Originally posted by easymo
What I found, was that I was wrong. The guy flat bellybutton deserted. If you can find anything that I missed. I am eager to read it.
First off if you do a google search you will notice EVERYONE of the top pages are flat out Anti-Bush in the Free republic type mode. The main stream media looked at the story and decided to drop it for lack of supportable Evidence (documents and eye witnesses)
You can make your own decision on the credibility of the story. I really dont care one way or the other.
If you want to do some extra research you might want to start with the article in the LA Times that started all of this. In 1999 they did a series of articles on GWB including his service record. They made every effort to show that GWB was given special treatment and deserted, but in the end they admitted that they have NO evidence that Bush was given special treatment or that he deserted.
They pointed to a court document from a AL. gaurd unit officer who said he was asked by a FRIEND of GWB's dad to push it through. He said under oath that while he did process the paper work he never gave him any abnormal help. They also spoke with his 84 year old former AL. Gaurd CO who said he dosnt remember ever seeing him.
They do have concrete documented evidence that he failed to drill in a timely matter. He did make up most if not all of the drills in the last months of his service.
(stolen from a news article)
Assessing Bush's military service three decades later is no easy task: Some of his superiors are no longer alive. Others declined to comment, or, understandably, cannot recall details about Bush's comings and goings. And as Bush has risen in public life over the last several years, Texas military officials have put many of his records off-limits and heavily redacted many other pages, ostensibly because of privacy rules.
Retired Colonel Maurice H. Udell, Bush's instructor in the F-102, said he was impressed with Bush's talent and his attitude. ''He had his boots shined, his uniform pressed, his hair cut and he said, `Yes, sir' and `No, sir,''' the instructor recalled.
Said Udell, ''I would rank him in the top 5 percent of pilots I knew. And in the thinking department, he was in the top 1 percent. He was very capable and tough as a boot.''