Chapter - VI -Bush in World War II
Plut aux dieux que ce fut le dernier de
ses crimes!
--Racine, Britannicus
George Bush has always traded shamelessly
on his alleged record as a naval aviator during the Second World War in
the Pacific theatre. During the 1964 senate campaign in Texas against
Senator Ralph Yarborough, Bush televised a grainy old film which depicted
young George being rescued at sea by the crew of the submarine USS
Finnback after his Avenger torpedo bomber was hit by Japanese
anti-aircraft fire during a bombing raid on the island of Chichi Jima on
September 2, 1944. That film, retrieved from the Navy archives, backfired
when it was put on the air too many times, eventually becoming something
of a maladroit cliche.
Bush's campaign literature has always
celebrated his alleged exploits as a naval aviator and the Distinguished
Flying Cross he received. As we become increasingly familiar with the
power of the Brown Brothers, Harriman/Skull and Bones network working for
Senator Prescott Bush, we will learn to become increasingly skeptical of
such official accolades and of the official accounts on which they are
premised.
But George Bush has always traded
shamelessly on his alleged war record. During Bush's Gulf war adventure of
1990-91, the adulation of Bush's ostensible warrior prowess reached levels
that were previously considered characteristic of openly totalitarian and
militaristic regimes. Late in 1990, after Bush had committed himself
irrevocably to his campaign of bombing and savagery against Iraq, hack
writer Joe Hyams completed an authorized account of George Bush at war.
This was entitled Flight of the Avenger (New York: Harcourt Brace
Jovanovich, 1991), and appeared during the time of the Middle East
conflagration that was the product of Bush's obsessions. Hyams's work had
the unmistakable imprimatur of the regime: not just George, but also
Barbara had been interviewed during its preparation, and its adulatory
tone placed this squalid text squarely within the "red Studebaker" school
of political hagiography.
The appearance of such a book at such a
time is suggestive of the practice of the most infamous twentieth-century
dictatorships, in which the figure of the strong man, Fuehrer, duce, or
vozhd as he might be called, has been used for the transmission of
symbolic-allegorical directives to the subject population. Was fascist
Italy seeking to assert its economic autarky in food production in the
face of trade sanctions by the League of Nations? Then a film would be
produced by the MINCULPOP (the Ministry of Popular Culture, or propaganda)
depicting Mussolini indefatigably harvesting grain. Was Nazi Germany in
the final stages of preparation of a military campaign against a
neighboring state? If so, Goebbels would orchestrate a cascade of magazine
articles and best-selling pulp evoking the glories of Hitler in the
trenches of 1914-18. Closer to our own time, Leonid Brezhnev sought to
aliment his own personality cult with a little book called Malaya Zemlya,
an account of his war experiences which was used by his propagandists to
motivate his promotion to Marshal of the USSR and the erection of a statue
in his honor during his own lifetime. This is the tradition to which
Flight of the Avenger belongs.
Bush tells us in his campaign
autobiography that he decided to enlist in the armed forces, specifically
naval aviation, shortly after he heard of the Japanese attack on Pearl
Harbor. About six months later, Bush graduated from Phillips Academy, and
the commencement speaker was Secretary of War Henry Stimson, eminence
grise of the US ruling elite. Stimson was possibly mindful of the hecatomb
of young members of the British ruling classes which had occurred in the
trenches of World War I on the western front. In any event, Stimson's
advice to the Andover graduates was that the war would go on for a long
time, and that the best way of serving the country was to continue one's
education in college. Prescott Bush supposedly asked his son if Stimson's
recommendation had altered his plan to enlist. Young Bush answered that he
was still committed to join the navy.
Henry L. Stimson was certainly an
authoritative spokesman for the Eastern Liberal Establishment, and Bushman
propaganda has lately exalted him as one of the seminal influences on
Bush's political outlook. Stimson had been educated at both Yale (where he
had been tapped by Skull and Bones) and Harvard Law School. He became the
law partner of Elihu Root, who was Theordore Roosevelt's secretary of
state. Stimson had been Theodore Roosevelt's anti-corruption,
trust-busting US Attorney in New York City during the first years of the
FBI, then Taft's secretary of war, a colonel of artillery in World War I,
Governor General of the Philippines for Coolidge, secretary of state for
Hoover, and enunciator of the "Stimson doctrine." This last was a piece of
hypocritical posturing directed against Japan, asserting that changes in
the international order brought about by force of arms (and thus in
contravention of the Kellogg-Briand Pact of 1928) should not be given
diplomatic recognition. This amounted to a US commitment to uphold the
Versailles system, the same policy upheld by Baker, Eagleburger, and
Kissinger in the Serbian war on Slovenia and Croatia during 1991. Stimson,
though a Republican, was brought into Roosevelt's war cabinet in 1940 in
token of bipartisan intentions.
