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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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As <strong>Bush</strong> himself slyly notes: "<strong>The</strong> United States didn't maintain formal diplomatic<br />

relations with the People's Republic at the time, so my appointment wouldn't need Senate<br />

confirmation." An asterisk sends us to the additional fact that "because I'd been<br />

ambassador to the United Nations I carried the title 'ambassador' to China." <strong>The</strong> person<br />

that would have to be convinced, <strong>Bush</strong> correctly noted, was Henry Kissinger, who<br />

monopolized all decisions on his prized China card. [fn 2] But <strong>George</strong> was right about the<br />

confirmation. Official diplomatic relations between the US and mainland China came<br />

only with the Carter China card of 1979. In 1974, what <strong>Bush</strong> was asking for was the US<br />

Laison Office (USLO), which did not have the official status of an embassy. <strong>The</strong> chief of<br />

that office was the president's personal representative in China, but it was a post that did<br />

not require senate confirmation.<br />

<strong>Bush</strong>'s notorious crony Robert Mosbacher, certainly well versed enough to qualify as a<br />

conoisseur of sleaze, was uncharacteristically close to the heart of the matter when he<br />

opined that in late August, 1974, <strong>Bush</strong> "wanted to get as far away from the stench [of<br />

Watergate] as possible." [fn 3] Like Don Gregg in 1989, <strong>Bush</strong> wanted to get out of town<br />

and let things blow over for a while. His own story that Beijing would be a "challenge, a<br />

journey into the unknown" is pure tripe. More imaginative, but equally mendacious is the<br />

late Dean Burch's explanation that <strong>Bush</strong> had "a Marco Polo complex, thinking he could<br />

pentrate the mystery of the place." <strong>The</strong> truth is that with Washington teeming with<br />

Congressional committees, special prosecutors, grand juries, all in a furor of ostracism,<br />

<strong>Bush</strong> wanted to get as far away as he could, and Beijing was ideal.<br />

Other attractions inherent in the Beijing posting are suggested by the fact that <strong>Bush</strong>'s<br />

predecessor in Beijing was David K.E. Bruce, who had opened the liason office in<br />

March, 1973. Bruce had been the chief of the London bureau of the Office of Strategic<br />

Services during World War II, which meant that he had been the boss of all European<br />

OSS operations, including Allen Dulles in Switzerland and all the rest. <strong>The</strong> presence in<br />

Beijing of Bruce, a true eminence grise of Anglo-American intelligence, points up the<br />

importance of the post, especially in the covert and intelligence domain.<br />

Otherwise, as <strong>Bush</strong> has already mentioned, serving in Beijing meant further close<br />

subordination to Henry Kissinger. Kissinger told <strong>Bush</strong> before he left that policy would be<br />

implemented directly by Kissinger himself, in contact with the Chinese liaison in<br />

Washington and the Chinese representative at the United Nations. In practice, <strong>Bush</strong><br />

would be ordered about by such Kissinger clones as Richard Solomon of the NSC,<br />

Assistant Secretary of State Philip Habib, and Winston Lord, director of the State<br />

Department's Policy Planning Staff and the scion of an old Skull and Bones family. But<br />

then again, <strong>Bush</strong> was a leading Kissinger clone in his own right.<br />

Finally, anyone who has observed <strong>Bush</strong>'s stubborn, obsessive, morally insane support for<br />

Deng Xiao-ping, Li Peng, and Yang Shankun during the aftermath of the Tien An Men<br />

massacre of June, 1989 is driven towards the conclusion that <strong>Bush</strong> gravitated towards<br />

China because of an elective affinity, because of a profound attraction for the methods<br />

and outlook of Chinese leaders like Mao Tse-tung, Chou En-lai, and Deng, for whom<br />

<strong>Bush</strong> has manifested a steadfast and unshakeable devotion in the face of heinous crimes

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