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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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CIA Director, if he got that far, he would have to spend "the next six months serving as<br />

point man for a controversial agency being investigated by two major Congressional<br />

committees. <strong>The</strong> scars left by that experience would put me out of contention, leaving the<br />

spot open for others." [fn 20] <strong>Bush</strong> suggests that "the Langley thing" was the handiwork<br />

of Donald Rumsfeld, who had a leading role in designing the reshuffle. (Some time later<br />

William Simon confided privately that he himself had been targetted for proscription by<br />

"Rummy," who was more interested in the Treasury than he was in the Pentagon.)<br />

On All Saints' Day, November 1, 1975, <strong>Bush</strong> received a telegram from Kissinger<br />

informing him that "the President is planning to announce some major personnel shifts on<br />

Monday, November 3, at 7:30 PM, Washington time. Among those shifts will be the<br />

transfer of Bill Colby from CIA. <strong>The</strong> President asks that you consent to his nominating<br />

you as the new director of the Central Intelligence Agency." [fn 21]<br />

<strong>Bush</strong> promptly accepted.<br />

NOTES:<br />

1. Al Reinert, "Bob and <strong>George</strong> Go To Washington or <strong>The</strong> Post-Watergate Scramble" in Texas Monthly,<br />

April 1974.<br />

2. <strong>Bush</strong> and Gold, Looking Forward, p. 130.<br />

3. Walter Pincus and Bob Woodward, "Presidential Posts and Dashed Hopes," Washington Post, August 9,<br />

1988.<br />

4. Washington Post, September 16, 1974.<br />

5. Washington Post, December 2, 1974.<br />

6. See Hassan Ahmed and Joseph Brewda, "Kissinger, Scowcroft, <strong>Bush</strong> Plotted Third World Genocide,"<br />

Executive Intelligence Review, May 3, 1991, pp. 26-30.<br />

7. Russell R. Ross ed., Cambodia: A Country Study (Washington, 1990), p. 46.<br />

8. Kissinger, Years of Upheaval (Boston, 1982), p. 341. This second volume of Kissinger's memoirs,<br />

published when his close ally <strong>Bush</strong> had already become vice president, has much less to say about <strong>George</strong>'s<br />

activities, with only one reference to him in more than 1200 pages. We see again that <strong>Bush</strong> prefers that<br />

most of his actual record remain covert.<br />

9. Kissinger, Years of Upheaval, p. 367.<br />

10. Kissinger, Years of Upheaval, p. 681.<br />

11. See William Shawcross, Sideshow: Kissinger, Nixon, and the Destruction of Cambodia (New York,<br />

1987), pp. 360-361.

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