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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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stabilization is fundamental to any effective strategy....<strong>The</strong> US should encourage LDC<br />

leaders to take the lead in advancing family planning." When NSSM 200 goes on to ask,<br />

"would food be considered an instrument of national power?" it is clear to all that active<br />

measures of genocide are at the heart of the policy being propounded. A later Kissinger<br />

report praises the Chinese communist leadership for their committment to population<br />

control. During 1975, these Chinese communists, Henry Kissinger and <strong>George</strong> <strong>Bush</strong> were<br />

to team up to create a demonstration model of the NSSM 200 policy: the Pol Pot regime<br />

in Cambodia.<br />

During the time that <strong>Bush</strong> was in Beijing, the fighting in Vietnam came to an end as the<br />

South Vietnamese army collapsed in the face of a large-scale invasion from the north.<br />

<strong>The</strong> insane adventure of Vietnam had been organized by <strong>Bush</strong>'s own Brown Brothers,<br />

Harriman/Skull and Bones network. When John F. Kennedy had been elected president in<br />

1960, he had turned to Brown Brothers, Harriman partner Robert Lovett to provide him a<br />

list of likely choices for his cabinet. From this list were drawn Rusk and McNamara, the<br />

leadings hawks in the cabinet. Mc<strong>George</strong> and William Bundy, descendants of the<br />

Lowells of Boston, but closely related to the Stimson-Acheson circles, were mainstays of<br />

the party of escalation. Henry Cabot Lodge was the US Ambassador in Saigon when the<br />

Harriman had insisted on assassinating President Diem, the leader of the country the US<br />

was supposedly defending. Harriman, starting as assistant secretary for Southeast Asian<br />

affairs, had worked his way up through the Kennedy-Johnson State Department with the<br />

same program of expanding the war. Now that Harriman-Lovett policy had led to the<br />

inevitable debacle. But the post-war suffering of southeast Asia was only beginning.<br />

Target Cambodia<br />

One of the gambits used by Kissinger to demonstrate to the Beijing communist leaders<br />

the utility of rapprochement with the US was the unhappy nation of Cambodia. <strong>The</strong> pro-<br />

US government of Cambodia was headed by Marshal Lon Nol, who had taken power in<br />

1970, the year of the public and massive US ground incursion into the country. By the<br />

spring of 1975, while the North Vietnamese advanced on Saigon, the Lon Nol<br />

government was fighting for its life against the armed insurrection of the Khmer Rouge<br />

communist guerillas, who were supported by mainland China. Kissinger was as anxious<br />

as usual to serve the interests of Beijing, and now even more so, because of the alleged<br />

need to increase the power of the Chinese and their assets, the Khmer rouge, against the<br />

triumphant North Vietnamese. <strong>The</strong> most important consideration remained to ally with<br />

China, the second strongest land power, against the USSR. Secondarily, it was important<br />

to maintain the balance of power in Southeast Asia as the US policy collapsed.<br />

Kissinger's policy was therefore to jettison the Lon Nol government, and to replace it<br />

with the Khmer rouge. <strong>George</strong> <strong>Bush</strong>, as Kissinger's liaison man in Beijing, was one of the<br />

instruments through which this policy was executed. <strong>Bush</strong> did his part, and the result is<br />

known to world history under the heading of the Pol Pot regime, which committed a<br />

genocide against its own population proportionally greater than any other in recent world<br />

history.

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