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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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least political agency." Church wanted me to stress how <strong>Bush</strong> "might compromise the<br />

independence of the CIA--the agency could be politicized."<br />

Some days later Church appeared on the CBS program Face the Nation, he was asked by<br />

<strong>George</strong> Herman if his opposition to <strong>Bush</strong> would mean that anyone with political<br />

experience would be a priori unacceptable for such a post? Church replied: "I think that<br />

whoever is chosen should be one who has demonstrated a capacity for indpendence, who<br />

has shown that he can stand up to the many pressures." Church hinted that <strong>Bush</strong> had<br />

never stood up for principle at the cost of political office. Moreover, "a man whose<br />

background is as partisan as a past chairman of the Republican party does serious damage<br />

to the agency and its intended purposes." [fn 4]<br />

<strong>The</strong> Brown Brothers, Harriman/Skull and Bones crowd counterattacked in favor of <strong>Bush</strong>,<br />

mobilizing some significant resources. One was none other than Leon Jaworski, the<br />

former Watergate special prosecutor. Jaworski's mission for the <strong>Bush</strong> network appears to<br />

have been to get the Townhouse and related Nixon slushfund issues off the table of the<br />

public debate and confirmation hearings. Jaworski, speaking at a convention of former<br />

FBI Special Agents meeting in Houston, defended <strong>Bush</strong> against charges that he had<br />

accepted illegal or improper payments from Nixon and CREEP operatives. "This was<br />

investigated by me when I served as Watergate special prosecutor. I found no<br />

involvement of <strong>George</strong> <strong>Bush</strong> and gave him full clearance. I hope that in the interest of<br />

fairness, the matter will not be bandied about unless something new has appeared on the<br />

horizon." Jaworski, who by then was back in Houston working for his law firm of<br />

Fulbright and Jaworski, sent a copy of the Houston Post article reporting this statement to<br />

Ford's White House counselor Philip Buchen. [fn 5]<br />

Saul Kohler of the Newhouse News Service offered the Ford White House an all-purpose<br />

refutation of the arguments advanced by the opponents of <strong>Bush</strong> during November and<br />

into December. "And now," wrote Kohler, "President Ford is catching all sorts of heat<br />

from a lot of people for appointing <strong>Bush</strong> to the non-political sensitive CIA because he<br />

once served as Chairman of the Republican national Committee." How unfair, thought<br />

Kohler, "for of all the appointments Ford made last weekend, the nomination of <strong>Bush</strong><br />

was the best." For one thing, "you'd have to go a long way to find a man with less guile<br />

than <strong>George</strong> <strong>Bush</strong>." <strong>Bush</strong> had been great at the RNC- "he managed to keep the RNC<br />

away from the expletive deleted of that dark chapter in American political history." "Not<br />

only did he keep the party apparatus clean, he kept his own image clean..." And then:<br />

"Was Cordell Hull less distinguished a Secretary of State because he had headed the<br />

Democratic National Committee?," and so forth. Kohler quoted a White House official<br />

commenting on the <strong>Bush</strong> nomination: "<strong>The</strong> gag line around here ever since <strong>The</strong> Boss<br />

announced <strong>George</strong> for the CIA is that spying is going to be a bore from now on because<br />

<strong>George</strong> is such a clean guy." [fn 6]<br />

In the meantime, <strong>Bush</strong> got ready for his second meeting with Mao and prepared the<br />

documentation for his conflict of interest and background checks. In a letter to John C.<br />

Stennis, the chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, which would hold the<br />

hearings on his nomination, <strong>Bush</strong> stated that his only organizational affiliations were as a<br />

trustee of Philips Academy in Andover, Massachusetts, and as a member of the Board of

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