabama and worked until November as political
director for Blount, who lost by a wide margin.

By the end of 1972, Bush's father was mulling over a new job offer from
Nixon � to be chairman of the Republican National Committee. With his
parents back in Washington, Bush went to stay with them for the holidays
and was involved in one of the most notorious incidents of his "nomadic"
years. He took his 16-year-old brother Marvin out drinking, ran over a
neighbor's garbage cans on the way home, and when his father confronted
him, challenged him to go "mano a mano" outside.

There was no fight, and Bush was apparently able to mollify his father
with the news that he had been accepted for the following fall at
Harvard Business School. But with nothing to do until then, his father
decided it was time to give this restless young man some broader
exposure to real life.

Shortly after Christmas, Bush began working as a counselor with black
youngsters in Houston's Third Ward in a program called PULL
(Professionals United for Leadership) for Youth. The brainchild of the
late John L. White, a former professional football player and civic
leader, it was set up for kids up to 17 in a warehouse on McGowen Street
and it offered sports, crafts, field trips and big-name mentors from the
athletic, entertainment and business worlds.

Bush and his brother Marvin, who tagged along for the summer weeks, were
the only whites in the place. "They stood out like a sore thumb," said
Muriel Simmons Henderson, who was one of PULL's senior counselors. "John
White was a good friend of their father. He told us that the father
wanted George W. to see the other side of life. He asked John if he
would put him in there."

Dressed in khaki, with his pants torn at the knees, Bush managed to fit
right in. He "came early and stayed late," in the words of one former
employee, playing basketball and wrestling with the youngsters, taking
them on field trips to juvenile prisons so they could see that side of
life and resolve not to end up there themselves. He also taught them not
to run when a police cruiser came by.

"He was a super, super guy," said "Big Cat" Ernie Ladd, a 6-foot-9,
320-pound pro football great and PULL luminary who stopped by
frequently. "If he was a stinker, I'd say he was a stinker. But
everybody loved him so much. He had a way with people. . . . They didn't
want him to leave." One little boy in particular, a
6-or-maybe-7-year-old named Jimmy Dean, made a special connection with
Bush. "He was an adorable kid," said Edgar Arnold, PULL's operating
director. "Everybody liked him, but he bypassed all these famous
athletes, all these giants, and picked out George Bush, and vice versa."
The two became inseparable. If George was a little late, Jimmy would
wait for him on the stoop. "At business meetings," Arnold said, "that
kid would be on top of George, head on his shoulders." When Jimmy showed
up shoeless, George bought him shoes.

Bush says he heard many years later that little Jimmy Dean was killed by
gunfire as a teenager. "He was like my adopted little brother."

In keeping with family tradition, Bush did not boast of his pedigree, or
even mention it, to others at PULL. "I didn't know he was of a silver
spoon nature," Henderson said.

His car, like his clothes, carried no hint of it. "He had a bomb of a
car," she remembered. "It was the pits . . . always full of stuff,
clothes, papers. No one could ride in it with him. . . . He never put
himself in the position of looking down his nose at someone, like, 'I've
got all this money, my father is George Bush.' He never talked about his
father. He was so down to earth. . . . You could not help liking him. He
was always fun."

Back to New England and Another School


------------------------------------------------------------------------
To start at Harvard, Bush needed early release from Guard duty in Texas,
and he got it easily, about eight months short of a full six years. A
Bush spokesman, Dan Bartlett, said early departures were quite common
and, in Bush's case, appropriate because his unit had phased out the
F-102s. Bush was transferred to a reserve unit in Boston for the rest of
his time, Bartlett noted.
Arriving in Cambridge in September 1973 in his spray-painted Cutlass and
scruffy clothes, Bush was not at all what his classmates expected when
the word spread that he was indeed the son of the Republican National
Committee chairman.

"One of my first recollections of him," says classmate Marty Kahn, "was
sitting in class and hearing the unmistakable sound of someone spitting
tobacco. I turned around and there was George sitting in the back of the
room in his [National Guard] bomber jacket spitting in a cup. You have
to remember this was Harvard Business School. You just didn't see that
kind of thing."

Classmates vividly remember Bush as an iconoclast and a character,
someone who didn't fit the tailored mold of business students in the
nation's premier graduate program. Many of the students who arrived that
fall, like Bush, had been out of college and working a few years. But
unlike Bush, a good number were returning to school with a road map of
where they were heading: Wall Street.

Bush's entry into the program came five years after his graduation from
Yale, and after a series of dead-end or unfulfilling jobs. He was 27 and
clearly had not found his niche yet. "A lot of people went to Harvard
Business School . . . for a job and all that. I went there to actually
learn. And did," says Bush.

