19.12.2012 Views

George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

Create successful ePaper yourself

Turn your PDF publications into a flip-book with our unique Google optimized e-Paper software.

<strong>Bush</strong>'s implication in the matter is beyond any doubt. Shortly after <strong>Bush</strong> had arrived at<br />

Langley, Prime Minister Wilson despatched his close friend Lord Weidenfeld to the<br />

United States with a confidential letter to be given to Senator Hubert Humphrey. Wilson<br />

and Weidenfeld met on February 10, 1976. <strong>The</strong> letter enumerated the names of a number<br />

of MI-5 and MI-6 officers of whom Wilson was suspicious. Wilson's letter requested that<br />

Humphrey go to <strong>Bush</strong> and aks him whether the CIA knew anything about these British<br />

counter-intelligence and intelligence officers. Was it possible, Wilson wanted to know,<br />

that those named in the letter were actually working with or for the CIA? Were the<br />

British officials in league with a CIA faction that was carrying out eletronic or other<br />

surveillance of Wilson, including in his office in 10 Downing Street? Implied was the<br />

further question: was the CIA part of an operation to destabilize Wilson and bring him<br />

down?<br />

It is known that <strong>Bush</strong> took Wilson's letter quite seriously, so seriously that he flew to<br />

London to talk to Wilson and assured him that the CIA had not been responsible for any<br />

surveillance of the PM. But by the time <strong>Bush</strong> reached London, Wilson had already<br />

resigned in a surprise announcement made on March 16, 1976. What role had the CIA<br />

actually played?<br />

<strong>The</strong> transition from Harold Wilson to Margaret Thatcher amounts to the replacement of<br />

Lord Victor Rothschild's favorite puppet politician of the 1960's with Lord Victor<br />

Rothschild's preferred choice for the 1980's. <strong>The</strong> pretext used to harrass Wilson out of<br />

office was Wilson's well-known close ties to communists and to the Soviet block, but all<br />

of that had been well known back in 1964 when he had come to power for the first time.<br />

<strong>The</strong> pretext appears in all of its irony when we recall that Lord Victor Rothschild was<br />

himself the leading candidate to be named as the legendary "Fifth Man" of the KGB-SIS<br />

spy team of Philby, Maclean, Burgess, and Blunt.<br />

A leading purveyor of the argument that Wilson was a Soviet asset was James Jesus<br />

Angleton, like <strong>Bush</strong> a Yale graduate. Angleton had been the counterintelligence director<br />

of the CIA until 1975, but he had not been very successful. Angleton had always been<br />

obsessed by the presence of high-level CIA moles in the US government and his own<br />

agency. Angleton was in touch with Peter Wright of MI-5. Wright was also bitterly<br />

opposed to Wilson, whom he characterized as a "Soviet-Zionist agent," which was<br />

perfectly accurate as far as it went. But again, all that had been clear back in 1964 and<br />

even much earlier. Wright had provided Chapman Pincher, a right-wing British journalist<br />

and also an asset of Lord Victor, with the material for the book <strong>The</strong>ir Trade is Treachery,<br />

a "limited hangout" which provided many interesting facts about the Soviet pentration of<br />

British intelligence, but which was mainly designed to keep Lord Victor out of the<br />

spotlight. Later Wright's own book, Spycatcher, succeeded even better in protecting Lord<br />

Victor by becoming an international succes de scandale that allowed Lord Victor to die a<br />

natural death without ever having been apprehended by British authorities. <strong>The</strong> crowning<br />

irony is that Philby's old pal Lord Victor, Wright, and the obsessive Angleton were all in<br />

a strange united front to villify Wilson for his links to Soviet intelligence, which were of<br />

course massive but which had been well known all along.

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!