The
guidelines state it does not
matter whether the accusations
against a President are just.
|
London, Thursday, June 6, 2002
Colonel
who called Bush 'a joke' suspended
By Andrew Gumbel AN American Air Force
colonel has been suspended and could be
court-martialled because he wrote to a
newspaper describing George Bush as
"sleazy and contemptible" and accusing the
administration of ignoring advance
warnings on the 11 September attacks for
political gain. Lieutenant-Colonel Steve Butler
was suspended from his job at a military
language academy in Monterey, California,
under Article 88 of the Uniform Code of
Military Justice. Article 88, which dates back to the War
of Independence, prohibits disparaging
remarks about the President or senior
figures in the White House or Congress. It
stipulates a maximum punishment of
dismissal and one year in military
detention. Colonel Butler, who has been in
the air force for 24 years and served in
the Gulf War, called the President a joke
who had taken advantage of the war on
terrorism to deflect attention from his
questionable election and the poor state
of the economy. "Of
course Bush knew about the impending
attacks on America," he wrote in The
Monterey County Herald. "He did nothing to
warn the American people because he needed
this war on terrorism. His daddy had
Saddam and he needed Osama
... His presidency was going nowhere." The letter did not appear to be the
result of any inside knowledge, merely the
officer's forthright opinions. Colonel Butler was suspended three days
after it was published. The guidelines
state it does not matter whether the
accusations against a President are just.
The issue is whether an officer spoke
inappropriately, and publicly. Nobody has been prosecuted under
Article 88 since the Vietnam War, when a
junior officer was court-martialled for
holding up a sign describing President
Lyndon Johnson as an ignorant
fascist at an anti-war rally in Texas. He
was discharged and sentenced to two years
of hard labour. Officers are periodically disciplined,
including two who were forced into early
retirement during the Clinton era for
describing the President as a gay-loving,
womanising, lying, pot-smoking draft
dodger. -
SAN
FRANCISCO mayor was warned Sept 10 by
Condoleeza Rice about air
travel
-
White
House admits: Bush Was Warned of Hijack
Threat (and
David Irving's comment)
-
White
House "original target of terrorist
plane attack"
|