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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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Arlington Cemetery. <strong>The</strong> funeral on January 7 was described by the Washington Post as<br />

"a show of pomp usually reserved for the nation's most renowned military heroes."<br />

Anthony Lewis of the New York Times described the funeral as "a political device" with<br />

ceremonies "being manipulated in order to arouse a political backlash against legitimate<br />

criticism." Norman Kempster in the Washington Star found that "only a few hours after<br />

the CIA's Athens station chief was gunned down in front of his home, the agency began a<br />

subtle campaign intended to persuade Americans that his death was the indirect result of<br />

congressional investigations and the direct result of an article in an obscure magazine."<br />

Here, in the words of a Washington Star headline, was "one CIA effort that worked."<br />

Between Christmas and New Year's in Kennbunkport, looking forward to the decisive<br />

floor vote on his confrimation, <strong>Bush</strong> was at work tending and mobilizing key parts of his<br />

network. One of these was a certain Leo Cherne.<br />

Leo Cherne is not a household word, but he has been a powerful figure in the US<br />

intelligence community over the period since World War II. Leo Cherne was to be one of<br />

<strong>Bush</strong>'s most important allies when he was CIA Director and throughout <strong>Bush</strong>'s<br />

subsequent career, so it is worth taking a moment to get to know Cherne better.<br />

Cherne's parents were both printers who came to the US from Romania. In his youth he<br />

was a champion orator of the American Zionist Association, and he has remained a part<br />

of B'nai B'rith all his life. He was trained as an attorney, and he joined the Research<br />

Institute of America, a publisher of business books, in 1936. He claims to have helped to<br />

draft the army and navy industrial mobilization plans for World War II, and at the end of<br />

the war he was an economic advisor to Gen. Douglas MacArthur in Japan. During that<br />

time he worked for "the dismantling of the pervasive control over Japanese society which<br />

had been maintained by the Zaibnatsu families," [fn 21] and devised a new Japanese tax<br />

structure. Cherne built up a long association with the Industrial College of the Armed<br />

Forces.<br />

Cherne was typical of the so-called"neoconservatives" who have been prominent in<br />

government and policy circles under Reagan-<strong>Bush</strong>, and <strong>Bush</strong>. Cherne was the founder of<br />

the International Rescue Committee, which according to Cherne's own blurb "came into<br />

existence one week after Hitler came to power to assist those who would have to flee<br />

from Nazi Germany...In the years since, we have helped thousands of Jews who have fled<br />

from the Iron Curtain countries, all of them, and have worked to assist in the resettlement<br />

of Jews in Europe and the United States who have left the Soviet Union."<br />

Cherne's IRC was clearly a conduit for neo-Bukharinite operations between east and west<br />

in the Cold War, and it was also reputedly a CIA front organization. CIA funding for the<br />

IRC came through the J.M. Kaplan Fund, a known CIA conduit, and also through the<br />

Norman Foundation, according to Frank A. Cappell's Review of the News (March 17,<br />

1976). IRC operations in Bangladesh included the conduiting of CIA money to groups of<br />

intellectuals. Capell noted that Cherne had "close ties to the leftist element in the CIA."<br />

Cherne was also on good terms with Sir Percy Craddock, the British intelligence<br />

coordinator, and Sir Leonard Hooper.

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