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Barnestorming

Ben Barnes' revelations on 60 Minutes have shaken the White House, but CBS' timidity has kept us from learning about the dirty politics Bush learned in Alabama.
 
 
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Wednesday night's 60 Minutes segment on the controversy over how George Bush got a coveted slot in the Texas National Guard's "Champagne Unit," and what he did during his time in uniform, took those of us old enough to remember back in time to 1972.

It was a time when the country was already sharply divided. Nearly half of Americans had already concluded that the war in Vietnam was dirty, immoral and a hopeless quagmire. It was four years after the CBS news anchor called "the most trusted man in America," Walter Cronkite, had used his broadcast to tell the country that the war could not be won – a declaration that helped drive war president Lyndon Johnson to his decision not to seek another term as a result of the war's unpopularity.

And it was a time when a large number of draft-age males were gaming the system to avoid being sent to Vietnam if they could. Bill Clinton was one. Dubya was another. While college deferments saved many of those who could afford a university education from going, the sons of the working class and the poor were being shipped to the killing fields to decimate a country that had never done us harm – as Muhammad Ali famously put it in refusing induction, "No Viet Cong ever called me nigger." Many of those draftees came home in body bags. Schemers like Clinton and the sons of privilege like Bush avoided those plasticized tombs.

It has been a matter of record for years, after his court testimony on the subject, that Ben Barnes was the enabler of Bush's escape from Vietnam. State legislatures have long been sewers of corruption, and none more so than the Texas legislature of which Barnes was the speaker. An ambitious, equal opportunity suckup and a poster boy for Texas sleaze, by his own admission Speaker Barnes helped not just Bush but the offspring of influential fat-cats and politicians from both major parties find safe refuge from Vietnam in that Texas Guard unit where, as we proles would say, no heavy lifting was required.

On 60 Minutes, Barnes – he of the checkered and scandal-plagued political career – announced he is now "ashamed" of what he did, of the way he misused the power of "determining life and death" in his hands. Is his remorse genuine? Or is it an attempt by Barnes – now a corporate lobbyist and influence-buyer who is still working both sides of the street, and who has bundled over $100,000 in fat-cat contributions to the Kerry campaign – to cloak his televised "confession" in noble terms? I'm sure I'm not the only Baby Boomer with a memory of that bloody era who finds a creature like Barnes distasteful, and his mea culpa an attempt to curry favor with a future Kerry presidency (he agreed to the 60 Minutes interview before Kerry's meltdown in the polls).

What was really new and interesting in the CBS broadcast were the revelations of four hitherto-unpublished documents from Bush's squadron commander, the late Col. Jerry Killian, revealing that Bush disobeyed a direct order to take a physical examination, and tried to sweet-talk Killian into finding a way for him to "get out of coming to drill from now through November" because "he may not have time." Then there's the Killian memo revealing he's being pressured by higher-ups to sugar-coat his review of Bush's absenteeism, a memo entitled "CYA," which – CBS was too prudish to tell us this – is the military abbreviation for "Cover Your Ass." CBS also failed to mention that young Bush's father was Richard Nixon's UN Ambassador at the time.

Just what was Lt. Bush doing during those long months he shirked his duties and ducked orders? He was serving his political apprenticeship as the political director for the U.S. Senate campaign of Winton "Red" Blount, the wealthy head of an engineering and construction firm who was president of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce before being appointed Nixon's Postmaster General (where he promptly fired some 33,000 employees as the postal service was put on for-profit basis). Blount was running against veteran Senator John Sparkman, a conservative Southern Democrat who had been Adlai Stevenson 's running mate on the national ticket in 1952.

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