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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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and significant political pressure to repudiate them. <strong>Bush</strong> wanted to go to China because<br />

he found Chinese communists genuinely congenial.<br />

When <strong>Bush</strong> was about to leave for China, his crony Dean Burch (no longer troubled, as<br />

we see, by <strong>Bush</strong>'s dermal diarrhea) arranged for a fifteen minute sendoff meeting with<br />

Ford, but this was reduced to 10 minutes by NSC director Scowcroft, at that time the<br />

most important Kissinger clone of them all. Before he left for Beijing, <strong>Bush</strong> could not<br />

resist making some sententious and self-serving pronouncements to the press about his<br />

experience in Watergate. He told David Broder of the Washington Post: "We've done a<br />

lot of running just to stay in place, and I was sometimes depressed by the amount of<br />

bickering that goes on. But then I look across town at Bob Strauss and his problems, and<br />

I feel like this was a 20-month honeymoon." Bob Strauss was at this time <strong>Bush</strong>'s<br />

counterpart at the Democratic National Committee. <strong>Bush</strong> noted that there was<br />

"philosophical discontent" among right-wing Republicans about the policies of Nixon<br />

and Ford, but opined that these would never lead to a third party on the right. <strong>Bush</strong><br />

defended "patronage" and said he was "worried about the health of the two-party system"<br />

even though he worried that this cause is "really not very popular right now." [fn 4]<br />

<strong>Bush</strong>'s staff in Beijing included deputy chief of mission John Holdridge, Don Anderson,<br />

Herbert Horowitz, Bill Thomas, and <strong>Bush</strong>'s "executive assistant," Jennifer Fitzgerald,<br />

who has remained very close to <strong>Bush</strong>, and who has sometimes been rumored to be his<br />

mistress. Jennifer Fitzgerald in 1991 was the deputy chief of protocol in the White<br />

House; when German Chacellor Kohl visited <strong>Bush</strong> in the sping of 1991, he was greeted<br />

on the White House steps by Jennifer Fitzgerald. <strong>Bush</strong>'s closest contacts among Chinese<br />

officialdom included vice minister of foreign affairs Qiao Guanhua and his wife Zhang<br />

Hanzhi, also a top official of the foreign ministry. This is the same Qiao who is<br />

repeatedly mentioned in Kissinger's memoirs as one of his most important Red Chinese<br />

diplomatic interlocutors. This is the "Lord Qiao" enigmatically mentioned by Mao during<br />

Kissinger's meeting with Mao and Zhou En-lai on November 12, 1973. Qiao and Zhang<br />

later lost power because they sided with the left extremist Gang of Four after the death of<br />

Mao in 1976, <strong>Bush</strong> tells us. But in 1974-75, the power of the proto-Gang of Four faction<br />

was at its height, and it was towards this group that <strong>Bush</strong> quickly gravitated. In moving<br />

instinctively towards the hardline Mao faction, <strong>Bush</strong> was also doubtless aware of of<br />

Mao's connections with the Yale in China program around the time of the First World<br />

War. <strong>The</strong> Skull and Bones network could turn up in unexpected places.<br />

<strong>Bush</strong> and Barbara were careful to create the impression that they were rusticating away in<br />

Beijing. Barbara told Don Oberdorfer in early December: "Back in Washington or at the<br />

United Nations the telephone was ringing all the time. <strong>George</strong> would come home and say,<br />

excuse me, and pick up the phone. It's very different here. In the first five weeks I think<br />

he received two telephone calls, except for the ones from me. I try to call him once a day.<br />

I think he misses the phone as much as anything."<br />

Was Mrs. <strong>Bush</strong> being entirely candid? Even if she was, <strong>Bush</strong> could console himself and<br />

his hyperkinetic thyroid with the fact that if there were no calls, there were also no<br />

subpoenas. <strong>Bush</strong> himself added: "A lot of people said, 'You don't know what you're

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