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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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<strong>Bush</strong>, Eban "observed...that on political grounds Israel not have any reference [sic] to<br />

Jarring but appreciated that parliamentary reasons may dictate need for some thing. Both<br />

Eban and Tekoah summed up that from Israel point of view, best course would be to limit<br />

resolution language to 'complimentary reference to Jarring.'"<br />

What all these machinations finally yielded was a resolution that passed with the United<br />

States abstaining and Israel opposed. At the same time, the US promised Israel a<br />

continuing supply of Phantom jets, and there was war in the Middle East before the year<br />

was out, just as Kissinger had planned.<br />

<strong>Bush</strong> himself has always been reluctant about flaunting his own impeccable Zionist<br />

credentials, probably because of his desire to maintain close ties to the money and power<br />

centers of the Arab world. In his campaign autobiography, <strong>Bush</strong> seeks repeatedly to<br />

profile himself as a target of the extremists of the Jewish Defense League. On one<br />

occasion, <strong>Bush</strong> recounts, he was accosted at the entrance to the US mission to the United<br />

Nations by Rabbi Meir Kahane, the leader of the JDL. "Why won't you talk to me? All I<br />

want is a dialogue," said Kahane, according to <strong>Bush</strong>'s account. <strong>Bush</strong> says he refused to<br />

stop, but told Kahane in passing: "Because I've seen your idea of a dialogue-those shots<br />

fired into the Soviet Embassy, and I don't condone your group's violence any more than<br />

violence directed at Jews by Arab terrorists," which was a marvel of even-handed<br />

rhetoric in full career. Another <strong>Bush</strong> anecdote of unconfirmed veracity is attributed by<br />

Fitzhugh Green to New York East Side restauranteur Walter J. Ganzi, who recounted<br />

after the 1988 election that <strong>Bush</strong> had pacified and dispersed a menacing crowd of several<br />

thousand angry JDL demonstrators one day by making an impromptu speech suffused<br />

with leadership charisma. <strong>Bush</strong>'s admirers claim that he was responsible for Nixon's<br />

creation of a new police force, the Executive Protective Service, which is assigned to<br />

guard foreign officials visiting the US. [fn 25]<br />

From January 28 through February 4, 1972, the Security Council held its first meeting in<br />

twenty years outside of New York City. <strong>The</strong> venue chosen was Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.<br />

<strong>Bush</strong> made this the occasion for a trip through the Sudan, Kenya, Zambia, Zaire, Gabon,<br />

Nigeria, Chad, and Botswana. <strong>Bush</strong> later told a House subcommittee hearing that this was<br />

his second trip to Africa, with the preceding one having been a junket to Egypt and Libya<br />

"in 1963 or 1964." [fn 26] During this trip <strong>Bush</strong> met with seven chiefs of state, including<br />

President Mobutu of Zaire, Emperor Haile Selassie of Ethiopia, President Tombalbaye of<br />

Chad, and President Nimeiri of the Sudan.<br />

At the meeting in Addis Ababa, <strong>Bush</strong> was blind-sided by a speech delivered by the<br />

delegate of Panama, one of the rotating members of the Security Council. <strong>The</strong> Panamian<br />

representative, Aquilino Boyd, vigorously attacked the US "occupation" of the Panana<br />

Canal Zone. <strong>Bush</strong> was forced into parliamentary manuevering to avoid further discussion<br />

of the Panamanian complaint, claiming that Boyd was out of order in that the Canal Zone<br />

matter was not on the agenda, which was supposed to be oriented towards African<br />

matters. This marks one of <strong>Bush</strong>'s earliest public encounters with the Panama issue,<br />

which was destined to become his bloody obsession during the first year of his<br />

presidency. [fn 27]

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