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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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expulsion of Taiwan. This was the so-called "two Chinas" policy. In an August 12<br />

interview, <strong>Bush</strong> told the Washington Post that he was working hard to line up the votes to<br />

keep Taiwan as a UN member when the time to vote came in the fall. Responding to the<br />

obvious impression that this was a fraud for domestic political purposes only, <strong>Bush</strong><br />

pledged his honor on Nixon's committment to "two Chinas.""I know for a fact that the<br />

President wants to see the policy implemented," said <strong>Bush</strong>, apparently with a straight<br />

face, adding that he had discussed the matter with Nixon and Kissinger at the White<br />

House only a few days before. <strong>Bush</strong> said that he and other members of his mission had<br />

lobbied 66 countries so far, and that this figure was likely to rise to 80 by the following<br />

week. Ultimately <strong>Bush</strong> would claim to have talked personlly with 94 delegations to get<br />

them to let Taiwan stay, which a fellow diplomat called "a quantitative track record."<br />

Diplomatic observers noted that the US activity was entirely confined to the high-profile<br />

"glass palace" of the UN, and that virtually nothing was being done by US ambassadors<br />

in capitals around the world. But <strong>Bush</strong> countered that if it were just a question of going<br />

through the motions as a gesture for Taiwan, he would not be devoting so much of his<br />

time and energy to the cause. <strong>The</strong> main effort was at the UN because "this is what the UN<br />

is for," he commented. <strong>Bush</strong> said that his optimism about keeping the Taiwan<br />

membership had increased over the past three weeks. [fn 12]<br />

By late September, <strong>Bush</strong> was saying that he saw a better than 50-50 chance that the UN<br />

General Assembly would seat both Chinese governments. By this time, the official US<br />

position as enunciated by <strong>Bush</strong> was that the Security Council seat should go to Peking,<br />

but that Taipei ought to be allowed to remain in the General Assembly. Since 1961, the<br />

US strategy for blocking the admission of Peking had depended on a procedural defense,<br />

obtaining a simple majority of the General Assembly for a resolution defining the seating<br />

of Peking as an Important Question, which required a two-thirds majority in order to be<br />

implemented. Thus, if the US could get a simple majority on the procedural vote, one<br />

third plus one would suffice to defeat Peking on the second vote.<br />

<strong>The</strong> General Assembly convened on September 21. <strong>Bush</strong> and his aides were running a<br />

ludicrous all-court press on scores of delegations. Twice a day there was a State<br />

Department briefing on the vote tally. "Yes, Burundi is with us...About Argentina we're<br />

not sure," etc.) All this attention got <strong>Bush</strong> an appearance on "Face the Nation", where he<br />

said that the two-China policy should be approved regardless of the fact that both Peking<br />

and Taipei rejected it. "I don't think we have to go through the agony of whether the<br />

Republic of China will accept or whether Peking will accept," <strong>Bush</strong> told the interviewers.<br />

"Let the United Nations for a change do something tha really does face up to reality and<br />

then let that decision be made by the parties involved," said <strong>Bush</strong> with his usual<br />

inimitable rhetorical flair.<br />

<strong>The</strong> UN debate on the China seat was scheduled to open on October 18; on October 12<br />

Nixon gave a press conference in which he totally ignored the subject, and made no<br />

appeal for support for Taiwan. On October 16, Kissinger departed with great fanfare for<br />

China. Kissinger says in his memoirs that he had been encouraged to go to China by<br />

<strong>Bush</strong>, who assured him that a highly publicized Kissinger trip to Peking would have no

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