|
Edited on Sat Feb-14-04 11:11 AM by kerouac
Correct me if I'm wrong here.. but doesn't this stack of military records that Bush just released prove that he (and his administration, including Karen Hughes over the past x years) lied about the existence of additional records?
Shrub stated "if we still have them" to Tim Russert on national TV, regarding his military records (q&a below direct from MSNBC transcript). Obviously, Bush knew they had more records because you don't just come up with 400+ pages of records overnight - so he lied in his recent interview.
Not only that, but Karen Hughes likely had many of these files when she wrote his book - so he's been lying about having more paperwork for years publicly.
We should have people asking themselves "if he lied about that, then what else did he lie about in the interview?"
We need to spotlight his lying about his knowledge of these additional records as the main issue instead of just the missing guard time. This should be a COVER-UP controversy first and a missing duty controversy second.
What other documents might Bush and his admin be covering-up right now? Energy dept. meetings, Bin Laden intel, pre-9/11 intel, and Iraq WMD intel? Hiding shrubs records could open a whole uncovered-records can of worms for this admin and destroy their credibility (rightfully so).
------------------
Russert: When allegations were made about John McCain or Wesley Clark on their military records, they opened up their entire files. Would you agree to do that?
President Bush: Yeah. Listen, these files — I mean, people have been looking for these files for a long period of time, trust me, and starting in the 1994 campaign for governor. And I can assure you in the year 2000 people were looking for those files as well. Probably you were. And — absolutely. I mean, I —
Russert: But you would allow pay stubs, tax records, anything to show that you were serving during that period?
President Bush: Yeah. If we still have them, but I — you know, the records are kept in Colorado, as I understand, and they scoured the records.
And I'm just telling you, I did my duty, and it's politics, you know, to kind of ascribe all kinds of motives to me. But I have been through it before. I'm used to it. What I don't like is when people say serving in the Guard is — is — may not be a true service.
Russert: But you authorize the release of everything to settle this?
President Bush: Yes, absolutely.
We did so in 2000, by the way.
|