Part 1
"Mr. George Bush of The Central Intelligence Agency"
September 16, 2013
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What possible connection could there
have been between George H.W. Bush and the assassination of John F.
Kennedy?
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Or between the C.I.A. and the
assassination?
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Or between Bush and the C.I.A.?
For some people, apparently, making such
connections was as dangerous as letting one live wire touch another.
In his book,
Family of Secrets - The Bush Dynasty, America's
Invisible Government and the Hidden History of the Last Fifty Years,
Russ Baker, editor of WhoWhatWhy, documents some of the strangest and
least known events relating to the assassination, whose 50th anniversary
falls this November 22.
This is the first installment of a ten-part series, featuring excerpts from
relevant chapters of the book. (The excerpts in Part 1 come from Chapter 2
of the book, and the titles and subtitles have been changed for this
publication.)
Notes:
(1) Although these excerpts do not
contain footnotes, the book itself is heavily footnoted and exhaustively
sourced.
(2) To distinguish between George Bush,
father and son, George H.W. Bush is sometimes referred to by his nickname
Poppy, and George W. Bush by his, W.
Poppy's Secret
When Joseph McBride came upon the document about George H. W. Bush's
double life, he was not looking for it.
It was 1985, and McBride, a former Daily Variety
writer, was in the library of California State University San Bernardino,
researching a book about the movie director Frank Capra.
Like many good reporters, McBride took off on a
"slight," if time-consuming, tangent - spending day after day poring over
reels of microfilmed documents related to the FBI and the JFK assassination.
McBride had been a volunteer on Kennedy's campaign, and since 1963 had been
intrigued by the unanswered questions surrounding that most singular of
American tragedies.
A particular memo caught his eye, and he leaned in for a closer look.
Practically jumping off the screen was a memorandum from FBI director J.
Edgar Hoover, dated November 29, 1963.
Under the subject heading "Assassination of
President John F. Kennedy," Hoover reported that, on the day after JFK's
murder, the bureau had provided two individuals with briefings.
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One was "Captain William Edwards of
the Defense Intelligence Agency."
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The other, "Mr. George Bush of the
Central Intelligence Agency."
To:
Director
Bureau of Intelligence and Research
Department of State
[We have been] advised that the Department of State feels some misguided
anti-Castro group might capitalize on the present situation and
undertake an unauthorized raid against Cuba, believing that the
assassination of President John F. Kennedy might herald a change in U.S.
policy… [Our] sources know of no [such] plans…
The substance of the foregoing information
was orally furnished to Mr. George Bush of the Central Intelligence
Agency and Captain William Edwards of the Defense Intelligence Agency.
McBride shook his head,
Even when Bush was named CIA director in 1976
amid much agency-bashing, his primary asset had been the fact that he was
not a part of the agency during the coups, attempted coups, and murder plots
in Iran, Cuba, Chile, and other hot spots about which embarrassing
information was being disclosed every day in Senate hearings.
For CIA director Bush, there had been much damage to control.
The decade from 1963 to 1973 had seen one
confidence-shaking crisis after another.
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There was the Kennedy assassination and
the dubious accounting of it by the Warren Commission.
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Then came the revelations of how the CIA
had used private foundations to channel funds to organizations
inside the United States, such as the National Student Association.
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Then came Watergate, with its penumbra
of CIA operatives such as E. Howard Hunt and their shadowy
misdoings.
Americans were getting the sense of a kind of
sanctioned underground organization, operating outside the law and yet
protected by it.
Then President Gerald Ford, who had
ascended to that office when Richard Nixon resigned, fired William Colby,
the director of the CIA, who was perceived by hard-liners as too
accommodating to congressional investigators and would-be intelligence
reformers.
Now Ford had named George H. W. Bush to take over the CIA.
But Bush seemed wholly unqualified for such a
position - especially at a time when the agency was under maximum scrutiny.
He had been U.N. ambassador, Republican National Committee chairman, and the
U.S. envoy to Beijing, where both Nixon and Henry Kissinger had regarded him
as a lightweight and worked around him.
