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Bush : A Dodger Not a warrior

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A Dodger Not A Warrior

 

February 15, 2004

 

There can be no dispute that George Bush attended some drills in the Texas Air National Guard in the first four months of 1972. By then, there were 56,000 dead Americans and the air losses in Vietnam continued. It isn't difficult to count Bush's days on duty in the Texas Guard because he wasn't present so many times. Only 26 days. If George Bush had been a milkman, children would have starved.

 

He believes he is a warrior president. He is not. He is a war dodger. He confuses himself with George Patton, and proudly passes a National Guard record around all over America.

 

There was a cheap argument between the hack flacks in the White House and the Pekingese of the Press over whether Bush attended a dentist one day.

 

Yes! He certainly was in the dentist's chair.

 

Give him the silver Medal for Molars!

 

On George Bush's last paid day in the Texas Air National Guard, on April 16, 1972, the air war in Vietnam had turned furious, Richard Nixon had ordered large strikes against North Vietnam, the first since 1967.

 

On Bush's last day, front pages had a photo of Maj. Gale Albert Despiegler, just captured after being shot down over Quang Binh, North Vietnam.

 

Despiegler would be in the same prison with John McCain, who was to spend 5 1/2 years of torture in a Hanoi jail. McCain tried suicide twice.

 

In their name today, George Bush is in command of a war, something that he knows absolutely nothing about, and because of this many are being killed and many, many more wounded.

 

Bush was far from the fight on April 16, 1972. In the war he evaded, United States fliers raided Haiphong with eight-engine B-52s that fly slower than the speed of sound and dropped enormous amounts of bomb tonnage in long patterns. This made the B-52s vulnerable to surface-to-air missiles. The jet fighters, smoked lightning, flew near the B-52s to attract the fire from the ground. The North Vietnamese fired 200 missiles and thousands of rounds of anti-aircraft shells.

 

On April 16, 1972, the American raids on Haiphong and Hanoi were reported from Hanoi by Agence France-Presse:

 

"Anti-aircraft guns fired on a formation of American F-4 fighter bombers early Sunday as the planes swept low over the North Vietnamese capital. The Hanoi radio said that American jets struck inside and outside Hanoi seven hours after the Haiphong raid. The Associated Press also reported. The Hanoi government claimed 15 planes were shot down, including a B-52. United States army headquarters reported that all B-52s returned from Haiphong."

 

The files show that the United States command said that "escort planes accompanied the bombers. Anti-aircraft fire was intense and some planes may have been shot down by surface-to-air missiles and anti-aircraft fire."

 

United States communiques said that four American aircraft, a Navy jet and three Air Force fighter bombers were downed in raids against military targets around Haiphong. Another United States communique said the pilot of a Navy Corsair was rescued at sea, but the two crewmen of an Air Force F-105 Thunderchief were missing.

 

Still another United States communique said the pilot of a Navy Corsair was rescued at sea, but the two crewmen of an Air Force F-105 Thunderchief were missing. The communique also said a helicopter and a medical evacuation helicopter were shot down north of Saigon.

 

Whether this was part of the communique about four planes missing or was about two more losses, is unsure. What we're sure of is that, on April 16, Bush was training to lead his country in war by packing his bags in Texas and moving to Alabama, and that pretty much ended his fighting career although he did wage war on cavities in that dentist's chair at Maxwell Field, Ala.

 

What matters is that Bush was in the National Guard in Texas through all the days from Jan. 1 until April 16 because he was dodging the war in Vietnam. At that time, if you were in the Guard, you were not called for Vietnam. Some people used National Guard, or college, or marriage, or conscientious objector, or moving to Canada to evade. Bush used the Guard. Today, National Guard troops are being activated and sent to Iraq. In Bush's time, the Guard was safe as an apartment in Paris.

 

And now, he sends people to get killed in Iraq. That he has no right to do this doesn't seem to enter his mind. He dodged the war, rebuffed any chance to go to war, and yet shamelessly, preposterously, without any idea of what he is doing, and without an ounce of personal uneasiness, sends young people to die in a war.

 

Has there ever been a president who seems less bothered by young dead than George Bush?

 

The picture of him playing soldier suit on an aircraft carrier, the helmet under his arm as if he just got back from a run over Baghdad, marks him as exceedingly dangerous. The guy could actually believe he is a warrior.

 

We have a commander in chief who made sure he missed all action for his country and now , without knowing what he is doing, plays war with other people's lives. Look at our casualties every day in Iraq since Bush declared the fighting over, sometime last year.

 

Copyright © 2004, Newsday, Inc.