But in 1942, Bush was not buying
Stimson's advice. It is doubtless significant that in the mind of young
George Bush, World War Two meant exclusively the war in the Pacific,
against the Japanese. In the Bush-approved accounts of this period of his
life, there is scarcely a mention of the European theatre, despite the
fact that Roosevelt and the entire Anglo-American establishment had
accorded strategic priority to the "Germany first" scenario. Young George,
it would appear, had his heart set on becoming a navy flier.
Normally the Navy required two years of
college from volunteers wishing to become naval aviators. But, for reasons
which have never been satisfactorily explained, young George was exempted
from this requirement. Had father Prescott's crony Artemus Gates, the
Assistant Secretary of the Navy for Air, been instrumental in making the
exception, which was the key to allowing George to become the youngest of
all navy pilots?
On June 12, 1942, his eighteenth
birthday, Bush joined the navy in Boston as a seaman second class. [fn 1]
He was ordered to report for active duty as an aviation cadet on August 6,
1942. After a last date with Barbara, George was taken to Penn Station in
New York City by father Prescott to board a troop train headed for Chapel
Hill, North Carolina. At Chapel Hill Naval Air Station, one of Bush's
fellow cadets was the well-known Boston Red Sox hitter Ted Williams, who
would later join Bush on the campaign trail in his desperate fight in the
New Hampshire primary in February, 1988.
After preflight training at Chapel Hill,
Bush moved on to Wold-Chamberlain Naval Airfield in Minneapolis,
Minnesota, where he flew solo for the first time in November, 1942. In
February, 1943 Bush moved on to Corpus Christi, Texas, for further
training. Bush received his commission as an ensign at Corpus Christi on
June 9, 1943.
After this Bush moved through a number of
naval air bases over a period of almost a year for various types of
advanced training. In mid-June 1943 he was learning to fly the Grumman TBF
Avenger torpedo-bomber at Fort Lauderdale, Florida. In August he made
landings on the USS Sable, a paddle wheel ship that was used as an
aircraft carrier for training purposes. During the summer of 1943 Bush
spent a couple of weeks of leave with Barbara at Walker's Point in
Kennebunkport; their engagement was announced in the New York Times of
December 12, 1943.
Later in the summer of 1943 Bush moved on
to the Naval Air Base at Norfolk, Virginia. In September, 1943 Bush's new
squadron, called VT-51, moved on to the Naval Air Station at Chincoteague,
Virginia, located on the Delmarva peninsula. On December 14, 1943 Bush and
his squadron were brought to Philadelphia to attend the commissioning of
the USS San Jacinto (CVL30), a light attack carrier built on a cruiser
hull. Since the name of the ship recalled Sam Houston's defeat of the
Mexican leader Santa Anna in 1836, and since the ship flew a Lone Star
flag, Bushman propaganda has made much of these artifacts in an attempt to
buttress "carpetbag" Bush's tenuous connections to the state of Texas.
Bush's VF-51 squadron reported on board this ship for a shakedown cruise
on February 6, 1944, and on March 25, 1944 the San Jacinto left for San
Diego by way of the Panama Canal. The San Jacinto reached Pearl harbor on
April 20, 1944, and was assigned to Admiral Marc A. Mitscher's Task Force
58/38, a group of fast carriers, on May 2, 1944.
In June Bush's ship joined battle with
Japanese forces in the Marianas archipelago. Here Bush flew his first
combat missions. On June 17, a loss of oil pressure forced Bush to make an
emergency landing at sea. Bush, along with his two crewmembers, gunner Leo
Nadeau and radioman-tail gunner John L. Delaney, were picked up by a US
destroyer after some hours in the water. Bush's first Avenger, named by
him the Barbara, was lost.
During July, 1944 Bush took part in
thirteen air strikes, many in connection with the US marines landing on
Guam. In August Bush's ship proceeded to the area of Iwo Jima and Chichi
Jima in the Bonin Islands for a new round of sorties.
