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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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<strong>Bush</strong> was on the edge of having his entire Watergate past come out in the wash, but the<br />

liberal Democrats were already far too devoted to the one-party state to grill <strong>Bush</strong><br />

seriously. In a few seconds, responding to another question from Hart, <strong>Bush</strong> was off the<br />

hook, droning on about plausible deniability, of all things:"...and though I understand the<br />

need for plausible deniability, I think it is extremely difficult."<br />

In his next go-round, Hart asked <strong>Bush</strong> about the impact of the cuthroat atmosphere of the<br />

Cold War and its impact on American values. <strong>Bush</strong> responded: "I am not going to sit here<br />

and say we need to match ruthlessness with ruthlessness. I do feel we need a covert<br />

capability and I hope that it can minimize these problems that offend our Americans. We<br />

are living in a very complicated, difficult world." This note of support for covert<br />

operations would come up again and again. Indicative of <strong>Bush</strong>'s thinking was his<br />

response to a query from Hart about whether he would support a US version of the<br />

British Official Secrets Act, which defines as a state secret any official information which<br />

has not been formally released to the public, with stiff criminal penalties for those who<br />

divulge or print it. In the era of FOIA, <strong>Bush</strong> did not hesitate: "Well, I understand that was<br />

one of the recommendations of the Rockefeller Commission. Certainly I would give it<br />

some serious attention." Which reeks of totalitarianism.<br />

<strong>The</strong> next day, December 16, 1975, Church, appearing as a witness, delivered his phillipic<br />

against <strong>Bush</strong>. After citing evidence of widespread public concern about the renewed<br />

intrusion of the CIA in domestic politics under <strong>Bush</strong>, Church reviewed the situation:<br />

So here we stand. Need we find or look to higher places than the Presidency and the nominee<br />

himself to confirm the fact that this door [of the Vice Presidency in 1976] is left open and that he<br />

remains under active consideration for the ticket in 1976? We stand in this position in the close<br />

wake of Watergate, and this committee has before it a candidate for Director of the CIA, a man of<br />

strong partisan political background and a beckoning political future. Under these cirumstances I<br />

find the appointment astonishing. Now, as never before, the Director of the CIA must be<br />

completely above political suspicion. At the very least this committee, I believe, should insist that<br />

the nominee disavow any place on the 1976 Presidential ticket. [...] I believe that this committee<br />

should insist that the nominee disavow any place on the 1976 Presidential ticket. Otherwise his<br />

position as CIA Director would be hoplessly compromised. [...] Mr. Chairman, let us not make a<br />

travesty out of our efforts to reform the CIA. <strong>The</strong> Senate and the people we represent have the<br />

right to insist upon a Central Intelligence Agency which is politically neutral and totally<br />

professional. It is strange that I should have to come before this of all committees to make that<br />

argument.[...]<br />

If Ambassador <strong>Bush</strong> wants to be Director of the CIA, he should seek that position. If he wants to<br />

be Vice President, then that ought to be his goal. It is wrong for him to want both positions, even<br />

in a Bicentennial year.<br />

It was an argument that conceded far too much to <strong>Bush</strong> in the effort to be fair. <strong>Bush</strong> was<br />

incompetent for the post, and the argument should have ended there. Church's<br />

unwillingness to demand the unqualified rejection of such a nominee no matter what<br />

future goodies he was willing temporarily to renounce has cast long shadows over<br />

subsequent American history. But even so, <strong>Bush</strong> was in trouble. <strong>The</strong> other senators<br />

questioned Church. Thurmond was a bullying partisan for <strong>Bush</strong>, demanding that Church<br />

certify <strong>George</strong> for the GOP ticket in 1976, which Church was unwisely willing to do.

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