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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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assassination amount to one of the most bizarre episodes in the annals of secret<br />

intelligence operations.<br />

One of the assassins of Letelier was unquestionably one Michael Vernon Townley, a CIA<br />

agent who had worked for David Atlee Philips in Chile. After the overthrow of Allende<br />

and the advent of the Pinochet ditatorship, David Atlee Philips had become the director<br />

of the CIA's western hemipshere operations. In 1975 Phillips founded AFIO, the<br />

Association of Former Intelligence Officers, which has supported <strong>George</strong> <strong>Bush</strong> in every<br />

campaign he has ever waged since that time. Townley, as a "former" CIA agent, had gone<br />

to work for the DINA, the Chilean secret police, and had been assigned by the DINA as<br />

its liaison man with a group called CORU. CORU was the acronym for Command of<br />

United Revolutionary Organizations, a united front of four anti-Castro Cuban<br />

organizations based primarily in the neighborhood of Miami called Little Havana. With<br />

CORU, we are back in the milieu of Miami anti-Castro Cubans whose political godfather<br />

<strong>George</strong> <strong>Bush</strong> had been since very early in the 1960's. CORU was at that time working<br />

together with the intelligence services of Chile's Pinochet, Paraguay's Alfredo Stroessner,<br />

and Nicaragua's Somoza for operations against common enemies, including Chilean leftwing<br />

emigres and Castro assets. Soon after the foundation of CORU, bombs began to go<br />

off at the Cuban Mission to the United Nations in New York.<br />

During this period a Miami doctor named Orlando Bosch was arrested, allegedly because<br />

he had been planning to assassinate Henry Kissinger, and that ostensibly because of<br />

Kissinger's concessions to Castro. During the same period, the Chilean DINA was<br />

mounting its so-called Operation Condor, a plan to assassinate emigre opponents of the<br />

Pinochet dictatorship and its Milton Friedman, Chicago school economic policies. [fn 45]<br />

It was under these circumstances that the US Ambassador to Chile, <strong>George</strong> Landau, sent<br />

a cable to the State Department with the singular request that two agents of the DINA be<br />

allowed to enter the United States with Paraguayan passports. One of these agents is<br />

likely to have been Townley. <strong>The</strong> cable also indicated that the two DINA agents also<br />

wanted to meet with Gen. Vernon Walters, the outgoing Deputy Director of Central<br />

Intelligence, and so the cable also went to Langley. Here the cable was read by Walters,<br />

and also passed into the hands of Director <strong>George</strong> <strong>Bush</strong>. <strong>Bush</strong> not only had this cable in<br />

his hands; <strong>Bush</strong> and Walters discussed the contents of the cable and what to do about it,<br />

including whether Walters ought to meet with the DINA agents. <strong>The</strong> cable also reached<br />

the desk of Henry Kissinger. One of Landau's questions appears to have been whether the<br />

mission of the DINA men had been approved in advance by Langley; his cable was<br />

accompanied by photocopies of the Paraguayan passports. (Later on, in 1980, <strong>Bush</strong><br />

denied that he had ever seen this cable; he had not just been out of the loop, he claims; he<br />

had been in China. (<strong>The</strong> red Studebaker hacks, including <strong>Bush</strong> himself in his campaign<br />

autobiography, do not bother denying anything about the Letelier case; they simply omit<br />

it. [fn 46]<br />

On August 4, on the basis of the conversations between <strong>Bush</strong> and Walters, the CIA sent a<br />

reply from Walters to Landau stating that the former "was unaware of the visit and that<br />

his Agency did not desire to have any contact with the Chileans." Landau responded by

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