Posted on 09/17/2004 8:58:58 PM PDT by The Bandit
Edited on 09/17/2004 9:05:20 PM PDT by Admin Moderator. [history]
BAIRD, Tex., Sept. 17 - Bill Burkett, the former Texas National Guard officer who has been caught up in the mystery of how CBS News acquired memos that seem to question President Bush's Vietnam-era National Guard service, unsuccessfully offered information and advice to help the Kerry campaign attack Mr. Bush, according to a posting Mr. Burkett wrote in an e-mail newsletter.
"I spent some time on the phone with the Kerry campaign seniors yesterday," Mr. Burkett wrote on Aug. 21 in an e-mail letter circulated to a list of about 600 Texas Democrats.
He complained that he had to "get through seven layers of bureaucratic kids trying to get a job after the election."
"I talked with Max Cleland," Mr. Burkett continued, referring to the former senator from Georgia who has been supporting Senator John Kerry's Democratic presidential bid.
Alluding to advertisements by a veterans group that deprecates Mr. Kerry's Vietnam service, Mr. Burkett continued, "I asked if they wanted to counterattack or ride this to ground and outlast it, not spending any money. He said counterattack."
"So I gave them the information to do it with," Mr. Burkett wrote. "But none of them have called me back."
Mr. Burkett did not say what information he offered. Earlier this year, he gained attention for saying that in 1998 he saw aides to Gov. George W. Bush of Texas and Guard officials dispose of pieces of Mr. Bush's National Guard record that could prove politically embarrassing. Mr. Bush's aides have denied his account.
"I volunteered to come back out with more," Mr. Burkett wrote.
Mr. Burkett, who was at home on his ranch in Baird, near Abilene, on Friday, declined to comment.
Mr. Cleland said in a telephone interview that Mr. Burkett called him "a couple of weeks ago," as he was out campaigning for Mr. Kerry.
"I couldn't swear to it whether he used the term documents or information," Mr. Cleland said. "It was some kind of stuff, some kind of information he wanted to get to the campaign, or something, regarding Bush's National Guard service. I referred him up to somebody in the campaign."
Mr. Cleland said he received up to 100 calls a week from people with tips and ideas. "He sounded like he had something," Mr. Cleland said. "But of course, in this business, you go around, every friend, everyone around the corner, has some something or other."
Campaign officials said Mr. Cleland had referred Mr. Burkett to someone at the campaign who passed his message on to the research department, where the message was set aside amid the deluge of other calls.
Mr. Burkett has returned to national attention since CBS News and "60 Minutes" reported last week on four memos reportedly from the personal files of Lt. Col. Jerry Killian, Mr. Bush's squadron commander, who died 20 years ago. The memos said that Colonel Killian was under pressure to "sugar coat" the record of the young Lieutenant Bush and that the officer had disobeyed a direct order to take a physical.
Forensic experts, a secretary who said she typed Lieutenant Killian's memos and members of his family have said that they doubt the authenticity of the documents. CBS News has said it is evaluating their legitimacy and has declined to identify its sources. But one person at CBS confirmed an account in Newsweek that Mr. Burkett had helped with the reports. The official was unable to say what role he played.
Mr. Burkett is an avid Democrat and a frequent contributor to the Texas Democratic e-mail list. His name also shows up occasionally as a contributor of criticism of the Bush administration on a Web site, onlinejournal.com. Asked about his contributions to that site, Mr. Burkett on Friday declined to comment. His wife, Nicki, later confirmed that the articles were indeed his.
His many online musings provide a glimpse of his thinking, including his intense desire to remove Mr. Bush from office. They include some inconclusive references to the possibility of more documents appearing about Mr. Bush's Guard service. Aside from the CBS report, the Pentagon on Friday released new documents from Mr. Bush's files.
Addressing Mr. Bush rhetorically in an article on the Web site on Aug. 25, Mr. Burkett wrote, "I know from your files that we have now reassembled, the fact that you did not fulfill your oath, taken when you were commissioned to 'obey the orders of the officers appointed over you.' " On Sept. 4, shortly before CBS News broadcast its report, Mr. Burkett told the Democratic e-mail list he had a hunch that more material might soon emerge to embarrass the president. "No proof, just gut instinct," Mr. Burkett added.
Mr. Burkett's lawyer, David Van Os, said his client had not fabricated any documents. "From my knowledge of Bill's character, I am 100 percent positively, unequivocally certain that Bill Burkett has not created or falsified any documents," Mr. Van Os said.
In another development, ABC News reported on Friday that former Col. Walter B. Staudt - who interviewed Mr. Bush for enrollment to the Texas Air National Guard in 1968 and who was named in a disputed Killian memo as exerting influence on behalf of Mr. Bush - said he "never pressured anybody about George Bush." He also told ABC News that he planned to vote for Mr. Bush.
David D. Kirkpatrick reported from Baird for this article, and Jim Rutenberg from New York. Nathan Levy contributed reporting from Baird.
"And, believe it or not, we got a message from Union Station saying they had a package for us. We went down to get it. You know what it was?
"It was a memo sent all the way from Texas. Black and white spotted. One of our staff members 6-year old daughter named it Checkers. And you know, the kid loved that memo and I just want to say this right now, that regardless of what they say about it, we're gonna stick with our story."
So now it starts. It looks like they are starting to cover up the trail of the memos through the sKerry campaign.
That's the way he sees it, that's the way he decrees it.
Mmm-hmmm. Riiiiiight. I don't suppose that "somebody" has a name? Like....DAN RATHER maybe???
The NY Times and the Washinton Post smell blood. This COULD get good.
The Washington Post found this same information, but the NYT seems to have dug a little deeper. I sense a competition developing. Let the games begin....
"I helped them before I didn't."
"I spent some time on the phone with the Kerry campaign seniors yesterday," Mr. Burkett wrote on Aug. 21 in an e-mail letter circulated to a list of about 600 Texas Democrats.So was the call back August 22? 23? 24...?"So I gave them the information to do it with," Mr. Burkett wrote. "But none of them have called me back."
Isn't it interesting, how everyone else can find so many people to talk to, yet, none were featured by Dan?
There's something familiar here....can't quite..... grassy knoll ... lone gunman...a magic bullet
He may have been unsuccessful at first, but I think Burkett's motto is "if at first you don't succeed, try, try again". And he did.
Cleland is now on record confirming that he spoke with Burkett and referred him to the Kerry campaign.
Add: This guy is too self-absorbed to realize that the Dims are about to set him up as the fall guy for the whole plan gone awry. He's an unstable whack-job, and it will be very easy to isolate and blame him for the whole affair. IMO, this was Rather's exit plan all along.
Maybe, when ol' Max was in Texas, he was doing more than "delivering" a letter to W's ranch.
He's probably still harboring hopes that THIS time his charges against Bush will stick. That's probably all he thinks about.
" I referred him up to somebody in the campaign."
oh reeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeally...
there's an opening here for some good news organization to try and somehow claim the mantle of credility that has been left lying like the carcass of a dead animal along the side of the road. While CBS and 60 Minutes have been devestated beyond repair for years, if not decades to come, other MSM have an opportunity to try and set the record straight. Rather had that opportunity and he decided to put his partisan sympathies ahead of his career and ahead of the network and corporation he serves. There are others, unlike Rather and others, who will value their journalistic integrity above their partisan interests, particularly given the stakes and potential rewards involved.
Anyone remember when the producer, Mapes, was out to interview Burkett?
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