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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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In a meeting presided over by Pottinger, Propper was only able to get Lapham to agree<br />

that the Justice Department could ask the CIA to report any information on the Letelier<br />

murder that might relate to the security of the United States against foreign intervention.<br />

It was two years before any word of the July-August cables was divulged.<br />

Ultimately some low-level Cubans were convicted in a trial that saw Townley cop a plea<br />

bargain and get off with a lighter sentence than the rest. Material about Townley under<br />

his various aliases strangley disappeared from the INS files, and records of the July-<br />

August cable traffic with Walters (and <strong>Bush</strong>) was expunged. No doubt that there had<br />

been obstruction of justice, no doubt there had been a cover-up.<br />

On October 6, bombs destroyed a Cubana Airlines DC-8 flying from Kingston, Jamaica<br />

to Havana, killing 73 passangers and crew, including the Cuban national fencing team<br />

which was returning from Venezuela. Anonymous callers to newspapers and radio<br />

stations claimed responsibility for CORU and Operation Condor, while Fidel Castro<br />

immediately blamed the CIA. Venezuelan police arrested CORU leaders Orlando Bosch<br />

(freed from jail in the US) and Luis Posada Carriles, whom we will later see as an<br />

associate of <strong>Bush</strong> operative Felix Rodriguez in Iran-contra.<br />

During 1976, Ed Wilson, officially retired, had been working with CIA officials on a<br />

project to deliver explosives, timers, weapons, and ultimately Redeye missles to Qaddafi<br />

of Libya. Wilson was receiving assistance from active duty CIA agents, including<br />

William Weisenburger and from Scientific Communications, a CIA front company.<br />

Wilson was working with Clines, who was still on the CIA payroll. CIA man Kevin<br />

Mulcahy had reported to <strong>The</strong>odore Shackley about Wilson's activities, and Shackley had<br />

informed deputy director William Wells, who in turned had passed the hot potato on to<br />

Inspector General John Waller. <strong>The</strong> result of this round was a probe of Mulcahy's report<br />

under Thomas Cox of Wallers' staff, assisted by Thomas Clines, of all people. On the<br />

basis of this in-house investigation, <strong>Bush</strong> on September 17 decided to pass the entire case<br />

on to the FBI.<br />

Another aspect of Wilson's skullduggery was reported to Clines by Rafael "Chi Chi"<br />

Quintero, another fixture of the Enterprise, who complained that Wilson was trying to<br />

recruit him for an assassination attempt against "Carlos," the fabled international terrorist.<br />

Years later Wilson was given a long jail sentence, while his sidekick Frank Terpil went<br />

underground. What is essential here is that under <strong>Bush</strong>'s administration, the CIA and its<br />

associated Enterprise and other old boys networks began to run amok along paths that<br />

lead us towards the Iran-contra affair and the other great covert action secret wars of the<br />

1980's and 1990's.<br />

During the last days of the Ford Administration, Attorney General Edward Levi had<br />

occasion to assert that the CIA's policy of refusing to turn documents and other evidence<br />

over to the Justice Department "smacked of a Watergate cover-up." This was in<br />

connection with the prosecution of one Edwin Gibbons Moore, who was allegedly trying<br />

to sell secret papers to the Soviet Embassy. <strong>The</strong> <strong>Bush</strong> CIA had refused to turn over<br />

various documents germane to this strange case.

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