[Mb-civic] USA Today: Questions about Bush's Guard service
unanswered
ean at sbcglobal.net
ean at sbcglobal.net
Tue Aug 24 17:23:23 PDT 2004
Questions about Bush's
Guard service unanswered
By Dave Moniz and Jim Drinkard, USA TODAY
http://www.usatoday.com/news/politicselections/nation/presid
ent/2004-08-23-bush-service_x.htm
Tuesday, August 24, 2004
WASHINGTON - At a time when Democratic presidential
candidate John Kerry has come under fire from a group of retired
naval officers who say he lied about his combat record in
Vietnam, questions about President Bush's 1968-73 stint in the
Texas Air National Guard remain unresolved:
üWhy did Bush, described by some of his fellow officers
as a talented and enthusiastic pilot, stop flying fighter jets in the
spring of 1972 and fail to take an annual physical exam required
of all pilots?
üWhat explains the apparent gap in the president's
Guard service in 1972-73, a period when commanders in Texas
and Alabama say they never saw him report for duty and records
show no pay to Bush when he was supposed to be on duty in
Alabama?
üDid Bush receive preferential treatment in getting into
the Guard and securing a coveted pilot slot despite poor
qualifying scores and arrests, but no convictions, for stealing a
Christmas wreath and rowdiness at a football game during his
college years?
The White House has released hundreds of pages of records, but
the files released so far haven't answered those questions. Since
the documents were released in February, at least a half-dozen
news organizations, including USA TODAY, have filed new
requests for Bush's military records under the Freedom of
Information Act.
In an e-mail to USA TODAY last week, presidential spokesman
Dan Bartlett said: "The president has authorized the release of
his records and we are complying with all requests. Some are
taking longer than others, but all will be addressed."
Past military service and qualifications to be commander in chief
have become a central theme in the 2004 presidential campaign.
Questions about Bush's record predate the current campaign.
The apparent gap in his Guard service first surfaced before the
2000 election, when The Boston Globe reported that Texas Guard
commanders were unable to account for Bush's whereabouts from
May 1972 to April 1973.
Bush has not said what he did in the Guard during that period.
Aside from a statement by a former Alabama Air Guard officer
who said he saw Bush report for duty there in the fall of 1972,
the only evidence he was at Dannelly Air National Guard Base in
Alabama was a record of a dental exam on Jan. 6, 1973, at the
base.
Bush said in a TV interview in February that he would make all
his military records available. That month, the White House
released more than 400 pages of Bush military records, including
some duplicates, and said the documents were a complete
catalog of his personnel files.
But some documents still have not been made public. The White
House did not release Bush's medical records from his Guard files
but allowed a group of reporters who cover the White House to
review them for 20 minutes. They found nothing unusual. Kerry
released some of his military records earlier this year. He has
also declined to release his complete medical records but showed
them to reporters as Bush did.
Since February, the White House has banned all Guard and
military commanders outside the Pentagon from commenting on
Bush's records or service. Requests for information must go to
the Pentagon's Freedom of Information Act office.
The Pentagon last week responded to a 4-month-old request from
USA TODAY for additional records from Bush's files by sending
another copy of documents that were released by the White
House in February. The documents do not address the
unexplained year in Bush's Guard service or his decision to stop
flying.
The Associated Press filed a lawsuit this summer requesting
copies of Bush's military records stored in a Texas archive on
microfilm. It sought information that might explain why Bush
did not take his flight physical and whether he showed up for
duty in Alabama in the fall of 1972, AP spokesman John Stokes
said.
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