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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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cannot conceive of the incumbent doing that sort of thing. But if I were put into that kind<br />

of position where you had a clear moral issue, I would simply say "no," because you see I<br />

think, and maybe-- I have the advantages as everyone on this committee of 20-20<br />

hindsight, that this agency must stay in the foreign intelligence business and must not<br />

harass American citizens, like in Operation Chaos, and that these kinds of things have no<br />

business in the foreign intelligence business." This was the same <strong>Bush</strong> whose 1980<br />

campaign was heavily staffed by CIA veterans, some retired, some on active service and<br />

in flagrant violation of the Hatch Act. This is the vice-president who ran Iran-contra out<br />

of his own private office, and so forth.<br />

Gary Hart also had a few questions. How did <strong>Bush</strong> feel about assassinations? <strong>Bush</strong><br />

"found them morally offensive and I am pleased the President has made that position<br />

very, very clear to the Intelligence Committee..." How about "coups d'etat in various<br />

countries around the world," Hart wanted to know?<br />

"You mean in the covert field," replied <strong>Bush</strong>. "Yes." "I would want to have full benefit of<br />

all the intelligence. I would want to have full benefit of how these matters were taking<br />

place but I cannot tell you, and I do not think I should, that there would never be any<br />

support for a coup d'etat; in other words, I cannot tell you I cannot conceive of a situation<br />

where I would not support such action." In retrospect, this was a moment of refreshing<br />

candor.<br />

Gary Hart knew where at least one of <strong>Bush</strong>'s bodies was buried:<br />

Senator Hart: You raised the question of getting the CIA out of domestic areas totally. Let us<br />

hypthesize a situation where a President has stepped over the bounds. Let us say the FBI is<br />

investigating some people who are involved, and they go right to the White House. <strong>The</strong>re is some<br />

possible CIA interest. <strong>The</strong> President calls you and says, I want you as Director of the CIA to call<br />

the Director of the FBI to tell him to call off this operation because it may jeopardize some CIA<br />

activities.<br />

Mr. <strong>Bush</strong>. Well, generally speaking, and I think you are hypothecating a case without spelling it<br />

out in enough detail to know if there is any real legitimate foreign intelligence aspect... [...]<br />

<strong>The</strong>re it was: the smoking gun tape again, the notorious <strong>Bush</strong>-Lietdtke-Mosbacher-<br />

Pennzoil contribution to the CREEP again, the money that had been found in the pockets<br />

of Bernard Barker and the Plumbers after the Watergate break-in. But Hart did not<br />

mention it overtly, only in this oblique, Byzantine manner. Hart went on: "I am<br />

hypothesizing a case that actually happened in June, 1972. <strong>The</strong>re might have been some<br />

tangential CIA interest in something in Mexico. Funds were laundered and so forth."<br />

Mr. <strong>Bush</strong>. Using a 50-50 hindsight on that case, I hope I would have said the CIA is not going to<br />

get involved in that if we are talking about the same one.<br />

Senator Hart. We are.<br />

Senator Leahy. Are there others?

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