| Answering
Kerry's questions
By William Campenni
Posted August, 2004 - Updated
October, 2004
The recent actions by the swift boat
veterans have triggered a vicious reaction by the Kerry
campaign against the service of President Bush in the
Air National Guard. To be candid, the Bush campaign
has done a poor job in countering the attacks, thereby
aiding their longevity.
While Mr. Bush has only offered praise for John Kerry's
service to the country, Mr. Kerry has personally questioned
Mr. Bush's dedicated service and specifically slandered
all of those who have served in the Guard, equating
it with fleeing to Canada.
The Kerry campaign has posted these "Unanswered
Questions" on its Web site since April, providing
sustenance to the anti-Bush pundits and Web dialogs.
While the allegations against Mr. Bush are numerous,
let's limit ourselves to these questions because they
have Mr. Kerry's imprimatur.
1. Mr. Bush used special treatment to jump ahead of
150 applicants into the Guard. Further, he used influence
to get a direct commission rather than go to Officer
Candidate School.
There may have been 150 or more applicants for all positions
in Mr. Bush's unit. For pilot slots, however, the pool
was much smaller, probably never more than 10, because
of the stringent physical and educational criteria.
It is possible that some influence was applied at the
margins, like who got which of two yearly slots first,
but that's life. It is ironic that the media is hypocritically
worked up on this fact of life, given William McGowan's
study on the nepotism for the children of media biggies
in their own profession.
Also, political influence did not get Mr. Bush a special
direct commission to lieutenant. The direct commission
was the normal procedure for those selected for a pilot
slot. Every pilot candidate got one. I did, too. It
was contingent upon completion of the year-long pilot
training. If you washed out, you reverted to enlisted
status. And once you were in pilot training, all the
political influence in the world wouldn't make those
instructors pass a guy who couldn't hack it.
2. Col. Albert Lloyd, Texas Guard personnel officer,
said a report on Mr. Bush's Alabama service should have
been filed.
3. Why hasn't Mr. Bush proved he showed up in Alabama?
With due respect to Col. Lloyd, who might be shocked
by this, that's not really the way it worked with pilots.
Operations, the flying part of a Guard organization,
works out many deals with other units on an informal
basis. Mr. Bush's "pulling drills" in Alabama
would be an agreement between units' Operations people.
There may be a letter to authorize the out-of-state
drills, as Mr. Bush had, but no formal transfer to the
other unit, hence no other paperwork. In Alabama someone
would be delegated to verify attendance, using a Form
105 punch card. These would be sent back to Texas for
pay and then destroyed after a few years. Three witnesses
have verified Mr. Bush's presence in Alabama: a dentist,
a flight surgeon and a safety officer, William Calhoun.
As a commander, I had probably 10 "visitors"
from other units whose Form 105s I signed, but I never
wrote any other reports. My visitors worked in a 6x10
plans office. Nobody saw them. If they didn't show up,
I usually didn't care.
4. Why did Mr. Bush miss his medical examination in
1972?
5. Why was there no investigation?
It would be best to ask him; however, it is not uncommon
to miss a physical in a Reserve unit. The clinics are
not open every day. The ad-libbing White House spokesman
further confused the issue by commenting that Mr. Bush
had to go back to Houston to see his family physician,
which was in error. A guess — Lt. Bush had decided
that with the changing fortunes at the unit, downsizing,
a conversion to new airplanes, a glut of pilots, it
was time to pull the plug. Flying physicals are like
driver's licenses — when they expire, you aren't
allowed to fly, or drive. They don't throw you in jail.
Investigations are a commander's prerogative, not a
mandate, and entail considerable time and resources.
You don't undertake them when a simpler option is present.
Most amusing are the charges that he wanted to avoid
a drug test. Formal drug testing in the Guard did not
start until 1981, and his records prove Mr. Bush was
never subject to the Human Reliability (nuclear weapons
safety) program. Sorry, guys.
6. Why did Mr. Bush specifically request not to be sent
overseas for duty?
A non-issue. The form that this canard references is
AF Form 125, Application for Extended Active Duty (EAD).
