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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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this another one of the falsifications with which his official biographies are studded? <strong>The</strong><br />

world must await the opening of the Beijing and Foggy Bottom archives. In the<br />

meantime, we must take a moment to contemplate that gathering of October, 1975 in<br />

Chairman Mao's private villa, secluded behind many courtyards and screens in the<br />

Chungnanhai enclave of Chinese rulers not far from the Great Hall of the People and<br />

Tien An Men, where less than a year later an initial round of pro-democracy<br />

demonstrations would be put down in blood in the wake of the funeral of Zhou En-lai.<br />

Mao, Kissinger, and <strong>Bush</strong>: has history ever seen a tete-a-tete of such mass murderers?<br />

Mao, identifying himself with Chin Shih Huang, the first emperor of all of China and<br />

founder of the Chin dynasty, who had built the Great Wall, burned the books, and killed<br />

the Confucian scholars-- this Mao had massacred ten per cent of his own people, ravaged<br />

Korea, strangled Tibet. Kissinger's crimes were endless, from the Middle East to<br />

Vietnam, from the oil crisis of 73-74 with the endless death in the Sahel to India-<br />

Pakistan, Chile, and many more. Kissinger, Mao, and <strong>Bush</strong> had collaborated to install the<br />

Pol Pot Khmer Rouge regime in Cambodia, which was now approaching the zenith of its<br />

genocidal career. Compared to the other two, <strong>Bush</strong> may have appeared as an apprentice<br />

of genocide: he had done some filibustering in the Caribbean, had been part of the<br />

cheering section for the Indonesia massacres of 1965, and then he had become a part of<br />

the Kissinger apparatus, sharing in the responsibility for India-Pakistan, the Middle East,<br />

Cambodia. But as <strong>Bush</strong> advanced through his personal cursus honorum, his power and<br />

his genocidal dexterity were growing, foreshadowing such future triumphs as the<br />

devastation of El Chorillo in Panama in December, 1989, and his later masterwork of<br />

savagery, the Gulf war of 1991. By the time of <strong>Bush</strong>'s administration, Anglo-American<br />

finance and the International Monetary Fund were averaging some 50,000,000 needless<br />

deaths per year in the developing sector.<br />

But Mao, Kissinger, and <strong>Bush</strong> exchanged pleasantries that day in Mao's sitting room in<br />

Chungnanhai. If the shades of Hitler or Stalin had sought admission to that colloqium,<br />

they might have been denied entrance. Later, in early December, Gerald Ford,<br />

accompanied by his hapless wife and daughter, came to see the moribund Mao for what<br />

amounted to a photo opportunity with a living cadaver. <strong>The</strong> AP wire issued that day<br />

hyped the fact that Mao had talked with Ford for 1 hour and fifty minutes, nearly twice as<br />

long as the Great Steersman had given to Nixon in 1972. Participants in this meeting<br />

included Kissinger, <strong>Bush</strong>, Scowcroft, and Winston Lord. Even such Kissingerian heavies<br />

as Undersecretary of State Joseph Sisco, Assistant Secretary of State for East Asian and<br />

Pacific Affairs, and Richard Solomon of the NSC were not allowed to stay for the<br />

meeting. <strong>Bush</strong> was now truly a leading Kissinger clone. A joint communique issued after<br />

this session said that Mao and Ford had had "earnest and significant discussions ...on<br />

wide-ranging issues in a friendly atmosphere." At this meeting, Chairman Mao greeted<br />

<strong>Bush</strong> with the words, "You've been promoted." Mao turned to Ford, and added: "We hate<br />

to see him go." At a private lunch with Vice Premier Deng Xiao-ping, the rising star of<br />

the post-Mao succession, Deng assured <strong>Bush</strong> that he was considered a friend of the<br />

Chinese Communist hierarchy who would always be welcome in China, "even as head of<br />

the CIA." For, as we will see, this was to be the next stop on <strong>Bush</strong>'s cursus honorum.<br />

Later Kissinger and <strong>Bush</strong> also met with Qiao Guanhua, still the Foreign Minister.

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