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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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37. Nathan Miller, Spying For America: <strong>The</strong> Hidden History of US Intelligence (New York, Paragon<br />

House, 1989), pp. 402-403.<br />

38. Ranelagh, <strong>The</strong> Agency, p. 632.<br />

39. Scott Armstrong and Jeff Nason, "Company Man," Mother Jones, October, 1988.<br />

40. John Stockwell, In Search of Enemies, (New York, 1978).<br />

41. David Corn, "<strong>The</strong> Same Old Dirty Tricks," <strong>The</strong> Nation, August 23, 1988.<br />

42. David Corn, "<strong>The</strong> Same Old Dirty Tricks," <strong>The</strong> Nation, August 23, 1988.<br />

43. Chapman Pincher, <strong>The</strong> Spycatcher Affair(New York, 1988), p. 147.<br />

44. For the CIA-Harold Wilson affair, see: David Leigh, <strong>The</strong> Wilson Plot (New York, 1988); Philip<br />

Knightley, <strong>The</strong> Second Oldest Profession (New York, Norton); Richard Deacon, <strong>The</strong> British Connection<br />

(London, Hamish Hamilton); and Chapman Pincher, <strong>The</strong> Spycatcher Affair (New York, 1988). Tom<br />

Mangold, Cold Warrior (New York, 1991) joins the red Studebaker school of historiography on <strong>Bush</strong> in the<br />

Angleton-Wilson affair.<br />

45. Accounts of the Letelier Affairs include John Dinges and Saul Landau, Assassination on Embassy Row<br />

(New York, 1980); Donald <strong>Free</strong>d, Death in Washington (Westport, Connecticut, 1980), and Scott<br />

Armstrong and Jeff Nason, "Company Man," Mother Jones, October 1988.<br />

46. See Armstrong and Nason, p. 43.<br />

47. <strong>Free</strong>d, p. 174.<br />

48. Dinges and Landau, p. 384.<br />

49. Taylor Branch and Eugene M. Propper, Labyrinth (New York, 1982), p. 72.<br />

50. Labyrinth, pp. 74-75.<br />

51. <strong>Free</strong>d, Death in Washington, p. 174.<br />

52. Jefferson Morley, "<strong>Bush</strong>'s Drug Problem- and Ours," <strong>The</strong> Nation, August 27, 1988.<br />

53. Richard Pipes, "Team B: <strong>The</strong> Reality Behind the Myth," Commentary, October 1986.<br />

55. Pipes, "Team B," Commentary, October, 1986, p. 34. Pipes makes clear that it was <strong>Bush</strong> and Richard<br />

Lehman who both leaked to David Binder of the New York Times. Lehman also encouraged Pipes to leak.<br />

<strong>The</strong> verson offered by William R. Corson et al. in Widows (New York, 1989), namely that Paisley did the<br />

leaking, may also be true, but will not exonerate <strong>Bush</strong>. <strong>The</strong> authors of Widows are in grave danger of being<br />

banished to the red Studebaker school of coverup in that they ignore Pipes' account and its included<br />

fingering of <strong>Bush</strong> as the lead leaker.<br />

55. See William R. Corson, Susan B. Trento, Joseph J. Trento, Widows.<br />

56. See Willaim R. Corson et al., Widows, and Henry Hurt, Shadrin: <strong>The</strong> Spy Who Never Came Back.

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