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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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Senator Tower wanted to know about Church's own presidential ambitions, and brought<br />

up that the press corps called the Senate Intelligence Committee the "Church for<br />

President" committee. Why didn't Church renounce his presidential ambitions so as to<br />

give his criticism more credibility? Goldwater spun out a mitigating defense of <strong>Bush</strong>.<br />

Church fought back with what we may consider the predecessor of the "wimp" argument,<br />

that <strong>Bush</strong> was always the yes-man of his patrons: if you were going to put a pol into<br />

Langley, he argued, "then I think that it ought to be a man who has demonstrated in his<br />

political career that he can and is willing to stand up and take the heat even where it<br />

courts the displeasure of his own President." "But I do not think that Mr. <strong>Bush</strong>'s political<br />

record has been of that character."<br />

Church was at his ironic best when he compared <strong>Bush</strong> to a recent chairman of the<br />

Democratic national Committee: "...if a Democrat were President, Mr. Larry O'Brien<br />

ought not to be nominated to be Director of the CIA. Of all times to do it, this is the<br />

worst, right at a time when it is obvious that public confidence needs to be restored in the<br />

professional, impartial, and nonpolitical character of the agency. So, we have the worst of<br />

all possible worlds." Church tellingly underlined that "<strong>Bush</strong>'s birthright does not include<br />

being Director of the CIA. It includes the right to run for public office, to be sure, but that<br />

is quite a different matter than confirming him now for this particular position."<br />

Church said he would under no circumstance vote for <strong>Bush</strong>, but that if the latter<br />

renounced the 76 ticket, he would refrain from attempting to canvass other votes against<br />

<strong>Bush</strong>. It was an ambiguous position.<br />

While still reeling from Church's philippic, <strong>Bush</strong> also had to absorb a statement from<br />

Senator Culver, who announced that he also would vote against <strong>Bush</strong>.<br />

<strong>Bush</strong> came back to the witness chair in an unmistakeable whining mood. He was<br />

offended above all by the comparison of his august self to the upstart Larry O'Brien: "I<br />

think there is some difference in the qualifications," said <strong>Bush</strong> in a hyperthyroid rage.<br />

"Larry O'Brien did not serve in the Congress of the United States for 4 years. Larry<br />

O'Brien did not serve, with no partisanship, at the United Nations for 2 years. Larry<br />

O'Brien did not serve as the Chief of the US Liaison Office in the People's Republic of<br />

China." Not only <strong>Bush</strong> but his whole cursus honorum were insulted! "I will never<br />

apologize," said <strong>Bush</strong> a few second later, referring to his own record. <strong>The</strong>n <strong>Bush</strong> pulled<br />

out his "you must resign" letter to Nixon: "Now, I submit that for the record that that is<br />

demonstrable independence. I did not do it by calling the newspapers and saying, 'Look, I<br />

am having a press conference. Here is a sensational statement to make me, to separate me<br />

from a President in great agony.'"<br />

<strong>Bush</strong> recovered somewhat under questioning by Hugh Scott of Pennsylvania, a reliable<br />

ally. Senator Symington urged <strong>Bush</strong> to committ to serve at the CIA for at least two years;<br />

<strong>Bush</strong> was non-committal, but the pressure was becoming unbearable. After some sparring<br />

between <strong>Bush</strong> and Gary Hart, Henry Jackson of Washington came in for the first time.<br />

Jackson's constant refrain was that the maladroit and bumbling Ford had put <strong>Bush</strong> in a<br />

very awkward and unfair position by nominating him:

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