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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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also reports that he worked for a time in the late 1960's in Rome, during the period when<br />

the CIA's GLADIO capabilities were being used to launch a wave of terrorism in that<br />

country. Such was the man that <strong>Bush</strong> chose to appoint to a position of reponsibility in the<br />

CIA. Later, Shackley will turn up as a "speech writer" for <strong>Bush</strong> during the 1979-80<br />

campaign.<br />

Along with Shackley came his associate and former Miami station second in command,<br />

Thomas Clines, a partner of General Richard Secord and Albert Hakkim during the Irancontra<br />

operation, convicted in September 1990 on four felony tax counts for not reporting<br />

his ill-gotten gains, and sentenced to 16 months in prison and a fine of $40,000.<br />

During <strong>Bush</strong>'s tenure Shackley's circles were mightliy remoralized. In particular Ed<br />

Wilson, a veteran of Shackley's Miami station, now a retired CIA officer who worked<br />

closely with serving CIA personnel to organize gun running, sex operatives, and other<br />

activities, plied his trade undisturbed. <strong>The</strong> Wilson scandal, which had grown up on<br />

<strong>Bush</strong>'s watch, would begin to explode only during the tenure of Stansfield Turner, under<br />

Carter.<br />

Another career covert operations man, John Waller, became the Inspector General, the<br />

officer who was supposed to keep track of illegal operations. For legal advice, <strong>Bush</strong><br />

turned first to holdover General Counsel Mitchell Rogovin, who had in December 1975<br />

theorized that intelligence activities belonged to the "inherent powers" of the Presidency,<br />

and that no special Congressional egislation was required to permit such things as covert<br />

operations to go on. Later <strong>Bush</strong> appointed Anthony Lapham, Yale '58, as CIA General<br />

Counsel. Lapham was the scion of an old San Francisco banking family, and his brother<br />

was Lewis Lapham, the editor of Harper's Magazine. Lapham would take a leading role<br />

in the CIA coverup of the Letelier assassination case. [fn 29]<br />

Typical of the broad section of CIA officers who were delighted with their new boss from<br />

Brown Brothers, Harriman/Skull and Bones was Cord Meyer, who had most recently<br />

been the station chief in London from 1973 on, a wild and wooly time in the tight little<br />

island, as we will see. Meyer, a covert action veteran and Watergate operative, writes at<br />

length in his autobiography about his enthusiasm for the <strong>Bush</strong> regime at CIA, which<br />

induced him to prolong his own career there:<br />

I again seriously thought of retiring from the Agency but the new atmosphere in CIA's Langley<br />

headquarters changed my mind. <strong>George</strong> <strong>Bush</strong> had been appointed by President Ford to succeed<br />

Colby as DCI in January, and by the time of my return he had completely dispelled the fears that<br />

had been aroused by his former political connections. Having served in the Congress as a<br />

Republican representative from Texas and having recently been chairman of the Republican<br />

National Committee, he was initially viewed with suspicion as an ambitious politician who might<br />

try to use the Agency for partisan purposes. However, he quickly proved by his performance that<br />

he was prepared to put politics aside and to devote all his considerable ability and enthusiasm to<br />

restoring the morale of an institution that had been battered enough by sucessive investigations.<br />

Instead of reaching outside for defeated Republican candidates to fill key jobs, he chose from<br />

within the organization among men who had demonstrated their competence through long careers<br />

in intelligence work. He leaned over backward to protect the objectivity and independence of the<br />

Agency's estimates and to avoid slanting the results to fit some preconceived notion of what the<br />

President wanted to hear.

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