It is a required form for every Air Force officer's
personnel folder. However, it does not apply to reservists
and guardsman unless and until ordered to extended active
duty. Most guardsmen, like Lt. Bush and me, were told
by personnel clerks to check off the "not volunteer"
block because it was meaningless. We had to fill out
the form to go to pilot training because that year was
EAD, but the all training bases were in the United States.
In the Guard, you are the property of that unit and
state. You aren't going anywhere except where your unit
goes.
7. Why does Mr. Bush say he was on base when his superiors
filled out a report saying he was gone a whole year?
First, pay records document Mr. Bush's appearances on
base, as verified by Col. Lloyd and Mr. Bush's point
credit statement. So why would these other reports be
at variance? They are not. Regulations require that
an Officer Efficiency Report (OER, now an OES) be completed
annually by their reporting official, or whenever there
is a change of reporting official of 90 days or more.
They evaluate performance. They don't document attendance.
"Not Observed" is an Air Force term of art,
meaning "I didn't have this guy for more than 90
days, so I can't evaluate him." If you were there
73 days, the reporting official would have to check
"not observed," even if he had lunch with
you daily. With this criterion, Alabama officials would
not report on you, and with six months away in the middle
of the year, probably neither would the Houston officials.
Sadly, the corroborating officials are now deceased.
George Bush did request an early out from his enlistment
contract and got it, legally and honorably. Little noted
in the debate is that John Kerry also signed a contract
to serve two more years (1970-72) in the drilling reserves
after his active duty tour. There is no letter of excusal
or record of attendance at these drills while he was
at the peak of his antiwar activities. With Kerry friends
like Sen. J. William Fulbright in the Senate, the Navy
was never going to enforce that obligation.
8. Why is the Pentagon under orders not to discuss Mr.
Bush's records with reporters?
This is standard procedure with all high-profile personnel
or media events. It is to provide a single point of
contact and prevent rumor or inaccurate information
from people who don't have the whole picture. It is
a practice the civil world could benefit from, given
the confused stories like the TWA Flight 800 crash.
9. Where are Mr. Bush's flight logs?
National Personnel Records Center, 9700 Page Ave, St.
Louis, Mo. 63132-5100.
Remember, over the term of the Vietnam War, 8.7 million
served on active duty, of which 2.7 million served in
Vietnam and surrounding waters and airspace. Thus 6
million never got near the theater of operations. This
69 percent of the active-duty force were sitting in
missile silos, in submarines and ships, at airfields
in England, at Army bases in Germany and on Coast Guard
cutters in Alaska. Nobody questions their service. Another
2 million were in the Reserve forces, waiting for a
call that for most did not come.
Hindsight is perfect, but in the late 1960s, the future
course of the war was not so clear. No matter what your
recruiter told you, when you donned a uniform in 1965
through 1973, you did not have a clue as to where fortune
would take you and what risks you would face. A gung-ho
Ranger might find himself in a safe instructor slot
in Germany; a Coast Guardsman would find himself dodging
mines in the China Sea; an Air National Guard pilot
in Sioux City would be dropping bombs in Vietnam. Life
was neither fair nor foreseeable. Someone in Saigon
would safely serve in a rear-echelon staff job, while
another in North Dakota would die a fiery death in the
crash of an Air National Guard jet.
But the hated George Bush was in the National Guard,
so it must be that those in the National Guard were
draft dodgers and cowards.
We who served in the Guard in that era are proud of
our service. Even with obsolescent equipment and condescending
attitudes from the regular forces, we were ready to
go. Many a guardsman volunteered for Vietnam, but were
turned down for often petty reasons, or offered pointless
assignments far from the war zone. As verified by at
least three witnesses, George Bush was one of those
Vietnam volunteers.
A final comment: With a single phone call, Mr. Bush
could round up a flight of wingmen to follow him around
as his "Band of Brothers." Choosing not to
exploit his squadron mates is indicative of his character
and class. Poet and wartime pilot Antoine de Saint-Exupery
wrote in "Night Flight" that "Like his
love, a man keeps his courage dark."
John Kerry should read it in the original French.
William Campenni is a retired colonel in the United
States Air Force/Air National Guard.
http://washingtontimes.com/op-ed/20040831-094211-3678r.htm
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