As polls showed that Mr Bush had edged ahead of Mr Kerry for the first time, a pro-Kerry organisation labelled the President an "impostor" over the photograph, taken in 1970 and discovered in his father's Presidential Library in Houston, Texas..
The ribbon is an Air Force Outstanding Unit Award - which was not awarded to the 111th Fighter Intercept Squadron in which Mr Bush served until 1975, five years after the photograph was taken, according to the group US War Report.
"Why is this fraud important? Because it betrays the Honour Code that every officer learns and carries throughout his or her career," said Walt Starr who investigated the medals for the group. Separately a new book, Deserter, by Ian Williams, a British-born author, challenges the President with details of how he used his father's influence to join the Texas Air National Guard as a trainee pilot, thereby avoiding service in Vietnam, and then allegedly disappeared from his base without fulfilling his duty.
"Bush has set himself up, and now that the issue is coming up he is going to have to answer questions on his own documented record," said Williams.
Williams's book offers evidence that Mr Bush stopped training in 1972, and failed to take an annual physical examination demanded of all pilots. Deserter also claims that Mr Bush failed to turn up for duty in Alabama, an omission which could have resulted in a charge of being absent without leave, or even desertion
Folks, if anyone had any doubts, Kerry really, really isn't Mondale or Dukakis.
We're going to win this, and we're going to tell the truth.
Bush made an issue of his Texas Air National Guard Service with his "Mission Accomplished" fly-in stunt, and we're going to take it apart.
John O'Neill was reduced to attempting to (impotently) trying to make Kerry's forays near or in Cambodia an issue on Bill Maher's program (too bad Maher didn't know aobut O'Neill's lies on this).
We've got better ammo against the forces of the Bush campaign, and it's going to be used.
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