What experience did he have in the world of
intelligence and spying? How would he restore public confidence in a
tarnished spy agency? No one seemed to know. Or did Gerald Ford realize
something most others didn't?
Bush served at the CIA for one year, from early 1976 to early 1977.
He worked quietly to reverse the Watergate-era
reforms of CIA practices, moving as many operations as possible offshore and
beyond accountability. Although a short stint, it nevertheless created an
image problem in 1980 when Bush ran unsuccessfully for the Republican
presidential nomination against former California governor Ronald Reagan.
Some critics warned of the dangerous precedent
in elevating someone who had led the CIA, with its legacy of dark secrets
and covert plots, blackmail and murder, to preside over the United States
government.
"Must be another
George Bush"
In 1985, when McBride found the FBI memo apparently relating to Bush's past,
the reporter did not immediately follow up this curious lead. Bush was now a
recently reelected vice president (a famously powerless position), and
McBride himself was busy with other things.
By 1988, however, the true identity of "Mr.
George Bush of the CIA" took on new meaning, as George H. W. Bush prepared
to assume his role as Reagan's heir to the presidency. Joe McBride decided
to make the leap from entertainment reportage to politics.
He picked up the phone and called the White
House.
"May I speak with the vice president?" he
asked
McBride had to settle for Stephen Hart, a
vice presidential spokesman.
Hart denied that his boss had been the man
mentioned in the memo, quoting Bush directly.
"I was in Houston, Texas, at the time and
involved in the independent oil drilling business. And I was running for
the Senate in late '63. I don't have any idea of what he's talking
about."
Hart concluded with this suggestion:
"Must be 'another' George Bush."
McBride found the response troubling - rather
detailed for a ritual non-denial.
It almost felt like a cover story that Bush was
a bit too eager to trot out. He returned to Hart with more questions for
Bush:
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Did you do any work with or for the CIA
prior to the time you became its director?
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If so, what was the nature of your
relationship with the agency, and how long did it last?
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Did you receive a briefing by a member
of the FBI on anti-Castro Cuban activities in the aftermath [of] the
assassination of President Kennedy?
Within half an hour, Hart called him back.
The spokesman now declared that, though he had
not spoken with Bush, he would nevertheless answer the questions himself.
Hart said that the answer to the first question was no, and, therefore, the
other two were moot.
Undeterred, McBride called the CIA.
A spokesman for the agency, Bill Devine,
responded:
"This is the first time I've ever heard
this... I'll see what I can find out and call you back."
The following day, the PR man was tersely formal
and opaque:
"I can neither confirm nor deny."
It was the standard response the agency gave
when it dealt with its sources and methods. Could the agency reveal whether
there had been another George Bush in the CIA?
Devine replied:
"Twenty-seven years ago? I doubt that very
much. In any event, we have a standard policy of not confirming that
anyone is involved in the CIA."
"Apparently" George
William Bush
But it appears this standard policy was made to be broken. McBride's
revelations appeared in the July 16, 1988, issue of the liberal magazine the
Nation, under the headline "The
Man Who Wasn't There, ‘George Bush,' C.I.A. Operative."
Shortly thereafter, CIA spokeswoman Sharron
Basso told the Associated Press that the CIA believed that "the record
should be clarified."
She said that the FBI document "apparently"
referred to a George William Bush who had worked in 1963 on the night
shift at the Langley, Virginia, headquarters, and that,
"would have been the appropriate place to
have received such an FBI report."
George William Bush, she said, had left
the CIA in 1964 to join the Defense Intelligence Agency.
Certainly, the article caused George H. W. Bush no major headaches. By the
following month, he was triumphantly accepting the GOP's presidential
nomination at its New Orleans convention, unencumbered by tough questions
about his past.
CIA can't find "other"
George Bush?
Meanwhile, the CIA's Basso told reporters that the agency had been unable to
locate the "other" George Bush.
