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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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at the time of the US Revolution. We are not going to give up on the United Nations,<br />

which commits itself to peaceful change." [fn 31]<br />

<strong>The</strong> second revealing exchange involved <strong>Bush</strong>'s relation to the policies that he was<br />

carrying out. Asked by Congressman Diggs to pinpoint where decisions on Rhodesian<br />

policy and related issues were made, <strong>Bush</strong> replied: "That is something you can never do<br />

in the State Department." He then went on to describe his relations to machinery of<br />

policy making: "I would be happy to take responsibility for it [the Rhodesian vote], if you<br />

are looking for somebody to do that, because I am the President's representative to the<br />

United Nations, and the buck stops with some of these things with me. But I don't profess<br />

to be that big a deal that I can say this is the way it is going to be, and that is the way it<br />

happens. But in terms of responsibility for this position, I would be happy to accept it."<br />

<strong>The</strong>n <strong>Bush</strong> added: "I do think that there is room for some criticism about the kind of<br />

facelessness of the process, but I would say for these resolutions, or anything that we<br />

have done in terms of policy, whether it is subcontinent, or Middle East, or China, I have<br />

been in accord with these major decisions, and I take the responsibility for them as the<br />

presidentially appointed representative to the United Nations. Yet I sometimes am<br />

frustrated by the machinery, I must say."<br />

One senses that this is <strong>Bush</strong>'s pledge of personal allegiance to the Kissinger policies that<br />

dominated in the areas he mentions, and that his frustration is reserved for the passive<br />

resistance that still from time to time merged from the Rogers State Department. Among<br />

other things, <strong>Bush</strong> was endorsing the Nixon-Kissinger regime's support for the military<br />

junta of the Greek colonels, a matter which became a minor issue in the 1988 presidential<br />

campaign.<br />

As the former Guyana Foreign Minister Fred Wills has pointed out in several speaking<br />

engagements for the Schiller Institute over recent years, the United States Ambassador to<br />

the United Nations presides over an immense covert apparatus of espionage, armtwisting,<br />

intimidation, entrapment, and blackmail, all directed against foreign delegates<br />

whom the US is seeking to compromise, bribe, or turn. <strong>The</strong> gambits habitually employed<br />

in this brutal and squalid game range from baskets of fruit delivered to the hotel rooms<br />

and residences of ambassadors and ministers, to the deployment of a stable of male and<br />

female sex operatives to entrap unwary foreign diplomats, to black-bag operations and<br />

occasional wetwork. It may also be relevant that the Mayor of New York City during<br />

these years was John V. Lindsay, a Yale graduate and Skull and Bones member, with<br />

whom <strong>Bush</strong> had dealings on matters of police and security policy affecting the UN<br />

diplomatic community.<br />

In the course of the many Congressional investigations of domestic covert operations<br />

during the Watergate period, attention was called to a number of mysterious and unsolved<br />

break-ins related to United Nations functions which took place in the New York area<br />

during the approximate time that <strong>George</strong> <strong>Bush</strong> was UN ambassador, which was from<br />

February 1971 until January 1973. <strong>The</strong>se included a break-in at the home of Victor<br />

Rioseco, an economic counselor for the Chilean mission to the United Nations, on<br />

February 10, 1971; a break-in at the home of Humberto Diaz-Casaneuva, the Chilean

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