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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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Carter's comments, which elicited a fit of apoplexy from our hero: "That's very<br />

interesting," said <strong>Bush</strong>. We came down here to do a professional job. <strong>The</strong> President<br />

directed me to brief him on intelligence matters. Everything went very well." Carter<br />

backed off a day later, saying "I happen to think a lot of <strong>George</strong> <strong>Bush</strong>."<br />

In the close 1976 election, Carter prevailed by vote fraud in New York, Ohio, and other<br />

states, but Ford was convinced by Nelson and Happy Rockefeller, as well as by his own<br />

distraught wife Betty, that he must concede in order to preserve the work of "healing"<br />

that he had accomplished since Watergate. Carter would therefore enter the White House.<br />

<strong>Bush</strong> prepared to make his bid for continuity at the CIA. Shortly after the election, he was<br />

scheduled to journey to Plains to brief Carter once again with the help of his deputy<br />

Henry Knoche. Early in the morning <strong>Bush</strong> and Knoche stopped off at the Old Executive<br />

Office Building to talk to Budget Director Robert Lynn in order to secure a cash infusion<br />

for the CIA, which was facing a budgetary crunch. <strong>Bush</strong> then dropped in on Vice<br />

President Nelson Rockefeller, and also went into the Oval Office to talk to Ford.<br />

<strong>The</strong> critical meeting with Carter went very badly indeed. <strong>Bush</strong> took Carter aside and<br />

argued that in 1960 and 1968, CIA Directors were retained during presidential transitions,<br />

and that it would make Carter look good if he did the same. Carter signalled that he<br />

wasn't interested. <strong>The</strong>n <strong>Bush</strong> lamely stammered that if Carter wanted his own man in<br />

Langley, <strong>Bush</strong> would be willing to resign. which is of course standard procedure for all<br />

agency heads when a new president takes office. Carter said that that was indeed exactly<br />

what he wanted, and that he would have his own new DCI ready by January 21, 1977.<br />

<strong>Bush</strong> and Knoche then briefed Carter and his people for some six hours. Carter insiders<br />

told the press that <strong>Bush</strong>'s briefing had been a "disaster." "Jimmy just wasn't impressed<br />

with <strong>Bush</strong>," said a key Carter staffer. [fn 59]<br />

<strong>Bush</strong> and Knoche then flew back to Washington, and on the plane <strong>Bush</strong> wrote a memo<br />

for Henry Kissinger describing his exchanges with Carter. At midnight, <strong>Bush</strong> drove to<br />

Kissinger's home and briefed him for an hour.<br />

Knoche said later that he was mightily impressed by <strong>Bush</strong>'s long day of meeting the<br />

budget director, the president, the vice president, the president-elect and the secretary of<br />

state, all on the same day, even if the result had been that <strong>Bush</strong> was fired. At <strong>Bush</strong>'s 9:30<br />

AM staff meeting in Langley the next day, Knoche and a group of other officialsawarded<br />

<strong>Bush</strong> the Intelligence Medal of Merit. "It was a very touching day," said Knoche.<br />

Carter first attempted to make <strong>The</strong>odore Sorenson, the former Kennedy intimate, his new<br />

CIA Director. It soon became clear that certain circles were determined to block this<br />

nomination. <strong>The</strong> Sorenson nomination was soon torpedoed by a series of leaks, including<br />

revelations that Sorenson had been a conscientious objector during World War II, plus<br />

accusations that he had taken classified documents with him when he had left the<br />

government in 1964. Carter tried to get NATO General Bernard Rogers for the post, but<br />

finally had to settle for Navy Admiral Stansfield Turner from his own class at Annapolis.

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