The assertion was reported by several news
outlets, with no comment about the irony of a vaunted intelligence agency -
with a staff of thousands and a budget of billions - being unable to locate
a former employee within American borders.
Perhaps what the CIA really needed was someone like Joseph McBride.
Though not an investigative journalist, McBride had no trouble finding
George William Bush. Not only was the man findable; he was still on the U.S.
government payroll.
By 1988 this George Bush was working as a claims
representative for the Social Security Administration.
He explained to McBride that he had worked only
briefly at the CIA, as a GS-5 probationary civil servant, analyzing
documents and photos during the night shift. Moreover, he said, he had never
received interagency briefings.
Several years later, in 1991, former Texas Observer editor David
Armstrong would track down the other person listed on the Hoover memo,
Captain William Edwards.
Edwards could confirm that he had been on duty
at the Defense Intelligence Agency the day in question.
He said he did not remember this briefing, but
that he found the memo plausible in reference to a briefing he might have
received over the phone while at his desk. While he said he had no idea who
the George Bush was who also was briefed, Edward's rank and experience was
certainly far above that of the night clerk George William Bush.
Shortly after McBride's article appeared in the Nation, the magazine ran a
follow-up op-ed, in which the author provided evidence that the Central
Intelligence Agency had foisted a lie on the American people.
The piece appeared while everyone else was
focusing on Bush's coronation at the Louisiana Superdome. As with McBride's
previous story, this disclosure was greeted with the equivalent of a
collective media yawn.
An opportunity was bungled, not only to learn
about the true history of the man who would be president, but also to
recognize the "George William Bush" diversion for what it was:
one in a long series of calculated
distractions and disinformation episodes that run through
the Bush family history.
George William Bush
Deposes
With the election only two months away, and a growing sense of urgency in
some quarters, George William Bush acknowledged under oath - as part
of a deposition in a lawsuit brought by a nonprofit group seeking records on
Bush's past - that he was the junior officer on a three- to four-man watch
shift at CIA headquarters between September 1963 and February 1964, which
was on duty when Kennedy was shot.
"I do not recognize the contents of the
memorandum as information furnished to me orally or otherwise during the
time I was at the CIA," he said.
"In fact, during my time at the CIA, I did
not receive any oral communications from any government agency of any
nature whatsoever. I did not receive any information relating to the
Kennedy assassination during my time at the CIA from the FBI.
Based on the above, it is my conclusion that
I am not the Mr. George Bush of the Central Intelligence Agency referred
to in the memorandum"...
George H.W. Bush - Spy
from the age of 18
Almost a decade would pass between Bush's election in 1988 and the
declassification and release in 1996 of another government document that
shed further light on the matter.
This declassified document would help to answer
some of the questions raised by the '63 Hoover memo - questions such as,
"If George Herbert Walker Bush was already
connected with the CIA in 1963, how far back did the relationship go?"
But yet another decade would pass before this
second document would be found, read, and revealed to the public.
Fast-forward to December 2006, on a day when JFK
researcher Jerry Shinley sat, as he did on so many days, glued to his
computer, browsing through the digitized database of documents on the Web
site of the Mary Ferrell Foundation.
On that December day, Shinley came upon an internal CIA memo that mentioned
George H. W. Bush [the Bush designated Director of Central Intelligence (DCI)].
Dated November 29, 1975, it reported, in
typically spare terms, the revelation that the man who was about to become
the head of the CIA actually had prior ties to the agency. And the
connection discussed here, unlike that unearthed by McBride, went back not
to 1963, but to 1953 - a full decade earlier.
Writing to the chief of the spy section of the
analysis and espionage agency, the chief of the "cover and commercial staff"
noted:
Through Mr. Gale Allen... I learned that Mr.
George Bush, DCI designate has prior knowledge of the now terminated
project WUBRINY/LPDICTUM which was involved in proprietary commercial
operations in Europe.
He became aware of this project through Mr.
Thomas J. Devine, a former CIA Staff Employee and later, oil-wildcatting
associate with Mr. Bush. Their joint activities culminated in the
establishment of Zapata Oil [sic] [in 1953] which they eventually sold.
