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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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new reason not to negotiate with the PLO, who could be classed as Soviet terrorist<br />

puppets. For the immediate needs of <strong>Bush</strong>'s election-year demagogy, it was an argument<br />

that could be used against Carter's equally demagogic "human rights" sloganeering. More<br />

broadly, it could be used to allege a clear and present universal danger that made it<br />

mandatory to close the book once and for all on the old Church committee-Pike committe<br />

mentality. All the participants, from CIA, MI-6, SDECE, Mossad, and so on down the<br />

line could readily agree that only the KGB, and never they themselves ran terrorism.<br />

Hardly ever.<br />

Begin had been a terrorist himself; Soustelle had been in the French OAS during the<br />

Algerian war where the SDECE had committed monumental crimes against humanity;<br />

<strong>Bush</strong> and Cline were godfathers of the Enterprise; the Mossad was reputed to have an<br />

agent on the Abu Nidal central committee, and also exercised influence over the Italian<br />

Red Brigades; while the chaps from MI-6 had the longest and bloodiest imperial records.<br />

But Ian Black wrote in the Jersualem Post wrote that "the conference organizers expect<br />

the event to initiate a major anti-terrorist offensive." In Paris, the right-wing L'Aurore ran<br />

an article under the headline "Toujours le KGB," which praised the conference for having<br />

confirmed that when it comes to international terrorism, the Soviets pull all the strings.<br />

[fn 16]<br />

<strong>The</strong>re were skeptics, even in the US intelligence community, where Ray Cline's<br />

monomania was recognized. At the 1980 meeting of AFIO, Cline was criticized by<br />

Howard Bane, the former CIA station chief in Moscow, who suggested "We've got to get<br />

Cline off this Moscow control of terrorists. It's divisive. It's not true. <strong>The</strong>re's not one<br />

single but of truth to it." A retired CIA officer named Harry Rostizke put in: "It's that farright<br />

stuff, that's all. It's horseshit."<br />

Nevertheless, the absurd thesis of the Jerusalem Conference was soon regurgitated by<br />

several new top officials of the Reagan Administration. In Alexander Haig's first news<br />

conference as Secretary of State on January 28, 1981, Haig thundered that the Kremlin<br />

was trying to "foster, support, and expand" terrorist activity worldwide through the<br />

"training, funding, and equipping" of terrorist armies. Haig made it official that<br />

"international terrorism will take the place of human rights" as the central international<br />

concern of the Reagan Administration. And that meant the KGB.<br />

During 1978 and 1979, the Carter Administration deliberately toppled the Shah of Iran,<br />

and deliberately replaced him with Khomeini. <strong>The</strong> US had shipped arms to the Shah, and<br />

never stopped such shipments, despite the advent of Khomeini and the taking of US<br />

hostages. <strong>The</strong> continuity of the arms deliveries, sometimes mediated through Israel,<br />

would later lead into the Iran-contra affair. In the meantime <strong>Bush</strong> and his partners in the<br />

Israeli Mossad had sealed a pact and signalled it in public with a new ideological smokescreen<br />

that, they hoped, would cover a new world-wide upsurge in covert operations<br />

during the 1980's.<br />

On November 3, 1979, <strong>Bush</strong> bested Sen. Howard Baker in a "beauty contest" straw poll<br />

taken at the Maine Republican convention in Portland. <strong>Bush</strong> won by a paper-thin margin

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