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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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10. Robert T. Hartmann Files, Box 20.<br />

11. Walter Pincus and Bob Woodward, "Presidential Posts and Dashed Hopes," Washington Post, August<br />

9, 1988.<br />

Chapter -XIV- <strong>Bush</strong> in Beijing<br />

Whatever benign star it is that tends <strong>George</strong> <strong>Bush</strong>'s destiny, lights his ambition, it was early on<br />

trapped in the flawed orbit of Richard Nixon. <strong>Bush</strong>'s meteoric ascent, in a decade's time, from<br />

county GOP chairman to national chairman, including his prestigious ambassadorship to the<br />

United Nations, was due largely to the strong tug of Nixonian gravity. Likewise, his blunted hopes<br />

and dimmed future, like the Comet Kohoutek, result from the too-close approach to a fatal sun. [fn<br />

1]<br />

Several minutes before Ford appeared for the first time before the television cameras with<br />

Nelson Rockefeller, his vice president designate, he had placed a call to <strong>Bush</strong> to inform<br />

him that he had not been chosen, and to reassure him that he would be offered an<br />

important post as a consolation. Two days later, <strong>Bush</strong> met Ford at the White House. <strong>Bush</strong><br />

claims that Ford told him that he could choose between a future as US envoy to the Court<br />

of St. James in London, or presenting his credentials to the Palais de l'Elysee in Paris.<br />

<strong>Bush</strong> would have us believe that he then told Ford that he wanted neither London nor<br />

Paris, but Beijing. <strong>Bush</strong>'s accounts then portray Ford, never the quickest, as tamping his<br />

pipe, scratching his head, and asking, "Why Beijing?" Here <strong>Bush</strong> is lying once again.<br />

Ford was certainly no genius, but no one was better situated than he to know that it would<br />

have been utter folly to propose <strong>Bush</strong> for an ambassadorship that had to be approved by<br />

the Senate.<br />

Why Beijing? <strong>The</strong> first consideration, and it was an imperative one, was that under no<br />

circumstances could <strong>Bush</strong> face Senate confirmation hearings for any executive branch<br />

appointment for at least one to two years. <strong>The</strong>re would have been questions about the<br />

Townhouse slush fund, about his intervention on Carmine Bellino, perhaps about Leon<br />

and Russell, and about many other acutely embarrassing themes. All of the reasons which<br />

had led Ford to exclude <strong>Bush</strong> as vice president, for which he would have needed the<br />

approval of both Houses of Congress, were valid in ruling out any nomination that had to<br />

get past the senate. After Watergate, <strong>Bush</strong>'s name was just too smelly to send up to the<br />

Hill for any reason, despite all the power of the usual Brown Brother, Harriman/Skull and<br />

Bones network mobilization. It would take time to cauterize certain lesions and to cool<br />

off certain investigative tracks. Certain scandals had to be fixed. Perhaps in a year or two<br />

things might cool down, and the climate of opinion alter. But while the psychology of<br />

Watergate dominated the legislative branch, a high-profile job for <strong>Bush</strong> was out of the<br />

question.

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