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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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getting into," but on the basis of a month I'm very happy. Sure, the place is very different<br />

but I wanted a change of pace. What the hell, I'm 50. It won't hurt anything," said <strong>Bush</strong><br />

with a whining note of self-pity. [fn 5] <strong>The</strong> self-pity was a deception this time, since, as<br />

we will see, <strong>Bush</strong> had plenty to do in Beijing. <strong>The</strong> US Liason Office was located in a<br />

walled compound in an area occupied by other foreign missions in a Beijing suburb. A<br />

guard from the People's Liberation Army was posted outside at all times. <strong>Bush</strong> told<br />

Oberdorfer that he started the day with the news on the Voice of America, followed by a<br />

yoghurt breakfast, then staff meetings and attempts at China-watching deciphering of the<br />

editorials of Ren Min Ribao (<strong>The</strong> People's Daily). At 11:40, <strong>Bush</strong> and Barbara received<br />

their Chinese lesson from their Mandarin teacher, Mrs. Tang. <strong>The</strong>n came a multicourse<br />

lunch. Wednesday and Saturday afternoons were time off, as well as Sundays. <strong>Bush</strong> tried<br />

to attract attention by riding a bicycle to diplomatic engagements. "Everybody was<br />

astonished, particularly because it was so different from the dignified manner of David<br />

Bruce," said one diplomat. "I think the Chinese probably thought they were doing it for<br />

effect." <strong>George</strong> was having back trouble, and found an osteopath to treat his back at a<br />

public bathhouse. <strong>Bush</strong>'s attention-getting ploys had some effect on the Beijing of Mao<br />

Tse-tung, or at least on the foreigners. "<strong>Bush</strong> is an instant success around here, " said a<br />

Canadian newsman. "<strong>The</strong> real test will come, though, when the novelty wears off and his<br />

enthusiasm runs down."<br />

NSSM 200<br />

When <strong>Bush</strong> had been in Beijing for about a month, Henry Kissinger arrived for one of his<br />

periodic visits to discuss current business with the Beijing leadership. Kissinger arrived<br />

with his usual army of retainers and Secret Service guards. During this visit, <strong>Bush</strong> went<br />

with Kissinger to see Vice-Premier Deng Xiao-ping and Foreign Minister Qiao. This was<br />

one of four reported visits by Kissinger that would punctuate <strong>Bush</strong>'s stay.<br />

<strong>Bush</strong>'s tenure in Beijing must be understood in the context of the Malthusian and frankly<br />

genocidal policies of the Kissinger White House. <strong>The</strong>se are aptly summed up for<br />

reference in the recently declassified National Security Study Memorandum 200,<br />

"Implications of Worldwide Population Growth for US Security and Overseas Interests,"<br />

dated December 10, 1974. [fn 6] NSSM 200, a joint effort by Kissinger and his deputy<br />

General Brent Scowcroft, provided a hit list of 13 developing countries for which the<br />

NSC posited a "special US political and strategic interest" in population reduction or<br />

limitation. <strong>The</strong> list included India, Bengladesh, Pakistan, Nigeria, Mexico, Indonesia,<br />

Brazil, the Philippines, Thailand, Egypt, Turkey, Ethiopia, and Colombia. Demographic<br />

growth in these and other third world nations was to be halted and if possible reversed for<br />

the brutal reason that population growth represented increased strategic, and military<br />

power for the countries in question.<br />

Population growth, argues NSSM 200, will also increase pressure for the economic and<br />

industrial development of these countries, an eventuality which the study sees as a threat<br />

to the United States. In addition, bigger populations in the third world are alleged to lead<br />

to higher prices and greater scarcity of strategic raw materials. As Kissinger summed up:<br />

"Development of a worldwide political and popular committment to population

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