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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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<strong>The</strong> CIA's specific contributions to the destabilization of Wilson included the agency's<br />

sponsorship of a book written by a Czech defector named Josef Frolik. This tome accused<br />

John Stonehouse, the Postmaster General in Wilson's cabinet, of being an east bloc agent.<br />

Stonehouse later attempted to go underground in Australia after feigning suicide.<br />

Stonehouse was later found and brought back, although he still asserts his innocence of<br />

espionage charges. This affair, complete with a fugitive cabinet minister, was a colossal<br />

embarrassment to Wilson.<br />

Wilson, as indicated, was convinced that he was being bugged, possibly with CIA<br />

participation. According to Chapman Pincher, "whether this surveillance extended to<br />

independent bugging by the CIA and NSA is unknown, although the CIA has denied it.<br />

Under the Anglo-American agreeement dating back to 1947, there had long been an<br />

exchange of suveillance information, including cable and letter intercepts, but it is not<br />

impossible that the Americans agencies occasionally undertook activities denied, by writ<br />

or circumstances, to the British." [fn 44] In other words, it was easier for the Anglo-<br />

American establishment to have the CIA handle the bugging in London, since this was<br />

not illegal under the CIA's regulations. Was there reciprocity in this respect? Part of the<br />

destabilization of Wilson was run through Private Eye magazine. Another likely<br />

participant was Tory activist Airey Neave, who had wanted to replace former Prime<br />

Minister Edward Heath with Thatcher when Heath fell in 1974. Ultimately, Thatcher<br />

would be the leading beneficiary of the fall of Wilson.<br />

Another government destabilized through the CIA during the same period was the Gough<br />

Whitlam Labor Party government of Australia. Whitlam threatened to deprive the CIA of<br />

its key Pine Gap electronic listening post after he discovered that the Austrialian<br />

intelligence services had been working with the CIA to bring down Allende. On<br />

November 8, 1975, with <strong>Bush</strong>'s likely advent at the CIA already public knowledge,<br />

<strong>The</strong>odore Shackley despatched a telegram to the Australian intelligence services<br />

threatening to cut off all exchanges, hanging the Australians out to dry. On November 11,<br />

in a highly unusual action, the Royal Governor General dismissed Whitlam as Prime<br />

Minister, bringing Malcolm Frase and the conservatives back to power. When Whitlam's<br />

Labor Party majority in the lower housr responded by voting no confidence in Fraser, the<br />

Royal Governor General dissolved the lower house and called a election. It was a coup<br />

ordered directly by Queen Elizabeth II, and carried out with <strong>Bush</strong>'s help. In the<br />

background of this affair is the Nugan Hand bank, an Anglo-American intelligence<br />

proprietary involved with drug money laundering.<br />

One of the most spectacular scandals of <strong>Bush</strong>'s tenure at the CIA was the assassination in<br />

Washington DC of the Chilean exile leader Orlando Letelier, who had been a minister in<br />

the government of Salvador Allende Gossens, who had been overthrown by Kissinger in<br />

1973. Letelier along with Ronnie Moffitt of the Washington Institute for Policy Studies<br />

died on September 21, 1976 in the explosion of a car bomb on Sheridan Circle, in the<br />

heart of Washington's Embassy Row district along Massachusetts Avenue.<br />

Relatively few cases of international terrorism have taken place on the territory of the<br />

United States, but this was certainly an exception. <strong>Bush</strong>'s activities before and after this

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