http://dneiwert.blogspot.com/2004_01_18_dneiwert_archive.html#107489673457218778Bush the 'Deserter' Friday, January 23, 2004
George W. Bush's sketchy military record has finally surfaced as a campaign issue in 2004. It came out in last night's debate in New Hampshire,
http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp-dyn/A39875-2004Jan22?language=printer when Peter Jennings had the following exchange with Gen. Wesley Clark:<snip>
...it has been fully substantiated...
http://dneiwert.blogspot.com/2003_05_04_dneiwert_archive.html#200265501 back when Bush performed his little flyboy stunt on the USS Lincoln. To recap:
he reality is that what we know about his record now should be considered a scandal, and should have been since it was uncovered during the campaign.<snip>
...as Joe Conason http://www.salon.com/opinion/conason/2003/05/02/topgun/index.html
http://www2.observer.com/observer/pages/conason.asp
has already noted, Bush actually falsified this aspect of his service in his ghost-written autobiography, A Charge to Keep, describing his pilot's training in some detail, then concluding: ''I continued flying with my unit for the next several years." In fact, Bush was suspended from flying 22 months after he completed his training -- a period that does not even generously fit Bush's description.<snip>
...in the Boston Globe story http://web.archive.org/web/20000619121358/www.boston.com/news/politics/campaign2000/news/One_year_gap_in_Bush_s_Guard_duty+.shtml
that in many respects was the most serious effort by anyone in the mainstream media to examine the issue...this rationalization, of course, begs the question: What if anyone else had pulled such a stunt?<snip>
For what it's worth, Michael Moore has an extended response up today, including a specific response http://www.michaelmoore.com/words/message/index.php
to Jennings...Moore also has a compendium of information http://www.michaelmoore.com/words/message/index.php#article7
on the issue.
Of course, I also strongly recommend anyone interested in the matter to review the hard information available at Martin Heldt's Web site, http://users.cis.net/coldfeet/
which includes the results of his numerous FOIA requests.
http://xnerg.blogspot.com/2004_01_01_xnerg_archive.html#107489137083043260 catches Wolf Blitzer being a journalistic nitwit on this very subject.
A note: Bush's status technically was Absent Without Leave (AWOL), which is not precisely the same as desertion. Moore uses the term, as Bob Somerby notes, http://www.dailyhowler.com/dh012304.shtml
as a term of art, but it is not definitively correct.