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Bush Goal Was Dodging War

 

February 15, 2004

 

Records released by the White House show that George Bush attended some drills in the Texas Air National Guard in the four months of 1972 while the air losses in Vietnam continued.

 

On George Bush's last paid day in the Texas Air National Guard, on April 16, 1972, the air war in Vietnam had turned furious because Richard Nixon had ordered large strikes against North Vietnam, the first since 1968. Nixon was certain that bombing would crumble North Vietnam and give him a smashing victory in the war.

 

Bush Goal Was Dodging War Bush was on duty for 26 days from January 1 until April 16. On that last day in Texas, April 16, 1972, the front pages around the nation, which George Bush could see because he was here, far from the shooting, had a photo of Maj. Gale Albert Despiegler, just captured after being shot down over Quang Binh, North Vietnam.

 

Despiegler would be in the same prison with John McCain, who spent five and a half years in a Hanoi jail and was tortured. He tried suicide twice.

 

On April 16, the American raids on the port of Haiphong and the capital city, Hanoi, were reported from Hanoi by Agence France-Presse:

 

"Anti-aircraft guns fired on a formation of American F-4 fighter bombers early Sunday as the planes swept low over the North Vietnamese capital. The Hanoi radio said that American jets struck inside and outside Hanoi seven hours after the Haiphong raid. The Associated Press also reported. The radio said that 11 American planes had been downed in the raid. A Pentagon spokesman refused to comment on the reports from Hanoi."

 

The United States command said that escort planes had accompanied the bombers. Anti-aircraft fire was believed to have been intense and some planes may have been shot down by surface-to-air missiles and anti-aircraft fire, but the command's announcement said only that all B-52's "returned safely."

 

After that April 16, Bush went to Alabama and that pretty much ended his fighting career although he did battle cavities in a dentist's chair at Maxwell Field, Ala.

 

The hack flacks in the White House and the Pekinese of the press are fighting over whether Bush actually did go to the dentist and thus was on duty, or was he missing from a real drill?

 

His whereabouts have nothing to do with it. What matters only is that Bush was in the National Guard in Texas because he was dodging the war in Vietnam. In those days, if you were in the Guard, you were not called for Vietnam. Some people used college, or marriage, or Conscientious Objector or moving to Canada to evade. Bush used the Guard. Anybody trying that today is in great danger. The Guard units are being called up by the day. But Bush used the Guard when it gave safety. And now, shamelessly, preposterously, he sends people to get killed in Iraq. That he has no right to do so doesn't seem to enter his mind.

 

In Texas, George Bush might have even had a uniform on. But he was not in Vietnam. And now, today, he is a guy who ducked the war, dodged the war, reneged on any chance to go to war, and yet without even a hint of personal shame sends young people to die in a war that his record shows that he would duck.

 

That Bush was not near any of this is his business. Of course he had joined the National Guard so he wouldn't have to go to Vietnam. That he barely went to any National Guard drills is also his business.

 

What matters to all our senses is that he is a president who struts around as a war hero, who dodged Vietnam and most of the National Guard drills and who with less shame than anybody we have had maybe ever, sends your kids to a war that he ducked as if he was allowed to do it by birth.

 

The picture of him playing soldier suit on an aircraft carrier, the helmet under his arm like he just got back from a run over Baghdad, marks him as exceedingly dangerous. He believes he is a warrior president. He is not. He is a war dodger. Therefore, it is preposterous for George Bush to be a commander of anything. He doesn't have the right to send people to war and yet he orders them off, and almost cheerfully.

 

What was he doing all day in April 16, 1972 when they raided Haiphong? It was the first attack on the port city by the eight-engine B-52's that fly slower than the speed of sound and drop enormous amounts of bomb tonnage in patterns of great length. This makes the B 52's vulnerable to ground fire, particularly surface-to-air missiles. The jet fighters, smoked lightning, must fly near the B-52's to attract the fire from the ground.

 

A United States communique on April 15 said that four American aircraft, a Navy jet and three Air Force fighter bombers, were downed in raids against military targets around Haiphong. The Hanoi government claimed 15 planes were shot down, including a B-52. United States army headquarters reported that all B-52's returned from Haiphong.

 

Another United States communique said the pilot of a Navy Corsair was rescued at sea, but the two crewmen of an Air Force Force 105 Thunderchief were missing.

 

Whether this was part of the communique about four planes missing or was about two more losses, is unsure.

 

What we are sure of is that we have a commander in chief who plays soldier with other people's lives.

Copyright © 2004, Newsday, Inc.

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