-Caveat Lector-

[Sen. Bob Kerrey pushed this news story on Hardball tonight.]


http://www.globe.com/dailyglobe2/305/nation/Questions_remain_on_Bush_s_service_as_Guard_pilotP.shtml

Boston Globe
10/31/2000

Questions remain on Bush's service as Guard pilot

By Walter V. Robinson, Globe Staff

''The responsibility to show up and do your job.''

- Texas Governor George W. Bush, reflecting on the values he
learned as a Texas Air National Guard pilot during the Vietnam
War era, in a 1998 interview with the National Guard Review.

For Vice President Al Gore, the character issue is like chewing
gum stuck to the sole of his shoe: Hardly a day passes without
Republicans challenging Gore's character, especially his storied
tendency to embellish facts.

But Democrats are crying foul, saying that Bush has overstated
his own record and with far less political consequence.
Belatedly, they are calling attention to misleading claims Bush
and his campaign have made about his Vietnam-era service as a
fighter pilot with the Texas Air National Guard, and to documents
that contradict Bush's insistence that he attended required
drills in Alabama and Texas in 1972 and 1973.

Five months after the Globe first reported those discrepancies,
Bush's biography on his presidential campaign Web site remains
unchanged, stating that he served as a pilot in the Texas Guard
from 1968 to 1973.

In fact, Bush only flew with the 111th Fighter-Interceptor
Squadron at Ellington Field in Houston from June 1970 until April
1972. That month he ceased flying altogether, two years before
his military commitment ended, an unusual step that has left some
veteran fighter pilots puzzled.

In Alabama, a group of Vietnam veterans recently offered a $1,000
reward for anyone who can verify Bush's claim that he performed
service at a Montgomery air guard unit in 1972, when Bush was
temporarily in Alabama working on a political campaign.

So far, no one has come forward. The reward is now $3,500.

What's more, a Bush campaign spokesman acknowledged last week
that he knows of no witnesses who can attest to Bush's attendance
at drills after he returned to Houston in late 1972 and before
his early release from the Guard in September 1973.

There is strong evidence that Bush performed no military service,
as was required, when he moved from Houston to Alabama to work on
a US Senate campaign from May to November 1972. There are no
records of any service and the commanding officer of the unit
Bush was assigned to said he never saw him.

During Bush's Alabama sojourn, he was suspended from flight duty
for not taking his annual flight physical. The Bush campaign's
initial explanation for the lapse, it now admits, was wrong.

Dan Bartlett, a Bush campaign spokesman, pointed to incomplete
records - one a torn page without Bush's name or any discernible
dates - as evidence that he did enough drills in Houston in the
closing months of his service to satisfy military obligations.

Major Thomas A. Deall, a spokesman for the Air Reserve Personnel
Center in Denver, said last week that officials there now believe
that after looking at Bush's records, he met minimum drill
requirements before his discharge.

Still, as the Globe reported in May, two documents and the
recollections of officers who said they believe that Bush did not
return to his Houston base after leaving for Alabama raise
questions about whether Bush performed any duty between April
1972 and September 1973, the month Bush entered Harvard Business
School.

The result is that Bush's discharge was ''honorable.'' But, for
understandable reasons, it is not a period of Bush's life he has
called attention to.

Other current and retired Air Force officers said Bush's military
records are much like those of countless other Guardsmen at the
time, when the federal government was reducing its force as the
Vietnam War came to a close: guardsmen who lost interest in their
units, and commanders who found it easier to muster them out than
hold them to a commitment many made to avoid Vietnam.

Jesse Brown, the former Veterans Affairs secretary who was
seriously wounded while serving as a Marine in Vietnam, said he
is irritated that Bush's military service lapses have not become
part of the campaign debate.

''It goes right to the heart of the character issue,'' Brown
said. ''If you served on active duty during that time, you knew
that people went into the Guard and Reserves so they wouldn't
have to put their asses on the line. But once they made that
decision, they should honor the obligation, do their duty and do
it well. Bush did not.''

