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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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"presidential." <strong>The</strong> inevitable footage of <strong>Bush</strong> getting fished out of the drink off Chichi<br />

Jima shootdown was also aired.<br />

Network camera crews were offered repeated chances to film <strong>Bush</strong> while he was jogging.<br />

This was an oblique way of pointing out that Reagan would be 70 years old by the<br />

begining of the primary season. "I'm up for the 1980's," was a favorite <strong>Bush</strong> quote for<br />

interviews. <strong>The</strong>re were no attacks on Reagan; indeed <strong>Bush</strong> was seeking to come across as<br />

a moderate conservative, in order first to fend off the challenge of Sen. Howard Baker,<br />

who was also running, and to gain on Reagan.<br />

In a rather slavish imitation of the Carter victory scenario, <strong>Bush</strong> also chose to imitate<br />

what had been called Carter's "fuzziness," or unwillingness to say anything of substance<br />

about issues. <strong>Bush</strong> was the unabashed demagogue, telling Diane Sawyer of CBS when he<br />

would finally talk about the issues: "if they can show me how it will get me more votes<br />

someplace, I'll be glad to do it."<br />

<strong>Bush</strong> talked vaguely about tax cuts to spur business and investment; he was unhappy<br />

about the "decline in America's stature overseas" due to Carter; he was against excessive<br />

government regulation. Military aggression overseas has never been far below the surface<br />

of <strong>Bush</strong>'s psyche; in 1979 he talked about the need to overcome the post-Vietnam guilt<br />

syndrome. He was, he proclaimed, "sick and tired of hearing people apologize for<br />

America." <strong>Bush</strong> was striving to appear as similar to Reagan, but more moderate in<br />

packaging, younger and more dynamic, and above all, a Winner.<br />

But in the midst of <strong>Bush</strong>'s summer, 1979 preparations for his presidential bid, there was<br />

one very serious moment of preparation that addressed the some real issues, albeit in a<br />

way virtually invisible from the campaign trail. This was a conference <strong>Bush</strong> attended at<br />

the Jonathan Institute in Jerusalem on July 2-5. Instead of mugging for the television<br />

cameras while eating hotdogs on the Fourth of July at a picnic in Iowa or New<br />

Hampshire, <strong>Bush</strong> journeyed to Israel for what was billed as the Jerusalem Conference on<br />

International Terrorism.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Jonathan Institute had been founded earlier the same year by Benjamin Netanyahu, a<br />

young crazy of the Likud block, in memory of his brother Jonathan, who had been killed<br />

during the Israeli raid on Entebbe in 1976. <strong>The</strong> Jonathan Institute was a semi-covert<br />

propaganda operation and could only be defined as a branch of the Israeli government.<br />

<strong>The</strong> committee sponsoring this conference on terrorism was headed up by Prime Minister<br />

Menachem Begin, followed by Moshe Dayan and many other prominent Israeli<br />

politicians and generals.<br />

<strong>The</strong> US delegation to the conference was divided according to partisan lines, but was<br />

generally united by sympathy for the ideas and outlook of the <strong>Bush</strong>-Cherne Team B. <strong>The</strong><br />

Democratic delegation was led by the late Senator Henry Jackson of Washington. This<br />

group included civil rights leader Bayard Rustin, plus Norman Podhoretz and Midge<br />

Decter of Commentary Magazine, two of the most militant and influential Zionist<br />

neoconservatives. Ben Wattenberg of the American Enterprise Institute was also on hand.

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