-Caveat Lector-   <A HREF="http://www.ctrl.org/">
</A> -Cui Bono?-

Keith,

Regardless of your 'dirt' on Ted Sampley, I think this is of interest and
agrees with the film I viewed as well as the CNN commentator's analysis,
and his assertion that Bush's father had admonished him to bail out rather
than risk getting killed or seriously injured, or something to that effect. But
you probably have some dirt of him, or CNN. That's fine. I just question what
is dirt and what is obfuscation and an attempt to redirect criticism. Bush
and Co. (incl. CIA and associated Companies) are VERY POWERFUL.

Regards,
Steve

By Ted Sampley
March/April/May 1997

Former President George Bush, who bailed out of a crippled Navy Avenger
bomber 53 years ago, jumped again in March of this year. His World War II
jump is historic. It made Bush the only president to ever bail out of an
airplane and the only president whose crew mates were sent careening
into the ocean because their pilot had abandoned the aircraft.

Accompanied by eight Golden Knights from the Army Precision
Parachuting Team and a civilian from the U.S. Parachute Association,
Bush's second jump was less eventful and historic. After leaping from a
civilian twin-engine airplane at 12,500 feet with two jump masters holding
onto his harness, Bush fell until he deployed his parachute at 4,500 feet.

A half a dozen people--including his wife Barbara--rushed to help cushion
his landing. Medical emergency personnel were also standing by on the
ground. Bush landed about 40 yards from his target at the Army's Yuma
Proving Ground, the sprawling base where the Golden Knights train eight
weeks a year.

When the 72-year-old former chief executive was asked how he felt, he
gave a thumbs up. "It was wonderful. I'm a new man--and I go home
exhilarated," he said. "There's a lot of things about my previous incarnation
that I do not miss, but I do miss the military," Bush later told base
employees.

Prior to the jump, Jim McGrath, Bush's assistant, had said "The reasons
behind this [the jump] are strictly personal, . . . It has to do with World War
II."

Those cryptic remarks give rise to speculation that Bush may have been,
as The London Times put it, "Trying to exorcise demons from his earlier
jump, the circumstances of which flared up into controversy during Bush's
presidential campaign.

In a 1987 account of the World War II incident, which differed from his
earlier versions, Bush told about the incident on television. He claimed that
during a bombing run against a Japanese radio installation on ChiChi
Island, his plane was hit and engulfed in flames and that he ordered his
crew to bail out. He said one did, but his parachute failed. Bush claimed
the other crewman did not answer the intercom, so he assumed that the
crewman was critically wounded or dead.

Bush, who was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross for action prior to
the crash, said that even though the plane was in flames, he managed to fly
it on to the target and drop his bombs before he bailed out. Bush admitted,
however, that in his rush to get out of the Avenger, he pulled the parachute
rip cord too quickly and was gashed on his forehead when he hit the tail of
the plane.

Bush's Betrayal

Chester Mierzejewski, an old war buddy of Bush, who said he was angered
by the "false assertions" made by candidate Bush when describing the
incident, gave a different account.

After 44 years of silence, Mierzejewski, who also was awarded the
Distinguished Flying Cross, told the New York Post that Bush had
abandoned his crew to death when there was another choice.

He said he was approximately 100 feet in front of Bush's plane as the turret
gunner for Squadron Commander Douglas Melvin's plane, "so close he
could see in the cockpit" of Bush's bomber. Mierzejewski's close wartime
buddy was one of the two crew members in Bush's plane.

According to Mierzejewski, the squadron was in a tight-formation bombing
raid against a Japanese radio installation on an island reported to be
heavily fortified. He saw "a puff of smoke" come from Bush's plane which
quickly disappeared and was certain only one man parachuted from the
plane and that it was Bush, the pilot.

Mierzejewski said the Avenger torpedo bomber was engineered so that it
could successfully crash land on water and that Bush doomed his own crew
by bailing out and leaving the bomber out of control.

Other World War II veterans also expressed concern about Bush
parachuting out of the aircraft. "He had a moral obligation to put that plane
in the water in an emergency landing," Robert Flood, a former B-17
bombardier told the press. "He violated the primary rule for a captain of a
multi-crew aircraft: The pilot never leaves the airplane with anybody in it."

Pete Brandon, a Marine Corps Avenger pilot, who also served in the South
Pacific, said an Avenger pilot had two choices: Set the plane down in the
water or hold it steady until the two crewmen could prepare to jump.

