19.12.2012 Views

George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

Create successful ePaper yourself

Turn your PDF publications into a flip-book with our unique Google optimized e-Paper software.

political parking spot," and that public confidence in the CIA had to be restored after the<br />

recent revelations of wrongdoing.<br />

After a long-winded argument, <strong>George</strong> Will came to the conclusion that Ambassador<br />

<strong>Bush</strong> at the CIA would be "the wrong kind of guy at the wrong place at the worst<br />

possible time."<br />

Senator Church viewed the <strong>Bush</strong> appointment in the context of a letter sent to him by<br />

Ford on October 31, 1975, demanding that the committee's report on US assassination<br />

plots against foreign leaders be kept secret. In Church's opinion, these two developments<br />

were part of a pattern, and amounted to a new stonewalling defense by what Church had<br />

called "the rogue elephant." Church issued a press statement in response to Ford's letter<br />

attempting to impose a blackout on the assassination report. "I am astonished that<br />

President Ford wants to suppress the committee's report on assassination and keep it<br />

concealed from the American people," said Church. <strong>The</strong>n, on November 3, Church was<br />

approached by reporters outside of his Senate hearing room and asked by Daniel Schorr<br />

about the firing of Colby and his likely replacement by <strong>Bush</strong>. Church responded with a<br />

voice that was trembling with anger. "<strong>The</strong>re is no question in my mind but that<br />

concealment is the new order of the day," he said. "Hiding evil is the trademark of a<br />

totalitarian government." [fn 3]. Schorr said that he had never seen Church so upset.<br />

<strong>The</strong> following day, November 4, Church read Leslie Gelb's column in the New York<br />

Times suggesting that Colby had been fired, among other things, "for not doing a good<br />

job containing the Congressional investigations." <strong>George</strong> <strong>Bush</strong>, Gelb thought, "would be<br />

able to go to Congress and ask for a grace period before pressing their investigations<br />

further. A Washington Star headline of this period summed up this argument: "CIA<br />

NEEDS BUSH'S PR TALENT." Church talked with his staff that day about what he saw<br />

as an ominous pattern of events. He told reporters: "First came the very determined<br />

administration effort to prevent any revelations concerning NSA, their stonewalling of<br />

public hearings. <strong>The</strong>n came the president's letter. Now comes the firing of Colby, Mr.<br />

Schlesinger, and the general belief that Secretary Kissinger is behind these latest<br />

developments." For Church, "clearly a pattern has emerged now to try and disrupt this<br />

[Senate Intelligence Committee] investigation. As far as I'm concerned, it won't be<br />

disrupted," said Church grimly.<br />

One of Church's former aides, speech-writer Loch K. Johnson, describes how he worked<br />

with Church to prepare a speech scheduled for delivery on November 11, 1975 in which<br />

Church would stake out a position opposing the <strong>Bush</strong> nomination:<br />

<strong>The</strong> nomination of <strong>George</strong> <strong>Bush</strong> to succeed Colby disturbed him and he wanted to wind up the<br />

speech by opposing the nomination. [...] He hoped to influence Senate opinion on the nomination<br />

on the eve of Armed Services Committee hearings to confirm <strong>Bush</strong>.<br />

I rapidly jotted down notes as Church discussed the lines he would like to take against the<br />

nomination. "Once they used to give former national party chairmen [as <strong>Bush</strong> had been under<br />

President Nixon] postmaster generalships--the most political and least sensitive job in<br />

government," he said. "Now they have given this former party chairman the most sensitive and

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!