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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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On the other hand, his close relationship to Ford [<strong>Bush</strong> was a regular tennis doubles partner with<br />

Ford] and the trust that the President obviously had in him gave <strong>Bush</strong> an access to the White<br />

House and an influence in the wider Washington bureaucracy that Colby had never enjoyed. Not<br />

only did morale improve as a result, but through <strong>Bush</strong> the Agency's views carried new weight and<br />

influence in the top reaches of the Ford Administration. In effect, I found on my return that the<br />

working environment at the Agency was far better than I had imagined it to be from my exposed<br />

position abroad and I determined to stay on for a period before retiring. <strong>Bush</strong> and "Hank" Knoche,<br />

the newly appointed deputy director, asked me to serve as a special assistant, and gave me as first<br />

assignment the task of reviewing the entire structure of the intelligence community to determine<br />

the adequacy of the arrangements for providing strategic warning against an attack on the United<br />

States and for handling major international crises. [fn 30]<br />

This all sounds like a <strong>Bush</strong> campaign brochure, but it is typical of the intelligence<br />

community forces loyal to <strong>Bush</strong>; as for Cord Meyer, it may be that he developed the<br />

design for the Special Situation Group which <strong>Bush</strong> chaired from March, 1981 to January,<br />

1989, through which <strong>Bush</strong> ran Iran-Contra and all of the other significant covert<br />

operations and coups of the entire Reagan era.<br />

And what did other CIA officers, such as intelligence analysts, think of <strong>Bush</strong>? A common<br />

impression is that he was a superficial lightweight with no serious interest in intelligence.<br />

Deputy Director for Science and technology Carl Duckett, who was ousted by <strong>Bush</strong> after<br />

three months, commented that he "never saw <strong>George</strong> <strong>Bush</strong> feel he had to understand the<br />

depth of something....[he] is not a man tremendously dedicated to a cause or ideas. He's<br />

not fervent. He goes with the flow, looking for how it will play politically." According to<br />

Maurice Ernst, the head of the CIA's office of economic research from 1970 to 1980,<br />

"<strong>George</strong> <strong>Bush</strong> doesn't like to get into the middle of an intellectual debate...he liked to<br />

delegate it. I never really had a serious discussion with him on economics." Another<br />

former CIA aide to <strong>Bush</strong> who wanted to remain anonymous observed that "it was an<br />

approach remarkably similar to what a younger, more active Ronald Reagan might have<br />

done." Hans Heymann was <strong>Bush</strong>'s National Intelligence Officer for Economics, and he<br />

remembers having been impressed by <strong>Bush</strong>'s Phi Beta Kappa Yale degree in economics.<br />

As Heymann later recalled <strong>Bush</strong>'s response, "He looked at me in horror and said, 'I don't<br />

remember a thing. It was so long ago, so I'm going to have to rely on you.'" [fn 31]<br />

Other CIA employees remember <strong>Bush</strong> as a manager who would not grapple with<br />

concepts, but who rather saw himself as a problem solver and consensus builder who<br />

would try to resolve difficulties by getting people into a room to find a compromise basis<br />

of agreement. In reality, much of this was also a calculated pose. No one has ever<br />

accused <strong>Bush</strong> of profundity on any subject, except perhaps race hatred, but his<br />

disengaged stance appears as an elaborate deception to conceal his real views from the<br />

official chain of command.<br />

In the meantime, the scuttlebut around Langley and the Pentagon was, according to a<br />

high CIA official, that "the CIA and DOD will love <strong>George</strong> <strong>Bush</strong> and Don Rumsfeld<br />

more than they hated or feared Bill Colby and Jim Schlesinger because neither will make<br />

any real waves." One writer summed up <strong>Bush</strong>'s superficial public profile during this<br />

period as "not altogether incompetent." [fn 32]

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