Dan Rather vs. W: 'The great untold story of modern Texas politics' (10,450 words) [View all]
Source: Texas Monthly
... But the CBS documents that seem destined to haunt Rather are, and have always been, a red herring. The real story, assembled here for the first time in a single narrative, featuring new witnesses and never-reported details, is far more complex than what Rather and Mapes rushed onto the air in 2004. At the time, so much rancorous political gamesmanship surrounded Bushs military history that it was impossible to report clearly (and Rathers flawed report effectively ended further investigations). But with Bush out of office, this is no longer a problem. Ive been reporting this story since it first broke, and today there is more cooperation and willingness to speak on the record than ever before. The picture that emerges is remarkable. Beyond the haze of elaborately revised fictions from both the political left and the political right is a bizarre account that has remained, until now, the great untold story of modern Texas politics. For 36 years, it made its way through the swamps of state government as it led up to the collision between two powerful Texans on the national stage.
And by the time it was over, no onenot Dan Rather, not George W. Bushwould be left unbloodied.
... When it was dismissed, in 2009, he was devastated. He maintains a smoldering anger for CBS News. But Rather says he remains optimistic that somebody, somewhere, will one day come forward and reveal the truth of what happened. Theyre out there, he says. Lets set the record straight.
And what about George W. Bush? Its unclear how the curators of his presidential library, which is slated to open next year at Southern Methodist University, will treat the ex-presidents life from 1968 to 1973. Theyre unlikely to explore the finer details of his flight logs or offer any further information about his lost year. But his time flying planes in Texas during the height of the Vietnam War remains a defining part of his political biography nonetheless, a chapter he proudly referenced in 2003, when he landed in a jet plane on the deck of an aircraft carrier to declare the end of major combat operations in Iraqright before the country sank into a bloody, years-long war that would divide the United States and claim tens of thousands of Iraqi and American lives. Bush has said history will be the judge. And so it will.
Read more: http://www.texasmonthly.com/2012-05-01/feature.php