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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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Cherne was a raving hawk during the Vietnam war, when he was associated with the as<br />

yet unreconstructed Kissinger clone Morton Halperin in the American Friends of<br />

Vietnam. Along with John Connally, Cherne was a co-chair of Democrats for Nixon in<br />

1972. He had been a founding member of Herman Kahn's Hudson Institute, a school for<br />

Kissingerian Strangeloves, and has always been a leader of New York's <strong>Free</strong>dom House.<br />

Cherne was also big on Robert O. Anderson's National Commission on Coping with<br />

Interdependence and on Nelson Rockefeller's Third Century Corporation.<br />

Cherne was a close friend of William Casey, who was working in the Nixon<br />

Administration as Undersecretary of State for Economic Affairs in mid-1973. That was<br />

when Cherne was named to the president's Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board (PFIAB)<br />

by Nixon. On March 15, 1976, Cherne became the chairman of this body, which<br />

specializes in conduiting the demands of financier and related interests into the<br />

intelligence community. Cherne, as we will see, would be along with <strong>Bush</strong> a leading<br />

beneficiary of Ford's spring, 1976 intelligence re-organization.<br />

To top it all off, Cherne has always been something of a megalomaniac. His self-serving<br />

RIA biographical sketch culminates: "Political scientist, economist, sculptor, lawyer,<br />

foreign affairs specialist-- any one and all of these descriptions fit Leo Cherne. A<br />

Renaissance man born in the 20th century, he is equally at home in fields of fine arts,<br />

public affairs, industry, economics, or foreign policy."<br />

<strong>Bush</strong>'s correspondence with Cherne leaves no doubt that theirs was a very special<br />

relationship. Cherne represented for <strong>Bush</strong> a strengthening of his links to the Zionistneoconservative<br />

milieu, with options for backchanneling into the Soviet block. So on<br />

New Year's Eve <strong>Bush</strong>'s thoughts, perhaps stimulated by his awareness of what help the<br />

Zionist lobby could give to his still embattled nomination, went out to Leo Cherne in one<br />

of his celebrated handwritten notes: "I read your testimony with keen interest and<br />

appreciation. I am really looking forward to meeting you and working with you in<br />

connection with your PFIAB chores. Have a wonderful 1976," <strong>Bush</strong> wrote.<br />

January 1976 was not auspicious for <strong>Bush</strong>. He had to wait until almost the end of the<br />

month for his confirmation vote, hanging there, slowly twisting in the wind. In the<br />

meantime, the Pike Committee report was approaching completion, after months of<br />

probing and haggling, and was sent to the Government Printing Office on January 23,<br />

despite continuing arguments from the White House and from the GOP that the<br />

committee could not reveal confidential and secret material provided by the executive<br />

branch. On Sunday January 25, a copy of the report was leaked to Daniel Schorr of CBS<br />

News, and was exhibited on television that evening. <strong>The</strong> following morning, the New<br />

York Times published an extensive summary of the entire Pike Committee report, which<br />

this newspaper had also received.<br />

Despite all this exposure, the House voted on January 29 that the Pike Committee report<br />

could not be released. A few days later it was published in full in the Village Voice, and<br />

CBS corrspondent Daniel Schorr was held responsible for its appearance. <strong>The</strong> Pike<br />

Committee report attacked Henry Kissinger "whose comments," it said "are at variance

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