"In an Avenger, only the pilot wore a parachute," Brandon said. "The two
crewmen wore harnesses. If the order came to bail out, they had to take
chest parachutes from a shelf and strap them on - and bail out. The
Avenger was very unstable. The pilot had to be at the controls the whole
time or it would go right over on its back."

Steve Hart, then Vice President Press Secretary, described Mierzejewski's
account as absurd. Hart said, "The Vice President has told us time and
time again what happened that day. To suggest that the account is
inaccurate is absurd."

What is absurd is the conflicting or missing reports of exactly what
happened to Bush's two crew members. According to the Post, the
intelligence report on the loss of Bush's plane in September, 1944 notes
that it had become "standard doctrine" for VT 51, Bush's bomber
squadron, "to make bombing runs on targets near water so as to retire over
the water. This puts pilot and crew in position for water rescue in event of
forced landing . . . "

The same document reports, without attribution, that "smoke and flame"
engulfed Bush's engine, and that "Bush and one other person were seen to
bail out. The chute of the other person who bailed out did not open."

The report was signed by Melvin and an intelligence officer, Lt. Martin E.
Kilpatrick. Contrary to normal military procedure, the report was not dated
and Navy archives were unable to supply a subsequently completed report.

Gunner Lawrence Mueller, who lives in Milwaukee, flew on the ChiChi Jima
mission. When asked who had the best view, he replied unhesitatingly:
"The turret gunner in Melvin's plane."

Mueller's recollections, jogged by a log book that he kept, support
Mierzejewski's account. And it was noted that Bush's plane was the only
one from the squadron that did not return. Mueller told the Post, "No
parachute was sighted except Bush's when the plane went down." He also
said no one mentioned a fire engulfing Bush's plane or he would have
noted it in the log book.

The Finback, the sub which picked up Bush from his raft in the water, made
no report of a fire on Bush's plane, but did comment on his crew: "Bush
stated that he failed to see his crew's parachutes and believed they had
jumped when the plane was still over ChiChi Jima, or they had gone down
with the plane."

About six hours later, the Finback picked up another pilot, James W.
Beckman, from the USS Enterprise, who stated that it was known that only
one man had parachuted from Bush's plane. "This decided us to
discontinue any further search of that area . . ."

Although the heart of Bush's story about the incident remains the same,
Mierzejewski is adamant Bush's account is not the truth and blames Bush
for the abandonment and deaths of both men.

"I think he could have saved those lives, if they were alive. I don't know that
they were, but at least they had a chance if he had attempted a water
landing," Mierzejewski said.

Bush is a Company Man

Bush was also the first president who had ever served as director of "the
company," better known as the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA). He is,
and has always been, a "company man," a fraternity member of that
shadowy world of informants, spies, counter spies and secret power. "The
company" is notorious for plotting against presidents, defying federal court
orders and gun and drug running, while secretly pursuing its own political
and military agendas.

Nation magazine, in a 1988 article, quoted an unidentified source "with
close connections to the intelligence community," as saying Bush "started
working for the agency in 1960 or 61 using his oil business as a cover for
clandestine activities."

The magazine also made public a Nov. 29, 1963 FBI memo from then
director J. Edgar Hoover to the State Department on the assassination of
President John F. Kennedy, which connected Bush to the CIA.

In the 1963 memo, discovered in an FBI memorandum in 1988, Hoover
said the bureau had briefed "Mr. George Bush of the Central Intelligence
Agency" on the reaction of Cuban exiles in Miami to the assassination.

The article quoted the unidentified intelligence source as saying of Bush: "I
know he was involved in the Caribbean. I know he was involved in the
suppression of things after the Kennedy assassination."

As CIA director under President Gerald Ford, Bush fought hard on Capitol
Hill to mend the CIA's wounded reputation after the U.S. Senate's 1976
Church Committee disclosures of CIA abuses of its secret powers.

When Bush took charge of the CIA, in 1976, he led the agency in its
struggle against legislative proposals designed to safeguard democracy
by giving Congress more real oversight in an effort to prevent the CIA from
further abusing its power.

Bush and Noriega

There is also the sticky subject of Bush's longtime affiliation with the
incarcerated former Panamanian dictator Gen. Manuel Antonio Noriega.