On September 2, 1944, Bush and three
other Avenger pilots, escorted by Hellcat fighter planes, were directed to
attack a radio transmitter on Chichi Jima. Planes from the USS Enterprise
would also join in the attack. On this mission Bush's rear-seat gunner
would not be the usual Leo Nadeau, but rather Lt. (jg) William Gardner
"Ted" White, the squadron ordnance officer of VT-51, already a Yale
graduate and already a member of Skull and Bones. White's father had been
a classmate of Prescott Bush. White took his place in the rear-facing
machine gun turret of Bush's TBM Avenger, the Barbara II. The
radioman-gunner was John L. Delaney, a regular member of Bush's crew.
What happened in the skies of Chichi Jima
that day is a matter of lively controversy. Bush has presented several
differing versions of his own story. In his campaign autobiography
published in 1987 Bush gives the following account:
The flak was the heaviest I'd ever flown
into. The Japanese were ready and waiting: their antiaircraft guns were
set up to nail us as we pushed into our dives. By the time VT-51 was ready
to go in, the sky was thick with angry black clouds of exploding
antiaircraft fire.
Don Melvin led the way, scoring hits on a
radio tower. I followed, going into a thirty-five degree dive, an angle of
attack that sounds shallow but in an Avenger felt as if you were headed
straight down. The target map was strapped to my knee, and as I started
into my dive, I'd already spotted the target area. Coming in, I was aware
of black splotches of gunfire all around.
Suddenly there was a jolt, as if a
massive fist had crunched into the belly of the plane. Smoke poured into
the cockpit, and I could see flames rippling across the crease of the
wing, edging towards the fuel tanks. I stayed with the dive, homed in on
the target, unloaded our four 500-pound bombs, and pulled away, heading
for the sea. Once over water, I leveled off and told Delaney and White to
bail out, turning the plane to starboard to take the slipstream off the
door near Delaney's station.
Up to that point, except for the sting of
dense smoke blurring my vision, I was in fair shape. But when I went to
make my jump, trouble came in pairs. [fn 2]
In this account, there is no more mention
of White and Delaney until Bush hit the water and began looking around for
them. Bush says that it was only after having been rescued by the USS
Finnback, a submarine, that he "learned that neither Jack Delaney nor Ted
White had survived. One went down with the plane; the other was seen
jumping, but his parachute failed to open." The Hyams account of 1991 was
written after an August 1988 interview with Chester Mierzejewski, another
member of Bush's squadron, had raised important questions about the haste
with which Bush bailed out, rather than attempting a water landing.
Mierzejewski's account, which is summarized below, contradicted Bush's own
version of these events, and hinted that Bush might have abandoned his two
crewmembers to a horrible and needless death. The Hyams account, which is
partly intended to refute Mierzejewski, develops as follows:
...Bush was piloting the third plane over
the target, with Moore flying on his wing. He nosed over into a
thirty-degree glide, heading straight for the radio tower. Determined to
finally destroy the tower, he used no evasive tactics and held the plane
directly on target. His vision ahead was occasionally cancelled by bursts
of black smoke from the Japanese antiaircraft guns. The plane was
descending through thickening clouds of flak pierced by the flaming arc of
tracers.
There was a sudden flash of light
followed by an explosion. "The plane was lifted forward, and we were
enveloped in flames," Bush recalls. "I saw the flames running along the
wings where the fuel tanks were and where the wings fold. I thought, This
is really bad! It's hard to remember the details, but I looked at the
instruments and couldn't see them for the smoke."
Don Melvin, circling above the action
while waiting for his pilots to drop their bombs and get out, thought the
Japanese shell had hit an oil line on Bush's Avenger. "You could have seen
that smoke for a hundred miles."
Perhaps so, but it is difficult to
understand why the smoke from Bush's plane was so distinctly visible in
such a smoke-filled environment. Hyams goes on to describe Bush's
completion of his bombing run. His account continues:
By then the wings were covered in flames
and smoke, and the engine was blazing. He considered making a water
landing but realized it would not be possible. Bailing out was absolutely
the last choice, but he had no other option. He got on the radio and
notified squadron leader Melvin of his decision. Melvin radioed back,
"Received your message. Got you in sight. Will follow."
[...] Milt Moore, flying directly behind
Bush, saw the Avenger going down smoking. "I pulled up to him; then he
lost power and I went sailing by him."