After the sale of Zapata Oil, Mr. Bush went
into politics, and Mr. Devine became a member of the investment firm of
Train, Cabot and Associates, New York...
The attached memorandum describes the close
relationship between Messrs. Devine and Bush in 1967-1968 which,
according to Mr. Allen, continued while Mr. Bush was our ambassador to
the United Nations.
In typical fashion for the highly
compartmentalized and secretive intelligence organization, the memo did not
make clear how Bush knew Devine, or whether Devine was simply dropping out
of the spy business to become a true entrepreneur.
For Devine, who would have been about
twenty-seven years old at the time, to "resign" at such a young age, so soon
after the CIA had spent a great deal of time and money training him was, at
minimum, highly unusual. It would turn out, however, that Devine had a
special relationship allowing him to come and go from the agency, enabling
him to do other things without really leaving its employ.
In fact, CIA history is littered with instances
where CIA officers have tendered their "resignation" as a means of creating
deniability while continuing to work closely with the agency...
Devine's role in setting up Zapata would remain hidden for more than a
decade - until 1965.
At that point, as Bush was extricating himself
from business to devote his energies to pursuing a congressional seat,
Devine's name suddenly surfaced as a member of the board of Bush's spin-off
company, Zapata Offshore - almost as if it was his function to keep the
operation running. To be sure, he and Bush remained joined at the hip...
Devine, like the senior George Bush, is now in his eighties and still active
in business in New York.
When I reached him in the winter of 2007 and
told him about recently uncovered CIA memos that related both his agency
connections and his longtime ties to Bush, he uttered a dry chuckle, then
continued cautiously.
"Tell me who you are working with in the
family," he asked when I informed him I was working on a book about
the Bushes.
I explained that the book was not exactly an
"authorized" biography, and therefore I was not "working" with someone
in the family. Moreover, I noted, the Bushes were not known for their
responsiveness to journalistic inquiries.
"The family policy has been as long as
George has been in office, they don't talk to media," Devine
replied.
But he agreed to contact the Bush family
seeking clearance.
"Well, the answer is, I will inquire. I
have your telephone number, and I'll call you back when I've
enquired."
Surprisingly enough, he did call again, two
weeks later, having checked in with his old friend in Houston.
He explained that he had been told by former
president George H.W. Bush not to cooperate. When I spoke to him several
months later, he still would not talk about anything - though he did
complain that, thanks to an article I had written about him for the
Real
News Project, he was now listed in Wikipedia.
And then he did offer a few words:
Thomas Devine: I just broke one of the first
rules in this game.
Russ Baker: And what is that?
Thomas Devine: Do not complain.
In fact, Devine had little to complain about.
At the time, although I was aware that he seemed
to be confirming that he himself had been in the "game," I did not
understand the full extent of his activities in conjunction with Bush.
Nor did I understand the heightened significance
of their relationship during the tumultuous event of 1963, to be discussed
in subsequent chapters.
No Business like the
Spy Business
Before there was an Office of Strategic Services (July 1942-October 1945) or
a Central Intelligence Agency (founded in 1947), corporations and attorneys
who represented international businesses often employed associates in their
firms as private agents to gather data on competitors and business
opportunities abroad.
So it was only to be expected that many of the
first OSS recruits were taken from the ranks of oil companies, Wall Street
banking firms, and Ivy League universities and often equated the interests
of their high-powered business partners with the national interest.
Such relationships like the one between George
H. W. Bush and Thomas Devine thus made perfect sense to the CIA...
By the time George H. W. Bush founded his own company, Zapata Petroleum, it
was not difficult to line up backers with long-standing ties to industrial
espionage activities. The setup with Devine in the oil business provided
Bush with a perfect cover to travel abroad and... identify potential CIA
recruits among foreign nationals...
"Poppy" Bush's own role with intelligence appears to date back as early as
the Second World War, when he joined the Navy at age eighteen.
