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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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"not at liberty to reveal the names," <strong>Bush</strong> told the two senators. Instead, <strong>Bush</strong> offered<br />

documents that generally described the CIA's use of reporters and scholars over the years,<br />

but with no names. Senators Baker, Hart, and Mondale then called <strong>Bush</strong> and urged that<br />

the names be made public. <strong>Bush</strong> refused.<br />

<strong>Bush</strong> pointed to his statement, made on February 12 as the first public act of his CIA<br />

career, removing all "full-time or part-time news correspondents accredited by any US<br />

news service, newspaper, periodicals, radio or TV network or station" from the CIA<br />

payroll. He also claimed that there were no clergymen or missionaries on the CIA payroll<br />

at all. As far as the journalists were concerned, in April the Senate Select Committee on<br />

Intelligence Acitivities announced that they had already caught <strong>Bush</strong> lying, and that at<br />

least 25 journalists and reporters were still on the CIA payroll, and the CIA was<br />

determined to keep them there. <strong>Bush</strong> had quibbled on the word "accredited." This limited<br />

the purge to accredited correspondents issued news credentials. But this excluded free<br />

lance reporters, editors, news executives, and foreign news organizations at all levels.<br />

When dealing with <strong>Bush</strong>, it pays to read the fine print.<br />

<strong>The</strong> <strong>Bush</strong>-Kissinger-Ford counteroffensive against the Congressional committtes went<br />

forward. On March 5 the CIA leaked the story that the Pike Committee had lost more<br />

than 232 secret documents which had been turned over from the files of the executive<br />

branch. Pike said that this was another classic CIA provocation designed to discredit his<br />

committee, which had ceased its activity. <strong>Bush</strong> denied that he had engineered the leak:<br />

"<strong>The</strong> CIA did not do any such thing. Nothing of that nature at all," <strong>Bush</strong> told a reporter to<br />

whom he had placed a call to whine out his denial. "My whole purpose was to avoid an<br />

argument with him," said <strong>Bush</strong>, although he said that "Pike was the cause of this whole<br />

problem under great pressure."<br />

In March <strong>Bush</strong> had to take action in the wake of the leaking of a CIA report showing that<br />

Israel had between 10 and 20 nuclear bombs; the report was published by Arthur Kranish,<br />

the editor of Science Trends Magazine. Church, who had Zionist lobby ties of his own<br />

and who was in the midst of a bid for the Democratic presidential nomination, demanded<br />

an investigation: "Can you imagine how a leak of that kind would have been treated if it<br />

had come out of the Congress of the United States!" In retrospect, the report may have<br />

been some timely window-dressing for Israeli prowess in a Ford regime in which Israel's<br />

military value as an ally was hotly contested; a little later Gen. <strong>George</strong> Brown, the<br />

chairman of the joint chiefs, was quoted to be the effect that Israeli and its armed forces<br />

had "got to be considered a burden" for the United States.<br />

In April, <strong>Bush</strong> told the American Society of Newspaper Editors that he was just back<br />

from a secret visit to three countries in Europe, which he refused to name, during which<br />

he conceded that he "might or might not" have met with Frank Sinatra. (Brother Jonathan<br />

<strong>Bush</strong> had said in February that Sinatra had offered his services to the new CIA boss.)<br />

<strong>Bush</strong> praised the CIA in his speech: "It is a fantastic reservoir of discipline in the CIA.<br />

Our personnel people say the quality of appplications is up. This is an expression of<br />

confidence in the agency. Morale is A-one." <strong>The</strong>re was speculation that <strong>Bush</strong> might have<br />

gone to Italy, where terrorist activity was increasing and the Italian Communist Party,

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