As soon as he was back over water, Bush
shouted on the intercom for White and Delaney to "hit the silk!" [...]
Dick Gorman, Moore's radioman-gunner, remembers hearing someone on the
intercom shout, "Hit the silk!" and asking Moore, "Is that you, Red?"
"No," Moore replied. "It's Bush, he's
hit!"
Other squadron members heard Bush
repeating the command to bail out, over and over, on the radio.
There was no response from either of
Bush's crewmen and no way he could see them; a shield of armor plate
between him and Lt. White blocked his view behind. He was certain that
White and Delaney had bailed out the moment they got the order. [fn 3]
Hyams quotes a later entry by Melvin in
the squadron log as to the fate of Bush's two crewmen: ""At a point
approximately nine miles bearing 045'T (degrees) from Minami Jima, Bush
and one other person were seen to bail out from about 3,000 feet. Bush's
chute opened and he landed safely in the water, inflated his raft, and
paddled farther away from Chi-Chi Jima. The chute of the other person who
bailed out did not open. Bush has not yet been returned to the
squadron...so this information is incomplete. While Lt. j.g. White and J.L.
Delaney are reported missing in action, it is believed that both were
killed as a result of the above described action." [fn 4] But it is
interesting to note that this report, contrary to usual standard navy
practice, has no date. This should alert us to that tampering with public
records, such as Bush's filings at the Securities and Exchange Commission
during the 1960's, which appears to be a specialty of the Brown Brothers,
Harriman/Skull and Bones network.
For comparison, let us now cite the
cursory account of this same incident provided by Bush's authorized
biographer in the candidate's 1980 presidential campaign biography:
On a run toward the island, Bush's plane
was struck by Japanese antiaircraft shells. One of his two crewmen was
killed instantly and the aircraft was set on fire. Bush was able to score
hits on the enemy installations with a couple of five-hundred pound bombs
before he wriggled out of the smoking cockpit and floated towards the
water. The other crewman also bailed out but died almost immediately
thereafter because, as the fighter pilot behind Bush's plane was later to
report, his parachute failed to open properly. Bush's own parachute became
momentarily fouled on the tail of the plane after he hit the water. [fn 5]
King's account in interesting for its
omission of any mention of Bush's injury in bailing out, a gashed forehead
he got when he struck the tail assembly of the plane. This had to have
occurred long before Bush had hit the water, so this account is garbled
indeed.
Let us also cite parts of the account
provided by Fitzhugh Green in his 1989 authorized biography. Green has
Bush making his attack "at a 60-degree angle." "For his two crew members,"
notes Green, "life was about to end." His version goes on:
Halfway through Bush's dive, the enemy
found his range with one or more shells. Smoke filled his cabin; his plane
controls weakened; the engine began coughing, and still he wasn't close
enough to the target. He presumed the TBM to be terminally damaged.
Fighting to stay on course, eyes smarting, Bush managed to launch his
bombs at the last possible moment. He couldn't discern the result through
black fumes. But a companion pilot affirmed later that the installation
blew up, along with two other buildings. The navy would decorate Bush for
literally sticking to his guns until he completed his mission under
ferocious enemy fire.
Good! Now the trick was to keep the plane
aloft long enough to accomplish two objectives: first, get far enough away
from the island to allow rescue from the sea before capture or killing by
the enemy; second, give his planemates time to parachute out of the
burning aircraft.
The TBM sputtered on its last few hundred
yards. Unbeknownst to Bush, one man freed himself. Neither fellow squadron
pilots nor Bush ever were sure which crewmember this was. As he jumped,
however, his parachute snarled and failed to open. [fn 6]
Green writes that when Bush was swimming
in the water, he realized that "his crew had disappeared" and that "the
loss of the two men numbed Bush."
For the 1992 presidential campaign, the
Bushmen have readied yet another rehash of the adulatory "red Studebaker"
printout in the form of a new biography by Richard Ben Cramer. This is
distinguished as a literary effort above all by the artificial verbal
pyrotechnics with which the author attempts to breathe new life into the
dog-eared Bush canonical printout. For these, Cramer relies on a
hyperkinetic style with non-verbal syntax which to some degree echoes
Bush's own disjointed manner of speaking. The resulting text may have
found favor with Bush when he was gripped by his hyperthyroid rages during
the buildup for the Gulf war. A part of this text has appeared in Esquire
Magazine. [fn 7] Here is Cramer's description of the critical phase of the
incident:
He felt a jarring lurch, a crunch, and
his plane leaped forward, like a giant had struck it from below with a
fist. Smoke started to fill the cockpit. He saw a tongue of flame
streaming down the right wing toward the crease. Christ! The fuel tanks!
