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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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profiting from the vogue of "Euro-communism," was rapidly increasing its vote share<br />

during 1975-76.<br />

In May, FBI Director Clarence Kelley apologized to the American people for the abuses<br />

committed by his secret police. Kelley said that he was "truly sorry" for past abuses of<br />

power, all of which were neatly laid at the door of the deceased former director, J. Edgar<br />

Hoover. <strong>Bush</strong>, for his part, aggressively refused to apologize. <strong>Bush</strong> conceded that he felt<br />

"outrage" at the illegal CIA domestic operations of the Watergate era, but that "that's all<br />

I'm going to say about it...you can interpret it any way you want." <strong>Bush</strong>'s line was that all<br />

abuses had already been halted under Colby by the latter's "administrative dictum," and<br />

that the issue now was the implementation of the Rockefeller Commission report, to<br />

which <strong>Bush</strong> once again pledged fealty. <strong>Bush</strong> had no comment on the Lockheed scandal,<br />

which had begun to destabilize the Japanese, German, Italian, and Netherlands<br />

governments. <strong>The</strong> advance of the Italian communists and the Panama canal treaties were<br />

all "policy questions for the White House" in his view. Although China was being rocked<br />

by the "democracy wall" movement and the first Tien An Men massacre of 1976, <strong>Bush</strong>,<br />

ever loyal to his Chinese communist cronies, found that all that did not add up to<br />

anything "dramatically different."<br />

A visit to the Texas Breakfast Club on May 27 found <strong>Bush</strong> trying to burnish his image as<br />

a good guy by talking about the existential dilemmas of a good man in any imperfect<br />

world, while pleading for more covert opoerations all the time. "I know in a limited way<br />

there are conflicts of conscience," <strong>Bush</strong> told the breakfasters. "But we're not living in a<br />

particularly moral world. We're living in a world that's not pure black or pure white.<br />

We're living in a world where [the US] has to have a covert capability." On the other<br />

hand, <strong>Bush</strong> was "not unconcerned about the constitutional questions that the excesses of<br />

the past have raised." "I'm not going to defend the things that were done but I'm not going<br />

to dwell on them either." "I'm happy to say I think things are moving away from the more<br />

sensational revelations of the past," leaving the CIA as an institution "intact." Necessity,<br />

pontificated <strong>Bush</strong>, sometimes demands "compromise with the purity of moral decisions."<br />

On June 3, the Houston Post touted <strong>Bush</strong> as a good vice presidential candidate after all,<br />

moderate and southern, no matter what Ford had promised to the senate to get <strong>Bush</strong><br />

confirmed. <strong>Bush</strong> was mum.<br />

A few days later <strong>Bush</strong> paid tribute to the Israeli Defense Forces, who had just rescued a<br />

group of hostages at Entebbe. <strong>Bush</strong> denigrated US capabilities in comparison with those<br />

of Israel, saying that the US could not match what Israel was able to do: "We do have a<br />

very important role in furnishing intelligence to policy makers and our friends on the<br />

movement of international terrorists, but to indicate that we have that kind of action<br />

capability--the answer is very frankly no." <strong>Bush</strong> said that his policy on this matter was to<br />

fight terrorism with better intelligence, for "the more the American people understand<br />

this, the more support the CIA will have." Yet, <strong>Bush</strong> was unable to stop a terrorist murder<br />

in Washington DC, despite the fact that he had personally received a telergam informing<br />

him that the assassins were coming to visit him-- scarcely a good example of using<br />

intelligence to fight terrorism.

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