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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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<strong>Bush</strong> in Addis Ababa voted in favor of two resolutions on Namibia, one of which set up<br />

the machinery under which the UN Secretary General was empowered to contact the<br />

South African government about the status of the trusteeship territory usurped by<br />

Pretoria. <strong>Bush</strong> thought that this first Namibia resolution had been "the most positive thing<br />

that came out." <strong>Bush</strong> also voted for a further resolution on apartheid, and abstained on the<br />

resolutions concerning Portuguese colionies and on Rhodesia. <strong>Bush</strong>'s vote on the<br />

Rhodesian resolution amounted to a vote of confidence in a mission led by the British<br />

Lord Pearce on the Rhodesian question, a mission which many African states opposed.<br />

At a press conference in Addis Ababa, African journalists destabilized <strong>Bush</strong> with<br />

aggressive questions about the US policy of ignoring mandatory UN economic sanctions<br />

against the racist, white supremacist Ian Smith regime in Rhodesia. <strong>The</strong> Security Council<br />

had imposed the mandatory sanctions, but later the US Congrsss had passed, and Nixon<br />

had signed into law, legislation incorporating the so-called Byrd amendment, which<br />

allowed the US president to import chrome from Rhodesia in the event of shortages of<br />

that strategic raw material. Chrome was readily available on the world market, especially<br />

from the USSR, although the Soviet chrome was more expensive than the Rhodesian<br />

chrome. In his Congressional testimony, <strong>Bush</strong> whined at length about the extensive<br />

criticism of this declared US policy of breaching the Rhodesian sanctions on the part of<br />

"those who are just using this to really hammer us from a propaganda standpoint." "We<br />

have taken the rap on this thing," complained <strong>Bush</strong>. "We have taken the heat on it." "We<br />

have taken a great deal of abuse from those who wanted to embarrass us in Africa, to<br />

emphasize the negative and not the positive in the United Nations." <strong>Bush</strong> talked of his<br />

own efforts at damage control on the issue of US support for the racist Rhodesian regime:<br />

"...what we are trying to do is to restrict any hypocrisy we are accused of." "I certainly<br />

don't think the US position should be that the Congress was trying to further colonialism<br />

and racism in this action it took," <strong>Bush</strong> told the Congressmen. "In the UN, I get the<br />

feeling we are categorized as imperialists and colonialists, and I make clear this is not<br />

what America stands for, but nevertheless it is repeated over and over and over again," he<br />

whined. [fn 28]<br />

During the hearings, <strong>Bush</strong> was confronted by Congressman Diggs with an account<br />

published in the Los Angeles Times of February 26, 1972, according to which the US had<br />

threatened to use the veto against a draft resolution stating that all sanctions against<br />

Rhodesia should remain fully in force until the people of Rhodesia had freely and equally<br />

exercised their right to self-determination. Rep. Diggs referred to a report in this article<br />

that the African and third world sponsors of this resolution had been forced to water it<br />

down in order to avoid a veto to be cast by <strong>Bush</strong>. <strong>Bush</strong> ducked any direct answer on this<br />

behind-the-scenes veto threat. "...we simply cannot, given the restrictions placed on us by<br />

law, appear to be two-faced on these things," <strong>Bush</strong> told Diggs.<br />

Some weeks later, <strong>Bush</strong> gave a lecture to students at Tulane University in New Orleans,<br />

where he announced that the US was now using the provisions of the Byrd amendment<br />

actually to purchase Rhodesian chrome, and conceded that this was indeed a violation of<br />

the UN economic sanctions. Noting that the policy was causing the Nixon regime<br />

"considerable embarrassment," <strong>Bush</strong> nevertheless defended the chrome purchases, saying

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