He called to Delaney and White--We've
been hit! He was diving. Melvin hit the tower dead-on--four five hundred
pounders. West was on the same beam. Bush could have pulled out. Have to
get rid of these bombs. Keep the dive....A few seconds...
He dropped on the target and let 'em fly.
The bombs spun down, the plane shrugged with release, and Bush banked away
hard to the east. No way he'd get to the rendezvous point with Melvin. The
smoke was so bad he couldn't see the gauges. Was he climbing? Have to get
to the water. They were dead if they bailed out over land. The Japs killed
pilots. Gonna have to bail out. Bush radioed the skipper, called his crew.
No answer. Does White know how to get to his chute? Bush looked back for
an instant. God, was White hit? He was yelling the order to bail out,
turning right rudder to take the slipstream off their hatch...had to get
himself out. He leveled off over water, only a few miles from the
island...more, ought to get out farther....that's it, got to be now...He
flicked the red toggle switch on the dash -- the IFF, Identification Friend
or Foe -- supposed to alert any US ship, send a special frequency back to
his own carrier...no other way to communicate, had to get out now, had to
be ... NOW.
It will be seen that these versions
contain numerous internal contradictions, but that the hallmark of "red
Studebaker" orthodoxy, especially after the appearance of the Mierzejewsky
account, is that Bush's plane was on fire, with visible smoke and flames.
The Bush propaganda machine needs the fire on board the Avenger in order
to justify Bush's precipitous decision to bail out, leaving his two crew
members to their fate, rather than attempting the water landing which
might have saved them.
The only person who has ever claimed to
have seen Bush's plane get hit, and to have seen it hit the water, is
Chester Mierzejewksi, who was the rear turret gunner in the aircraft flown
by Squadron Commander Douglas Melvin. During 1987-88, Mierzejewksi became
increasingly indignant as he watched Bush repeat his canonical account of
how he was shot down. Shortly before the Republican National Convention in
1988, Mierzekewski, by then a 68 year old retired aircraft foreman living
in Cheshire, Connecticut, decided to tell his story to Allan Wolper and Al
Ellenberg of the New York Post, which printed it as a copyrighted article.
[fn 8]
"That guy is not telling the truth,"
Mierzejewski said of Bush.
As the rear-looking turret gunner on
Commander Melvin's plane, Mierzejewski had the most advantageous position
for observing the events in question here. Since Melvin's plane flew
directly ahead of Bush's, he had a direct and unobstructed view of what
was happening aft of his own plane. When the New York Post reporters asked
former Lt. Legare Hole, the executive officer of Bush's squadron, about
who might have best observed the last minutes of the Barbara II, Hole
replied: "The turret gunner in Melvin's plane would have had a good view.
If the plane was on fire, there is a very good chance he would be able to
see that. The pilot can't see everything that the gunner can, and he'd
miss an awful lot, " Hole told the New York Post.
Gunner Lawrence Mueller of Milwaukee,
another former member of Bush's squadron who flew on the Chichi Jima
mission, when asked who would have had the best view, replied: "The turret
gunner of Melvin's plane." Mierzejewksi for his part said that his plane
was flying about 100 feet ahead of Bush's plane during the incident - so
close that he could see into Bush's cockpit.
Mierzejewki, who is also a recipient of
the Distinguished Flying Cross, told the New York Post that he saw "a puff
of smoke" come out of Bush's plane and quickly dissipate. He asserted that
after that there was no more smoke visible, that Bush's "plane was never
on fire" and that "no smoke came out of his cockpit when he opened his
canopy to bail out." Mierzejewski stated that only one man ever got out of
the Barbara II, and that was Bush himself. "I was hoping I would see some
other parachutes. I never did. I saw the plane go down. I knew the guys
were still in it. It was a helpless feeling."
Mierzejewski has long been troubled by
the notion that Bush's decision to parachute from his damaged aircraft
might have cost the lives of Radioman second class John Delaney, a close
friend of Mierzejewksy, as well as gunner Lt. Junior Grade William White.
