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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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member of Meyer Lansky's Miami circles who sold <strong>Bush</strong> his prized trophy, the Cigarette<br />

boat Fidelity.<br />

<strong>Bush</strong>'s war on drugs was a rhetorical and public relations success for a time. On February<br />

16, 1982, in a speech on his own turf in Miami, Florida, <strong>Bush</strong> promised to use<br />

sophisticated military aircraft to track the airplanes used by smugglers. Several days later,<br />

<strong>Bush</strong> ordered the US Navy to send in its E2C surveillance aircraft for this purpose. If<br />

these were not available in sufficient numbers, said <strong>Bush</strong>, he was determined to bring in<br />

the larger and more sophisticated AWACS early warning aircraft to do the job. But<br />

<strong>Bush</strong>'s skills as an interagency expediter left something to be desired: by May, two of the<br />

four E2C aircraft that originally had been in Florida were transferred out of the state. By<br />

June, airborne surveillance time was running a mere 40 hours per month, not the 360<br />

hours promised by <strong>Bush</strong>, prompting Rep. Glenn English to call hearings on this topic. By<br />

October, 1982 the General Accounting Office issued an opinion in which it found "it is<br />

doubtful whether the [south Florida] task force can have any substantial long-term impact<br />

on drug availability." But the headlines were grabbed by <strong>Bush</strong>, who stated in 1984 that<br />

the efforts of his task force had eliminated the marijuana trade in south Florida. That was<br />

an absurd claim, but it sounded very good. When Francis Mullen. Jr., the administrator of<br />

the Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) criticized <strong>Bush</strong> for making this wildly inaccurate<br />

statement, he was soon ousted from his post at the DEA.<br />

In 1988, Democratic Congressman Glenn English concluded that <strong>Bush</strong>'s "war on drugs"<br />

had been fought with "little more than lip service and press releases." English wrote:<br />

"<strong>The</strong>re has been very little substance behind the rhetoric, and some of the major<br />

interdiction problems have yet to be resolved. <strong>The</strong> President assigned...<strong>Bush</strong> to<br />

coordinate and direct federal antidrug-abuse programs among the various law<br />

enforcement agencies. However, eight years later it is apparent that the task has not been<br />

accomplished." [fn 1] No observer still stationed in reality could dispute this very<br />

pessimistic assessment.<br />

But the whole truth is much uglier. We have documented in detail how the Iran-contra<br />

drug-running and gun-running operations run out of <strong>Bush</strong>'s own office played their role<br />

in increasing the heroin, crack, cocain, and marijuana brought into this country. We have<br />

reviewed <strong>Bush</strong>'s relations with his close supporters in the Wall Street LBO gang, much of<br />

whose liquidity is derived from narcotics payments which the banking system is eager to<br />

recycle and launder. We recall <strong>Bush</strong>'s 1990 meeting with Syrian President Hafez Assad,<br />

who is personally one of the most prolific drug pushers on the planet, and whom <strong>Bush</strong><br />

embraced as an ally during the Gulf crisis.<br />

<strong>Bush</strong>'s "soft on drugs" profile went further. In the Pakistan-Afghanistan theatre, for<br />

example, it was apparent that certain pro-Khomeini formations among the Afghan<br />

guerillas were, like the contras, more interested in trafficking in drugs and guns than in<br />

fighting the Soviet-backed regime in Kabul and the Red Army forces that maintained it in<br />

power. <strong>The</strong>re were reports that such activities on the part of such guerilla groups were<br />

seconded by parts of the Pakistani secret intelligence services, the Inter-Service<br />

Intelligence, and the National Logistics Cell. According to these reports, <strong>Bush</strong>'s visit to

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