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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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Chapter -XVI- Campaign 1980<br />

Le mercennarie et ausiliarie sono inutili e pericolose; e, se uno tiene lo stato suo fondato<br />

in sulle arme mercennarie, non sara' mai fermo ne' sicuro.<br />

--Machiavelli, Il Principe<br />

As we follow <strong>George</strong> <strong>Bush</strong> along the <strong>George</strong> Washington Parkway as he drives away<br />

from his Langley office in January, 1977, we enter an especially shadowy and inscrutable<br />

interlude in his career. During their superficial and dilatory 1988 inquiry into <strong>Bush</strong>'s<br />

career, Bob Woodward and Walter Pincus did establish one typical phenomenon of<br />

<strong>Bush</strong>'s activity between January, 1977 and his emergence as a presidential candidate:<br />

<strong>Bush</strong> kept key parts of his activity a secret from his own aides and office staff, even<br />

going so far as to manufacture alibis which would appear to have been inventions.<br />

Woodward and Pincus described a "mystery about <strong>Bush</strong> and the agency" which arose<br />

during the course of their interviews about the post-1977 period. "According to those<br />

involved in <strong>Bush</strong>'s first political action committee, there were several occasions in 1978-<br />

79, when <strong>Bush</strong> was living in Houston and travelling the country in his first run for the<br />

presidency, that he set aside periods of up to 24 hours and told aides he had to fly to<br />

Washington for a secret meeting of former CIA Directors. <strong>Bush</strong> told his aides that he<br />

could not divulge his whereabouts, and that he would not be reachable."<br />

<strong>The</strong> mystery described by Woodward and Pincus arose when other interviews cast grave<br />

doubt on the veracity of this cover story; "...according to former directors and other<br />

senior CIA officials, there were no meetings of former directors during that period, and<br />

<strong>Bush</strong> had no assignments of any kind from the CIA." Stansfield Turner commented that<br />

he "never knew former directors had meetings and there were none when I was there."<br />

Stephen Hart of <strong>Bush</strong>'s staff told Woodward and Pincus that the keepers of <strong>Bush</strong>'s<br />

schedule could "recall no CIA activity of any kind," but explained the absences as<br />

"personal time in Washington" for "tennis, visits with friends, and dinners." [fn 1] Such<br />

enigmas are typical of the 1977-1979 interlude in <strong>Bush</strong>'s career.<br />

Shortly after leaving Langley, <strong>Bush</strong> asserted his birthright as an international financier in<br />

the way he had indicated to his close friend Leo Cherne, that is to say by becoming a<br />

member of the board of directors of a large bank. On February 22, 1977 Robert H.<br />

Stewart III, the chairman of the holding company for First International Bankshares of<br />

Dallas, announced that <strong>Bush</strong> would become the chairman of the executive committee of<br />

First International Bank in Houston and would simultaneously become a director of First

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