'I think [Bush] could have saved those lives, if they were alive. I don't
know that they were, but at least they had a chance if he had attempted a
water landing,'" Mierzejewski told the New York Post.
Former executive officer Legare Hole
summed up the question for the New York Post reporters as follows: "If the
plane is on fire, it hastens your decision to bail out. If it is not on
fire, you make a water landing." The point is that a water landing held
out more hope for all members of the crew. The Avenger had been designed
to float for approximately two minutes, giving the tailgunner enough time
to inflate a raft and giving everyone an extra margin of time to get free
of the plane before it sank. Bush had carried out a water landing back in
June when his plane had lost oil pressure.
The official- but undated- report on the
incident among the squadron records was signed by Commander Melvin and an
intelligence officer named Lt. Martin E. Kilpatrick. Kilpatrick is
deceased, and Melvin in 1988 was hospitalized with Parkinson's disease and
could not be interviewed. Mierzejewski in early August 1988 had never seen
the undated intelligence report in question. "Kilpatrick was the first
person I spoke to when we got back to the ship," he said. "I told him what
I saw. I don't understand why it's not in the report."
Gunner Lawrence Mueller tended to
corroborate Mierzejewki's account. Mueller had kept a log book of his own
in which he made notations as the squadron was debriefed in the ready room
after each mission. For September 2, 1944, Mueller's personal log had the
following entry: "White and Delaney presumed to have gone down with
plane." Mueller told the New York Post that "no parachute was sighted
except Bush's when the plane went down." The New York Post reporters were
specific that according to Mueller, no one in the San Jacinto ready room
during the debriefing had said anything about a fire on board Bush's
plane. Mueller said: "I would have put it in my logbook if I had heard
it."
According to this New York Post article,
the report of Bush's debriefing aboard the submarine Finnback after his
rescue makes no mention of any fire aboard the plane. When the New York
Post reporters interviewed Thomas R. Keene, an airman from another carrier
who had been picked up by the Finnback a few days after Bush, and referred
to the alleged fire on board Bush's plane, "Keene was surprised to hear"
it. "'Did he say that?," Keene asked.
Leo Nadeau, Bush's usual rear turret
gunner, who had been in contact with Bush during the 1980's, attempted to
undercut Mierzejewski's credibility by stating that "Ski," as Mierzejewski
was called, would have been "too busy shooting" to have been able to focus
on the events involving Bush's plane. But even the pro-Bush accounts agree
that the reason that White had been allowed to come aloft in the first
place was the expectation that there would be no Japanese aircraft over
the target, making a thoroughly trained and experienced gunner
superfluous. Indeed, no account alleges that any Japanese aircraft
appeared over Chichi Jima.
Bush and Mierzejewski met again on board
the San Jacinto after the downed pilot was returned from the Finnback
about a month after the loss of the Barbara II. According to the New York
Post account, about a month after all these events Bush, clad in Red Cross
pajamas, returned to the San Jacinto. "He came into the ready room and sat
down next to me," Mierzejewksi recounted. "He [Bush] knew I saw the whole
thing. He said, 'Ski, I'm sure those two men were dead. I called them on
the radio three times. They were dead.' When he told me they were dead, I
couldn't prove they weren't. He seemed distraught. He was trying to assure
me he did the best he could. I'm thinking what am I going to say to him,"
Mierzejewski commented in 1988.
Mierzejewski began to become concerned
about Bush's presentation of his war record while watching Bush's December
1987 interview with David Frost, which was one of the candidate's most
sanctimonious performances. In March, 1988 Mierzejeweski wrote to Bush and
told him that his recollections were very different from the vice
president's story. Mierzejewski's letter was not hostile in tone, but
voiced concern that political opponents might come forward to dispute
Bush. There was no reply to this letter, and Chester Mierzejewski
ultimately elected to tell his own unique eye-witness version of the facts
to the New York Post. Certainly his authoritative, first-hand account
places a large question mark over the events of September 2, 1944 which
Bush has so often sought to exploit for political gain.
Several days after Mierzejewski's
interview was published, Bush's office obtained and released to the press
a copy of the (undated) squadron log report. One Donald Rhodes of Bush's
office called Mierzejewksi to offer him a copy of the report.
It is typical of Joe Hyams' hack work for
Bush in The Flight of the Avenger that he never mentions Mierzejewksi's
critical account, although he is obviously acutely aware of the objections
raised by Mierzejewski and wants very much to discredit those objections.
