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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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1976. This was simply intolerable for a senatorial patrician, and that was indeed <strong>Bush</strong>'s<br />

concept of his own "birthright."<br />

<strong>Bush</strong> gave the lie to Aristotle's theory of the humors: neither blood nor phlegm nor black<br />

nor even the yellow bile of rage moved him, but hyperthyroid transports of a manic rage<br />

that went beyond the merely bilious. <strong>George</strong> <strong>Bush</strong> had already had enough of the Stennis<br />

Committee, enough of the Church Committee, enough of the Pike Committee. Years<br />

later, on the campaign trail in 1988, he vomited out his rage against his tormentors of<br />

1975. <strong>Bush</strong> said that he had gone to the CIA "at a very difficult time. I went in there<br />

when it had been demoralized by the attacks of a bunch of little untutored squirts from<br />

Capitol Hill, going out there, looking at these confidential documents without one simple<br />

iota of concern for the legitimate national security interests of this country. And I stood<br />

up for the CIA then, and I stand up for it now. And defend it. So let the liberals wring<br />

their hands and consider it a liability. I consider it a strength."<br />

But in 1975 there was no doubt that <strong>George</strong> <strong>Bush</strong> was in a towering rage. As Christmas<br />

approached, no visions of sugarplums danced in <strong>Bush</strong>'s head. He dreamed of a single<br />

triumphant stroke that would send Church and all the rest of his tormentors reeling in<br />

dismay, and give the new CIA Director a dignified and perhaps triumphant inauguration.<br />

<strong>The</strong>n, two days before Christmas, the CIA chief in Athens, Richard Welch was gunned<br />

down in front of his home by masked assassins as he returned home with his wife from a<br />

Christmas party. A group calling itself the "November 19 Organization" later claimed<br />

credit for the killing.<br />

Certain networks immediately began to use the Welch assassination as a bludgeon against<br />

the Church and Pike committees. An example came from columnist Charles Bartlett<br />

writing in the old Washington Star: "<strong>The</strong> assassination of the CIA Station Chief, Richard<br />

Welch, in Athens is a direct consequence of the stagey hearings of the Church<br />

Committee. Spies traditionally function in a gray world of immunity from such crudities.<br />

But the Committee's prolonged focus on CIA activities in Greece left agents there<br />

exposed to random vengeance." [fn 20] Staffers of the Church committee pointed out that<br />

the Church committee had never said a word about Greece or mentioned the name of<br />

Welch.<br />

CIA Director Colby first blamed the death of Welch on Counterspy magazine, which had<br />

published the name of Welch some months before. <strong>The</strong> next day Colby backed off,<br />

blaming a more general climate of hysteria regarding the CIA which had led to the<br />

assassination of Welch. In his book, Honorable Men, published some years later, Colby<br />

continued to attribute the killing to the "sensational and hysterical way the CIA<br />

investigations had been handled and trumpeted around the world."<br />

<strong>The</strong> Ford White House resolved to exploit this tragic incident to the limit. Liberals raised<br />

a hue and cry in response. Les Aspin later recalled that "the air transport plane carrying<br />

[Welch's] body circled Andrews Air Force Base for three-quarters of an hour in order to<br />

land live on the 'Today' Show." Ford waived restrictions in order to allow interrment at

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