Retorted Bartlett, Bush's spokesman: ''Jesse Brown served
honorably, but you mean to tell me he has no problem with Bill
Clinton's avoidance of military service?''

If Bush's lackadaisical approach to his six-year obligation has
attracted scant attention, it could be for that reason: He is
running to succeed a president who actively and successfully
sought to avoid military service.

Even so, enough unanswered questions remain about Bush's service
in the Texas Air National Guard to draw the interest of
presidential historians if the Texas governor is elected to the
White House next week. The evidence is strong that political
influence got Bush into the Guard, when the alternative was the
draft or an enlistment. The mystery is whether political clout
accounts for Bush's abbreviated career as a Guard pilot.

Reviewing the outstanding questions:

How long did Bush fly with the 111th?

In his autobiography, ''A Charge to Keep,'' Bush said he flew
with his unit for ''several years'' after finishing flight
training in June 1970. His campaign biography states that he flew
with the unit until he won release from the service in September
1973, nine months early, for graduate school.

Neither assertion is true. Bush flew with the 111th for 22
months, until April 1972, and never flew again. Bartlett said
last week that he could say unequivocally that Bush was not
grounded by his superiors. Asked that question last July,
Bartlett, after conferring with Bush, was more equivocal: He said
Bush could not recall ever being grounded.

What happened to 1st Lieutenant Bush after April 1972?

Bush and his campaign have said that he performed ''alternative''
duty at the 187th Tactical Reconnaissance Squadron in Montgomery
from May to November 1972, while he was working on a Senate race
in Alabama. Such duty was normal for Guardsmen who were
temporarily away from their home units.

But Bush's own records contradict that assertion.

First, with the approval of his superiors, Bush in May 1972
sought a permanent transfer to a postal unit in Alabama that
didn't require weekend drills or active duty. Guard headquarters
overruled that decision. Bush did not do any drills from May
through September 1972.

In July 1972, Bush failed to take his annual flight physical. In
August, National Guard headquarters suspended him from flying
status. Last year, the Bush campaign erroneously claimed that
Bush did not take the physical because his personal physician was
in Houston. In fact, only Air Force flight surgeons can give
annual flight physicals to pilots. Bush could have taken the exam
at Maxwell Air Force Base in Montgomery.

In September 1972, Bush won approval to do temporary
''alternative'' training at the 187th Squadron in Montgomery. He
was cleared to attend weekend drills in October and November. But
two of the 187th's officers said Bush never appeared. ''I'm
dead-certain he didn't show up,'' said the unit's commander,
retired Brigadeer General William Turnipseed.

Bush, who has declined requests for an interview on the issue,
has said he did appear, though he does not recall what he did.
There are no records in his file to show that he did any training
in Alabama.

What happened when Bush returned to Houston in late 1972?

Bush and his spokesman have said that Bush did not fly again
because he planned to go to graduate school. Also, they say that
as the unit was upgrading to a newer fighter, the F-101, it made
little sense for the Guard to retrain him for that jet. In fact,
the unit flew the F-102 for a year after Bush left the service.

Bush has said he performed administrative duties with the 111th's
parent unit, the 147th Fighter Group, though Bartlett has said
Bush cannot recall what those duties were.

There is other evidence that Bush's attendance was so
inconsistent that his commanders did not know he had returned to
the Houston base.

On May 2, 1972, Bush's two immediate superiors at the 111th, one
of them a friend, signed a document stating that they could not
perform his annual officer efficiency report for the period of
May 1, 1972, to April 30, 1973, because Bush ''has not been
observed at this unit during the period of this report'' and
''has been performing equivalent training'' at the Montgomery
unit. The document is dated a day after Bush was supposed to have
done duty in the unit. Both men have since died.

The official record that chronologically lists Bush's service
includes no evidence of service between May 1972 and October 1,
1973, the official date of his discharge.

This story ran on page A14 of the Boston Globe on 10/31/2000.  �
Copyright 2000 Globe Newspaper Company.


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