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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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themselves, but did say that he wanted to "gun down" speculation that the CIA had<br />

leaked a tough estimate of the USSR's military buildup in order to stop Carter from<br />

cutting the defense budget. That speculation "just couldn't be further from the truth," said<br />

<strong>Bush</strong>, who was thus caught lying neither for the first nor last time in his existence. As if<br />

by compulsive association, <strong>Bush</strong> went on: "That gets to the integrity of the process. And I<br />

am here to defend the integrity of the intelligence process. <strong>The</strong> CIA has great integrity. It<br />

would never take directions from a policymaker-- me or anybody else--in order to come<br />

up with conclusions to force a President-elect's hand or a President's hand," pontificated<br />

<strong>Bush</strong> with Olympian hypocrisy.<br />

For his part, Henry Kissinger, within a year or two, in an interview with the London<br />

Economist, embraced key aspects of the Team B position.<br />

Congress soon got into the act, and <strong>George</strong> <strong>Bush</strong> testified at a closed hearing of the<br />

Senate Foreign Relations Committee on January 18, 1977. It turned out that Team B and<br />

its "worst-case" scenario enjoyed strong support from Hubert Humphrey, Clifford Case,<br />

and Jacob Javits. Later it also became clear that Adlai Stevenson, the chiarman of the<br />

Senate Intelligence Committee Subcommittee on Collection, Production, and Quality of<br />

Intelligence was also supportive of Team B, along with many other senators such as<br />

Moynihan and Wallop. Gary Hart was hostile, but Percy was open to dialogue with Team<br />

B.<br />

After the Team B conclusions had been bruited around the world, Pipes became a leading<br />

member of the Committee on the Present Danger, where his fellow Team B veteran Paul<br />

Nitze was already ensconced, along with Eugene V. Rostow, Dean Rusk, Lane Kirkland,<br />

Max Kampelman, Richard Allen, David Packard, and Henry Fowler. About 30 members<br />

of the Committee on the Present danger went on to become high officials of the Reagan<br />

Administration.<br />

Ronald Reagan himself embracedthe "window of vulerability" thesis, which worked as<br />

well for him as the bomber gap and missle gap arguments had worked in previous<br />

elections. When the Reagan Administration was being assembled, <strong>Bush</strong> and James Baker<br />

had a lot to say about who got what appointments. <strong>Bush</strong> was the founder of Team B, and<br />

that is the fundamental reason which such pro-Zionist neoconservatives as Max<br />

Kampelman, Richard Perle, Steven Bryen, Noel Koch, Paul Wolfowitz and Dov Zakem<br />

showed up in the Reagan Administration. For in one of his many ideological<br />

reincarnations, <strong>George</strong> <strong>Bush</strong> is also a neoconservative himself. What counted for Team B<br />

was to occupy the offices, and to dominate the debate. Team B greatly influenced the<br />

strategic assumptions and rhetoric of the first Reagan Administration; their one<br />

outstanding defeat was the launching of the SDI.<br />

In a grim postlude to the Team B exercise, <strong>Bush</strong>'s hand-picked staff director for the<br />

operation, John Paisley, the Soviet analyst (Paisley was the former deputy director of the<br />

CIA's Office of Strategic Research) and CIA liaison to the Plumbers, disappeared on<br />

September 24, 1978 while sailing on Chesapeake Bay in his sloop, the Brillig. Several<br />

days later a body was found floating in the bay in an advanced state of decomposition,

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