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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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Although the group that arrived with Scoop Jackson were supposedly Democrats, most of<br />

them would support Reagan-<strong>Bush</strong> in the November, 1980 election.<br />

<strong>The</strong>n there was the GOP delegation, which was led by <strong>George</strong> <strong>Bush</strong>. Here were <strong>Bush</strong><br />

activist Ray Cline, Major General <strong>George</strong> Keegan, a stalwart supporter of Team B, and<br />

Professor Richard Pipes of Harvard, the leader of Team B. Here were Senator John<br />

Danforth of Missouri and Brian Crozier, a "terrorism expert." Pseudo-intellectual<br />

columnist <strong>George</strong> Will ("Will the Shill") was also on hand, as was Rome-based journalist<br />

Claire Sterling, who had been active in covering up the role of Henry Kissinger in the<br />

1978 assassination of Italian Prime Minister Aldo Moro, and who would later be blind to<br />

indications of an Anglo-American role in the attempted assassination of Pope John Paul<br />

II.<br />

International participation was also notable: Annie Kriegel and Jacques Soustelle of<br />

France, Lord Alun Chalfont, Paul Johnson, and Robert Moss of the United Kingdom, and<br />

many leading Israelis.<br />

<strong>The</strong> keynote statement was made by Prime Minister Begin, who told the participants that<br />

they should spread through the world the main idea of the conference, which was that all<br />

terrorism in the world, whatever its origin, is controlled by the Soviet Union. Ray Cline<br />

made a major presentation, developing his theory that terrorism should not be seen as a<br />

spontaneous response to oppression by frustrated minorities, but rather only as the<br />

preferred tool of Soviet bloc subversion. For Cline, the great watershed was an alleged<br />

1969 decision by the Poliburo in Moscow to use the Palestine Liberation Organization as<br />

the Kremlin's fifth column in the Middle East, and specifically to subsidize PLO terrorist<br />

attacks with money, training, and communications provided by the KGB. For Cline, the<br />

PLO, despite the fact that it enjoyed the support of the vast majority of Palestinians, was<br />

merely a synthetic tool of Soviet intelligence. It was a very convenient argument for<br />

Zionist hardliners.<br />

Richard Pipes then drew on Russian history to illustrate the singular thesis that terrorism<br />

was a product of Russian history, and of no other history. "<strong>The</strong> roots of Soviet terrorism,<br />

indeed of modern terrorism," according to Pipes, "date back to 1879...It marks the<br />

beginning of that organization which is the source of all modern terrorist groups, whether<br />

they be named the Tupamaros, the Baader-Meinhof group, the Weathermen, Red<br />

Brigades or PLO. I refer you to the establishment in 1879 of a Congress in the small<br />

Russian town of Lipesk, of an organization known as Narodnaya Volya, or the People's<br />

Will."<br />

<strong>The</strong>re is no doubt that the KGB and its east bloc satellite agencies were massively<br />

involved in running terrorism, as former Soviet bloc archives opened after 1989<br />

definitively show. But is it really true that terrorism was invented in Lipesk in 1879? And<br />

is terrorism really the absolute monopoly of the KGB? Did that include Menachem<br />

Begin, who blew up the King David Hotel in Jerusalem? Did it include other members of<br />

the Irgun and Stern gangs? Everyone present seems to have found good reasons for<br />

believing that the ludicrous thesis of the conference was true. For the Israelis, it was a

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