Indeed, many of those closest to him, including his mother, believe
Harvard's rigorous academic demands brought his life and potential
career into focus. "Harvard was a great turning point for him. I don't
think he'd say that as much as I would," said Barbara Bush. "I think he
learned what is that word? Structure."

Bush shrugged off the trappings of Harvard and avoided the official
clubs that would showcase him in the yearbook and look good on his
re�sume�. Instead, he showed up for class looking like he had just
rolled out of bed in the morning, often sat in the back of the room
chewing gum or dipping snuff and made it clear to everyone he had no
interest in Wall Street.

He was one of the few people who posed for his yearbook mug shot in a
sports shirt, a wrinkled one at that. The other prominent picture of him
in the book showed him sitting in the back row of class with longish
hair blowing a huge bubble.

"This was HBS and people were fooling around with the accouterments of
money and power," recalled April Foley, who dated Bush for a brief
period and has remained friends with him. "While they were drinking
Chivas Regal, he was drinking Wild Turkey. They were smoking Benson and
Hedges and he's dipping Copenhagen, and while they were going to the
opera he was listen to Johnny Rodriguez over and over and over and
over."

What Bush wanted to get out of Harvard were some practical business
fundamentals. He wanted to do something entrepreneurial, he told his
pals, but he wasn't sure what. He mused about running for office but
told friends he had to make some money first. Of this everyone was
certain: George W. Bush would never end up on the East Coast. He was
going back to Texas.

Staff researchers Nathan Abse, Madonna Lebling and Mary Lou White
contributed to this report.

� 1999 The Washington Post Company
=====

 In His Own Words: 'I, Like Others, Became Disillusioned'
The Washington Post
Wednesday, July 28, 1999;

The following are excerpts of interviews with George W. Bush conducted
by Washington Post reporters. The interviews took place May 11 and June
7, 1999, in Austin.

What'd you think about the war?

Well, initially I supported the government. My first reaction was, I'll
support my government.

Did you differentiate between supporting the government and supporting
the war?

I didn't differentiate at first. I then, as you know, went in the
service. And over time, though, I, like many others, became
disillusioned. I must confess I was not disillusioned right off the bat.


Did you defend the war? People recall that you argued both sides.

I don't remember debates. I don't think we spent a lot of time debating
it. Maybe we did, but I don't remember.

We understand your father felt the war should be supported and that he
was put off by the tactics of the anti-war protesters.

I probably felt the same way at the time. I do remember, I think it was
the Cambodian bombing, where I began to become � it became apparent over
time that decisions were made not in the best interest of our military.
It became evident that this was a political war, not a military war.

There was a certain predictability, and so the military mission was not
paramount. It was a political mission. And there was no clarity of
purpose, and it took a while for that to sink in my way of thinking.

Did you ever consider enlisting in active duty?

Yeah, I did, but I got into Guard as a pilot. I got a pilot slot.

Why did you do the Guard instead of active duty?

I was guaranteed a pilot slot. I found out, as I'm sure you've
researched all this out, they were looking for pilots. I think there
were pilot slots available. I was the third slot in the Texas Guard.

Had that not worked out, no telling where I would have been. I would
have ended up in the military somewhere.

You meant to join the Guard when you took the pilot's qualifying test?

Or the regular Air Force. I was just looking for options. I didn't have
a strategy. I knew I was going in the military. I wasn't sure what
branch I was going into. I took the test with an eye obviously on the
Guard slot, but had that not worked out, I wouldn't have gotten into
pilot training.

I remember going to the Air Force recruiting station and getting the Air
Force recruiting material to be a pilot. Then I went home, and I learned
there was a pilot slot available.

Were you avoiding the draft?

No, I was becoming a pilot.

You wanted to serve?

Yes I did.

But when you were asked, "Do you want to go overseas?" you said no.

I didn't know that. But I actually tried to go on a Palace Alert
program.

That was later.

It was. After I became a pilot.

[The] Palace Alert program was being phased out.

Not really. a couple of my buddies got to go. I couldn't go until
actually I'd gotten my [interruption]

I was curious about the sequence. You got out of combat school on June
23, 1970. Palace Alert programs were all closed down overseas as of June
30. So could you have gone even if you signed up for it?

I guess not if that's the case, but I remember going to see [his
supervisor] to try to get signed up for it. You just ask the commander
to put you in. He said, "You can't go because you're too low on the
totem pole." I'm not trying to make this thing any grander than it is.

� 1999 The Washington Post Company
-----
Aloha, He'Ping,
Om, Shalom, Salaam.
Em Hotep, Peace Be,
Omnia Bona Bonis,
All My Relations.
Adieu, Adios, Aloha.
Amen.
Roads End
Kris

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