Indeed, Hyams totally ignores Mierzejewski as a source, and also
studiously ignores the other witness who would have supported Mierzejewski,
that is to say Mueller. Hyams had the support of Bush's White House staff
in arranging interviews for his book, but somehow he never got around to
talking to Mierzejewski and Mueller. This must increase our suspicion that
Bush has some damning cicrumstance he wishes to hide.
Bush himself admits that he was in a big
hurry to get out of his cockpit: "The wind was playing tricks, or more
likely, I pulled the rip cord too soon." [fn 9] This caused his gashed
forehead and damaged his parachute.
Concerning the ability of Brown Brothers,
Harriman to fix a combat report in naval aviation, it is clear that this
could be accomplished as easily as fixing a parking ticket. Artemus Gates
is someone who could have helped out. Other Brown Brothers, Harriman
assets in powerful posts included Secretary of War Stimson, Secretary of
War for Air Robert Lovett, Special Envoy W. Averell Harriman, and even
President Roosevelt's confidant and virtual alter ego, Harry Hopkins, an
asset of the Harriman family.
Bush was very upset about what had
happened to his two crewmen. Later, during one of his Skull and Bones
"Life History" self-exposures, Bush referred to Lt. White, the Skull and
Bones member who had gone to his death with the Barbara II: "I wish I
hadn't let him go," said Bush, according to former Congressman Thomas W.
L. (Lud) Ashley, a fellow Skull and Bones member and during 1991 one of
the administrators of the Neil Bush legal defense fund. According to
Ashley, "Bush was heartbroken. He had gone over it in his mind 100,000
times and concluded he couldn't have done anything....He didn't feel
guilty about anything that happened....But the incident was a source of
real grief to him. It tore him up, real anguish. It was so fresh in his
mind. He had a real friendship with this man," said Ashley. [fn10]
Bush later wrote letters to the families
of the men who had died on his plane. He received a reply from Delaney's
sister, Mary Jane Delaney. The letter read in part:
You mention in your letter that you would
like to help me in some way. There is a way, and that is to stop thinking
you are in any way responsible for your plane accident and what has
happened to your men. I might have thought you were if my brother Jack had
not always spoken of you as the best pilot in the squadron. [fn 11]
Bush also wrote a letter to his parents
in which he talked about White and Delaney: "I try to think about it as
little as possible, yet I cannot get the thought of those two out of my
mind. Oh, I'm OK- I want to fly again and I won't be scared of it, but I
know I won't be able to shake the memory of this incident and I don't
believe I want to completely." [fn 12]
As Bush himself looked back on all these
events from the threshold of his genocidal assault on Iraq, he
complacently concluded that the pagan fates had preserved his life for
some future purpose. He told Hyams:
There wasn't a sudden revelation of what
I wanted to do with the rest of my life, but there was an awakening.
There's no question that underlying all that were my own religious
beliefs. In my own view there's got to be some kind of destiny and I was
being spared for something on earth. [fn 13]
After having deliberately ignored the
relevant dissenting views about the heroism of his patron, Hyams chooses
to conclude his book on the following disturbing note:
When flying his Avenger off the deck of
the San Jac, Bush was responsible for his own fate as well as his
crewmen's. As president he is responsible for the fate of all Americans as
well as that of much of the world.
And that is precisely the problem.
NOTES:
1. For details of Bush's navy career, see
Joe Hyams, Flight of the Avenger (New York, 1991), passim.
2. Bush and Gold, Looking Forward, p. 36.
3. Hyams, Flight of the Avenger, pp.
106-107.
4. Hyams, Flight of the Avenger, p. 111.
5. Nicholas King, George Bush: A
Biography (New York, 1980), pp. 30-31.
6. Fitzhugh Green, George Bush: An
Intimate Portrait (New York, 1989), pp. 36-37.
7. Richard Ben Cramer, "George Bush" How
He Got Here," Espquire, June 1991.
8. Allan Wolper and Al Ellenberg, "The
Day Bush Bailed Out," New York Post, August 12, 1988, p. 1 ff.
10. Bush and Gold, p. 36.
11. Washington Post, August 7, 1988
12. Hyams, p. 143.
13 bis. Bush and Gold, pp. 40-41.
14. Hyams, p. 134
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