posted on Oct, 15 2004 @ 10:24 PM
Over 30 pages of President Bush's military records have turned up after the Pentagon, the White House, and the National Guard all stated that all
records were released. It does not seem that these new records include any of the "missing" time from Bush"s already released documents, so
questions will still remain on the issue.
www.guardian.co.uk
Weeks after Texas National Guard officials signed an oath swearing they had turned over all of President Bush"s military records, independent
examiners found more than two dozen pages of previously unreleased documents about Bush.
The two retired Army lawyers went through Texas files under an agreement between the Texas Guard and The Associated Press, which sued to gain access
to the files. The 31 pages of documents turned over to AP Thursday night include orders for high-altitude training in 1972, less than three months
before Bush abruptly quit flying as a fighter pilot.
The discovery is the latest in a series of embarrassments for Pentagon and Texas National Guard officials who have repeatedly said they found and
released all of Bush"s Vietnam-era military files, only to belatedly discover more records. Those discoveries - nearly 100 pages, including Bush"s
pay records and flight logs - have been the result of freedom of information lawsuits filed in federal and Texas courts by AP.
Please visit the link provided for the complete story.
How many more records are going to be found and released? Is the military really this bad at record keeping? Or have they had the records all along
and are slowly going through them for some reason or another before releasing them.
The new records can be seen here...
www.defenselink.mil...
[edit on 15-10-2004 by sensfan]
[edit on 16-10-2004 by sensfan]
[edit on 16-10-2004 by sensfan]