On arrival at his training base in Norfolk,
Virginia, in the fall of 1942, Bush was trained not only as a pilot of a
torpedo bomber but also as a photographic officer, responsible for crucial,
highly sensitive aerial surveillance...
After mastering the technique of operating the handheld K-20 aerial camera
and film processing, Bush recruited and trained other pilots and crewmen.
His own flight team became part bomber unit, part spy unit.
The information they obtained about the Japanese
navy, as well as crucial intelligence on Japanese land-based defenses, was
forwarded to the U.S. Navy's intelligence center at Pearl Harbor and to the
Marine Corps for use in planning amphibious landings in order to reduce
casualties.
The so-called 'Operation Snapshot' was so hush-hush that, under naval
regulations in effect at the time, even revealing its name would lead to
court-martial.
"The Bronson Record"
Stinnett also fails to make note of
how much impact Bush had on the delay in the usage by the US Marines of
his "Operation Snapshot" Palau/Pelelieu photos.
By forcing the commanders to send the photos
back up the chain of command for reprimand, he delayed the ability of
Marine Commander Rupertus in confirming the accuracy of maps
based on those photos.
This is very convenient in time to the plans
of George Bush's father's attorney and business partner Allen
Dulles and others at Standard Oil (including ONI head Forrestal) in
attempting to prevent the bombing of the Japanese home islands before
the killing of Hitler could be arranged on July 20, 1944.
Dulles seems already to have prevented the
holding of US airbases in Northern China (see "Working with Chiang Kai
Shek") from which the US could have bombed Japan proper before the
capture of Guam and Saipan in the Marianas, the only other site, besides
Pelelieu, from which Japan could be reached by US land-based bombers.
All things considered, Stinnett appears overly anxious to make Bush
appear "on the up and up" as to the June 19 flight. The fact he was a
previous member of a Bush flight crew makes him a likely suspect
- along with Ted White - as a substitute crewman on the June 19,
1944 emergency take-off.
Nadeau thus not only wouldn't have been on
that plane that day, he'd have prevented Delaney from flying on
it as well. As a result, Delaney filed the complaint that resulted in
Nadeau's court-martial on June 25, 1944, after Bush's return.
Indeed, of the three normal members of Bush's crew, only Bush
himself may have been on the plane that day, and this could account for
why each successive account of Bush's crew as it is transferred from
ship to ship en route back to the San Jac, seems less sure of their true
identities and status.
The Terry's log for June 24, 1944, 04-0800
and 08-1200 hours, of Bush and crew back to San Jacinto makes no mention
of any names; it also lists such activity as occurring on "1800s" hours
- outside of these hourly sections.
This is an odd and interestingly
coincidental "error".
This was the same hourly section when Bush
would have been transferred to the Lexington from the Healy - that is,
"breeches buoyed" from the opposite direction, in effect - from the
other two crewmen of his plane, on the 22d if he were transferred close
to the time of the Japanese pows - 1805 hours. (Stinnett 79).
If so, Stinnett is slickly correct in stating (photo caption page 85)
that Bush and his crew were "on the fantail" of the Lexington
when the Japanese POWs were breeches-buoyed aboard; Bush had just barely
arrived at that point, though Stinnett ("Delaney") and White ("Nadeau")
had already been aboard the Lexington for several hours.
Did a similar juxtapositioning of numbers of
dates result in Stinnett's flight with Bush (noted above) being
recorded as "June 9" rather than June 19?
Source
According to a book by Robert Stinnett, a
fellow flier, Admiral Marc Mitscher hit the "bulkhead" when he saw
that Bush's team had filed a report in which they actually referred by name
to their top-secret project.
The three people above Bush in his command chain
were made to take razor blades to the pages of the report and remove the
forbidden language.
The lesson was apparently not lost on Bush. From that moment forward, as
every Bush researcher has learned, Bush's life would honor the principle: no
names, no paper trail, no fingerprints.
If you wanted to know what Bush had done, you
had to have the patience of a sleuth yourself.
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