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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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that was of interest to Park Chung Hee, the South Korean leader. It was therefore a<br />

simple matter to blow the lid off this story, causing a wave of hysteria among the literally<br />

hundreds of members of Congress who had attended parties organized by Tongsun Park,<br />

who had become the Perle Mesta of the 1970's when it came to entertaining<br />

Congressional bigwigs. Tongsun Park also had a stable of call girls available, and could<br />

provide other services. <strong>The</strong> US Ambassador to the Republic of Korea during this period<br />

was Richard Sneider.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Koreagate headlines began to appear a few days after <strong>Bush</strong> had taken over at<br />

Langley. In February there was a story by Maxine Cheshire of the Washington Post<br />

reporting that the Department of Justice was investigating Congressmen Bob Leggett and<br />

Joseph Addabbo for allegedly accepting bribes from the Korean government. Both men<br />

were linked to Suzi Park Thomson, who had been hosting parties of the Korean Embassy.<br />

Later it turned out that Speaker of the House Carl Albert had kept Suzi Park Thomson on<br />

his payroll for all of the six years that he had been Speaker. Congressmen Hanna,<br />

Gallagher, Broomfield, Hugh Carey, and Lester Wolf were all implicated. <strong>The</strong> names of<br />

Tip O'Neill, Brademas, and McFall also came up. <strong>The</strong> New York Times estimated that as<br />

many as 115 Congressmen were involved.<br />

In reality the number was much lower, but former Watergate Special Prosecutor Leon<br />

Jaworski was brought back from Houston to become special prosecutor for this case as<br />

well. This underlined the press line that "the Democrats' Watergate" had finally arrived. It<br />

was embarrassing to the <strong>Bush</strong> CIA when Tongsun Park's official agency file disappeared<br />

for several months, and finally tuned up shorn of key information on the CIA officers<br />

who had been working most closely with Park. Eventually Congressman Hanna was<br />

convicted and sent to jail, while Congressman Otto Passman of Louisiana was acquitted,<br />

largely because he had had the presence of mind to secure a venue in his own state. A<br />

number of other congressmen quit, and it is thought that the principal reason for the<br />

decision by Democratic Speaker of the House Carl Albert to retire at the end of 1976 was<br />

the fact that he had been touched by the breath of this scandal, which would go into the<br />

chronicles as "Koreagate." With this, most of the Congress was brought to heel. We note<br />

in passing that when <strong>George</strong> <strong>Bush</strong> takes a step up the ladder in Washington, the Speaker<br />

of the House is likely to be ousted. Ask Jim Wright.<br />

An interesting sidelight of Koreagate involves then Congressman Edward Derwinksi,<br />

today <strong>Bush</strong>'s Secretary of Veteran's Affairs. An article in the Wall Street Journal during<br />

this period alleged that federal investigators suspected Derwinksi of informing the<br />

Korean CIA that one of their officers was about to defect to the US for the purpose of<br />

cooperating with the Koregate investigations. Derwinski denied the accusations, and he<br />

was never prosecuted. [fn 38]<br />

With that, the Congress was terrorized and brought to heel. In this atmosphere, <strong>Bush</strong><br />

moved to reach a secret foreign policy consensus with key Congressional leaders of both<br />

parties of the one-party state. According to two senior government officials involved,<br />

limited covert operations in such places as Angola were continued under the pretext that<br />

they were necessary for phasing out the earlier, larger, and more expensive operations.

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