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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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government seized on these events as carte blanche to launch a series of air attacks<br />

against Syria and Lebanon, arguing that these countries could be held responsible for<br />

what had happened in Munich. Somalia, Greece, and Guinea came forward with a<br />

resolution in the Security Council which simply called for the immediate cessation of "all<br />

military operations". <strong>The</strong> Arab states argued that the Israeli air attacks were totally<br />

without provocation or jusitification, and killed numerous civilians who had nothing<br />

whatever to do with the terrorist actions in Munich.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Nixon regime, with one eye on the autumn 1972 elections and the need to mobilize<br />

the Zionist lobby in support of Tricky Dick's second term, wanted to find a way to oppose<br />

this resolution, since it did not sufficiently acknowledge the unique righteousness of the<br />

Israeli cause and Israel's inherent right to commit acts of war against its neighbors. It was<br />

<strong>Bush</strong> who authored a competing resolution which called on all interested parties "to take<br />

all measures for the immediate cessation and prevention of all military operations and<br />

terrorist activities." It was <strong>Bush</strong> who dished up the rationalizations for US rejection of the<br />

first resolution. That resolution was no good because it did not reflect the fact that "the<br />

fabric of violence in the Middle East in inextricably interwoven with the massacre in<br />

Munich," <strong>Bush</strong> argued. 'By our silence on the terror in Munich are we indeed inviting<br />

more Munichs?," he asked. Justifying the Israeli air raids on Syria and Lebanon, <strong>Bush</strong><br />

maintained that certain governments "cannot be absolved of responsibility for the cycle<br />

of violence" because of their words and deeds, or because of their tacit acquiescence.<br />

Slightly later, after the vote had taken place, <strong>Bush</strong> argued that "by adopting this<br />

resolution, the council would have ignored reality, would have spoken to one form of<br />

violence but not another, would have looked to the effect but not the cause."<br />

When the resolution was put to a vote, <strong>Bush</strong> made front-page headlines around the world<br />

by casting the US veto, a veto that had been cast only once before in the entire history of<br />

the UN. <strong>The</strong> vote was 13 to 1, with the US casting the sole negative vote. Panama was<br />

the lone abstention. <strong>The</strong> only other time the US veto had been used had been in 1970, on<br />

a resolution involving Rhodesia.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Israeli UN ambassador Yosef Tekoah did not attend the debate because of the Jewish<br />

holiday of Rosh Hashanah. But Israel's cause was well defended--by <strong>Bush</strong>. According to<br />

an Israeli journalist observing the proceedings who was quoted by the Washington Post,<br />

"<strong>Bush</strong> sounds more pro-Israeli than Tekoah would have." [fn 24]<br />

Later in 1972, attempts were made by non-aligned states and the UN Secretariat to<br />

arrange the indispensable basis for a Middle East pesce settlement-- the withdrawal of<br />

Israel from the territories occupied during the 1967 war. Once again, <strong>Bush</strong> was more<br />

Zionist than the Israelis.<br />

In Februaty of 1972, the UN's Middle East mediator, Gunnar Jarring of Norway, had<br />

asked that the Security Council reaffirm the original contents of resolution 242 of 1967<br />

by reiterating that Israel should surrender Arab territory seized in 1967. "Land for peace"<br />

was anathema to the Israeli government then as now. <strong>Bush</strong> undertook to blunt this nonalligned<br />

peace bid.

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