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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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<strong>Bush</strong>'s opening statement was also in the main a tissue of banality and cliches. He<br />

indicated his support for the Rockefeller Commission report without having mastered its<br />

contents in detail. He pointed out that he had attended Cabinet meetings from 1971 to<br />

1974, without mentioning who the president was in those days. Everybody was waiting<br />

for this consummate pontificator to get to the issue of whether he was going to attempt<br />

the vice-presidency in 1976. Readers of <strong>Bush</strong>'s propaganda biographies know that he<br />

never decides on his own to run for office, but always responds to the urging of his<br />

friends. Within those limits, his answer was that he was available for the second spot on<br />

the ticket. More remarkably, he indicated that he had a hereditary right to it--it was, as he<br />

said, his "birthright."<br />

Would <strong>Bush</strong> accept a draft? "I cannot in all honesty tell you that I would not accept, and I<br />

do not think, gentlemen, that any American should be asked to say he would not accept,<br />

and to my knowledge, no one in the history of this Republic has been asked to renounce<br />

his political birthright as the price of confirmation for any office. And I can tell you that I<br />

will not seek any office while I hold the job of CIA Director. I will put politics wholly<br />

out of my sphere of activities." Even more, <strong>Bush</strong> argued, his willingness to serve at the<br />

CIA reflected his sense of noblesse oblige. Friends had asked him why he wanted to go to<br />

Langley at all, "with all the controversy swirling around the CIA, with its obvious<br />

barriers to political future?"<br />

Magnanimously <strong>Bush</strong> replied to his own rhetorical question: "My answer is simple. First,<br />

the work is desperately important to the survival of this country, and to the survival of<br />

freedom around the world. And second, old fashioned as it may seem to some, it is my<br />

duty to serve my country. And I did not seek this job but I want to do it and I will do my<br />

very best." [fn 17]<br />

Stennis responded with a joke that sounds eerie in retrospect: "If I though that you were<br />

seeking the Vice Presidential nomination or Presidential nomination by way of the route<br />

of being Director of the CIA, I would question you judgment most severely." <strong>The</strong>re was<br />

laughter in the committee room.<br />

Senators Goldwater and Stuart Symington made clear that they would give <strong>Bush</strong> a free<br />

ride not only out of deference to Ford, but also out of regard for the late Prescott <strong>Bush</strong>,<br />

with whom they had both started out in the Senate in 1952. Senator McIntyre was more<br />

demanding, and raised the issue of enemies' list operations, a notorious abuse of the<br />

Nixon (and subsequent) administratio ns:<br />

"What if you get a call from the President, next July or August, saying '<strong>George</strong>, I would<br />

like to see you.' You go in the White House. He takes you over in the corner and says,<br />

'look, things are not going too well in my campaign. This Reagan is gaining on me all the<br />

time. Now, he is a movie star of some renown and has traveled with the fast set. He was a<br />

Holywood star. I want you to get any dirt you can on this guy because I need it."<br />

What would <strong>Bush</strong> do ? "I do not think that is difficult, sir," intoned <strong>Bush</strong>. "I would<br />

simply say that it gets back to character and it gets back to integrity; and furthermore, I

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