The connection between the two men goes back to 1976 when each
directed his country's intelligence service and Noriega was on the payroll of
the CIA. The two had lunch together in Washington in late 1976 and met
again in Panama in December 1983.

Former CIA Director Stansfield Turner told UPI in 1988 that he had
removed Noriega from the agency payroll in 1977 because he was an
"unscrupulous character," but Bush later reinstated him.

Turner said that after Bush became vice president in 1981, he "met with
Noriega and put him back on the payroll" as an intelligence source.

As early as 1972, questions were raised within the U.S. government about
Gen. Noriega's complicity in the drug trade. The Noriega drug link was first
made public in a June 12, 1986 story in the New York Times. U.S.
intelligence agencies had evidence, the paper reported, that the general
was "extensively involved in drug trafficking, money laundering, selling arms
to left-wing guerrillas and passing U.S. intelligence methods and sources to
the communist government in Cuba."

On February 4, 1988, a grand jury in Miami and Tampa, Fla., returned
indictments against Noriega which led to newly elected President Bush
ordering a December 19th, 1989 military invasion of Panama by U.S.
troops seeking to arrest his old comrade.

Noriega finally surrendered to U.S. Drug Enforcement agents and was
flown to Miami where he was jailed and later convicted for drug running.
The U.S. military suffered 25 killed as a result of the invasion.

"Shut Up and Sit Down"

For 12 years, the "read my lips" president had promised (eight years as
vice president and four as president) that the POW/MIA issue was "the
highest national priority" and that there would be no dealings with Vietnam
until the POW/MIA issue was properly resolved.

At the 1992 annual convention of The National League of POW/MIA
Families, the questions POW/MIA families and veterans had harbored for
years about the honesty of Bush's promises exploded into a nationally
reported incident.

Bush, who was the guest speaker at that convention, became the subject of
a demonstration when the elderly mother of a MIA stood up and yelled at
Bush, "No more lies! Tell us the truth!"

Dozens more of the family members quickly joined in the protest, many
holding up pictures of their missing brothers, fathers and sons and
chanting, "No more lies!" and "Release all the files!" Bush snapped at the
jeering MIA relatives, telling them to "shut up and sit down."

The protest and uproar continued for over five minutes until the crowd finally
let Bush speak again. Bush told them, abandoning his original text, "To
suggest that the commander-in-chief that led this country into its most
successful recent effort [the Gulf War] would condone for one single day the
personal knowledge of a person held against his will . . . is simply, totally
unfair."

Later that year, despite his promise to "never" abandon the POW/MIA
issue, Bush bailed out and initiated the beginning process of normalizing
trade relations with communist Vietnam.

Another Bush Betrayal

Bush angered the MIA families again in April 1995, when McGrath made
public a planned September 1995 trip to Vietnam by Bush. McGrath
explained to outraged MIA families that Bush and his wife, Barbara, had
been invited to Hanoi by Citibank and that Bush "doesn't really have a
political agenda in going there."

The MIA families disagreed. They said Citibank was paying Bush hundreds
of thousands of dollars to make the trip and that the real agenda was to
speed up normalized relations between Vietnam and the United States so
that U.S. business interests could more easily take advantage of Vietnam's
slave labor market.

Accompanied by Vietnam veterans and former South Vietnamese political
prisoners who had been held in concentration camps for years by the
communist Vietnamese, the MIA family members staged a protest outside
of a building in Houston in which Bush has an office.

Despite the protest, Bush went to Vietnam and embraced its communist
leaders. For money, he shook the blood stained hands of some of the
same communist leaders who had murdered U.S. POWs and orchestrated
hundreds, if not thousands, of terrorist bomb attacks against the civilian
population of South Vietnam during the war.

Bush's trip to Vietnam was a betrayal and a slap in the face to the veterans
who fought against the communists and the activists working to establish
human rights and democracy in Vietnam.

As for the suggestion that "the commander-in-chief" that led this country in
the Gulf War "would condone for one single day the personal knowledge of
a person held against his will," there were two men who knew Bush very
well and could have spoken about his loyalty to the men and women in
uniform.

Unfortunately, very few people have ever heard of them and neither
Radioman 2nd Class John Delaney or Gunner Lt. Junior Grade William
White are able to speak. They are on the bottom of the Pacific off the coast
of a tiny island where their pilot, Navy Lt. George Bush, sent them
when he made his first parachute jump.


"Reptilians make good barbeque."

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