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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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Chapter -XV- CIA DIRECTOR<br />

In late 1975, as a result in particular of his role in Watergate, <strong>Bush</strong>'s confirmation as CIA<br />

Director was not automatic. And though the debate at his confirmation was superificial,<br />

some senators, including in particular the late Frank Church of Idaho, made some<br />

observations about the dangers inherent in the <strong>Bush</strong> nomination that have turned out in<br />

retrospect to be useful.<br />

<strong>The</strong> political scene on the homefront from which <strong>Bush</strong> had been so anxious to be absent<br />

during 1975 was the so-called "Year of Intelligence," in that it had been a year of intense<br />

scrutiny of the illegal activities and abuses of the intelligence community, including CIA<br />

domestic and covert operations. On December 22, 1974 the New York Times published<br />

the first of a series of articles by Seymour M. Hersh which relied on leaked reports of<br />

CIA activities assembled by Director James Rodney Schlesinger to expose alleged<br />

misdeeds by the agency.<br />

It was widely recognized at the time that the Hersh articles were a self-exposure by the<br />

CIA that was designed to set the agenda for the Ford-appointed Rockefeller Commission,<br />

which was set up a few days later, on January 4, 1975. <strong>The</strong> Rockefeller Commission<br />

members included John T. Connor, C. Douglas Dillon, Erwin N. Griswold, Lane<br />

Kirkland, Lyman Lemnitzer, Ronald Reagan, and Edgar F. Shannon, Jr. <strong>The</strong> Rockefeller<br />

Commission was supposed to examine the malfeasance of the intelligence agencies and<br />

make recommendations about how they could be reorganized and reformed. In reality,<br />

the Rockefeller Commission proposals would reflect the transition from the structures of<br />

the cold war towards the growing totalitarian tendencies of the 1980's.<br />

While the Rockefeller Commission was a tightly controlled vehicle of the Eastern<br />

Anglophile liberal establishment, Congressional investigating committees were<br />

empaneled during 1975 whose proceedings were somewhat less rigidly controlled. <strong>The</strong>se<br />

included the Senate Intelligence Committee, known as the Church Committee, and the<br />

corresponding House committee, first chaired by Rep. Lucien Nedzi (who had previously<br />

chaired one of the principal Watergate-era probes) and then (after July) by Rep. Otis

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