mirror of
https://github.com/nhammer514/textfiles-politics.git
synced 2024-10-01 01:15:38 -04:00
161 lines
8.4 KiB
XML
161 lines
8.4 KiB
XML
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
|
|
<div class="article">
|
|
<p>From COVERT ACTION INFORMATION BULLETIN Number 33
|
|
</p>
|
|
<p>
|
|
Bush's Boys Club: Skull and Bones
|
|
</p>
|
|
<p>
|
|
To be a member of the ruling elite, George Bush must meet
|
|
certain criteria. He must be white, he must be male, and he must
|
|
be rich. He must also belong to certain elite clubs and
|
|
institutions which help to distinguish him from those he is
|
|
called upon to rule.
|
|
George Bush is a member of Skull and Bones, an elite
|
|
secret society open only to a select 15 males in their senior
|
|
year at Yale University. If this club appears somewhat
|
|
exclusionary, don't worry; they have made great strides in the
|
|
past few years. Recent Bones inductees include a few blacks,
|
|
gays, and even some foreign students. However, it has been said
|
|
that if women were ever allowed into the secret "tomb" (meeting
|
|
place) of Skull and Bones, the tomb would "have to be
|
|
bulldozed."
|
|
The importance of Skull and Bones is not that it provides
|
|
good gossip about young males doing strange things in tombs, but
|
|
that it provides a certain bond between members which they carry
|
|
for life. Membership to Skull and Bones is the first initiation
|
|
into the world of power politics and capitalism. It is somewhat
|
|
akin to a "junior" old boys' network.
|
|
One of the interesting aspects of this secret society is
|
|
the number of Bones members who, after graduation, move on to do
|
|
intelligence work. There has even been informed speculation that
|
|
there is a "Bones cell" in the CIA.
|
|
Whether there is a Bones cell or not in the CIA is open to
|
|
interesting debate. We can, however, examine the histories of
|
|
several Bonesmen who have gone on to illustrious careers in
|
|
intelligence work.
|
|
One of the most unusual Bonesmen is the Reverend William
|
|
Sloane Coffin, Jr. Known best for his anti-Vietnam war activities
|
|
and his political activism at Riverside Church in New York City,
|
|
Sloane Coffin was recruited by the CIA shortly after he graduated
|
|
from Yale in 1949. Although his tenure at the Agency was short,
|
|
he is one example of the CIA's use of the secret society to fill
|
|
their ranks.
|
|
Another illustrious Skull and Bones member with close ties
|
|
to the CIA is arch-conservative and reknowned propagandist
|
|
William F. Buckley. According to several experts on the CIA,
|
|
Buckley began his cooperation with the Agency while he was in
|
|
Mexico City in 1952, where his good friend, E. Howard Hunt, was
|
|
CIA station chief at the time.
|
|
As an interesting aside, Buckley and Bush (as well as many
|
|
other Washington and business elites) are members of the
|
|
"prestigious" older-boys California getaway, "The Bohemian
|
|
Club."
|
|
It is not surprising, given the Buckley family's wealth and
|
|
status, that Bill's older brother, James Buckley, is also a
|
|
member of Skull and Bones. From 1981-82 Buckley was Under
|
|
Secretary of State for Security Assistance, Science, and
|
|
Technology where it was his job to see the U.S. military aid went
|
|
to support the right regimes.
|
|
He once stated that CIA covert activities in Chile, which
|
|
led to the overthrow of democratically-elected Salvador Allende,
|
|
were necessary because, "It was only by virtue of covert help by
|
|
the United States that these free institutions were able to
|
|
survive in the face of increasingly repressive measures by the
|
|
Allende regime."
|
|
Buckley was also directly connected to the work of the
|
|
Chilean secret police, DINA. In September 1976, DINA agents
|
|
assassinated former Chilean diplomat Orlando Letelier and his
|
|
colleague, Ronni Moffitt, in Washington DC. "Independent
|
|
researchers verified through the FBI and Department of Justice --
|
|
that on September 14, 1976, one week before the Letelier
|
|
assassination, Michael Townley and Guillermo Novo [two DINA
|
|
agents involved in the assassination] drove to the office of
|
|
Senator James Buckley in New York City for a meeting. Buckley had
|
|
helped finance trips to Chile for Novo and others close to the
|
|
killing."
|
|
When CIA agent David Atlee Phillips was accused of being
|
|
involved in the assassination he started an organization
|
|
entitled "Challenge: An Intelligence Officers' Legal Action
|
|
Fund." The board of "Challenge" included former CIA director
|
|
William Colby, former CIA Inspector General Lyman Kirkpatrick,
|
|
former intelligence officer General Richard Stillwell, and
|
|
interestingly, James Buckley.
|
|
Hugh Cunningham, Bonesman from the class of 1934, is a
|
|
Rhodes Scholar with a lengthy career in the CIA. He was in the
|
|
Agency from 1947 to 1973 during which time he served in top
|
|
positions with the Clandestine Services, the Board of National
|
|
Estimates, and was the Director of Training from 1969-73. He also
|
|
served with the CIA's precursor, the Central Intelligence Group,
|
|
from 1945-47.
|
|
William Bundy is a Bonesman from the class of 1939. Bundy
|
|
began his intelligence career in the OSS during World War II.
|
|
From 1951-61 he worked at the CIA, including at its Office of
|
|
National Estimates. During the Vietnam War, he was the Assistant
|
|
Secretary of State for Asian Affairs and a vocal advocate for
|
|
escalating the war.
|
|
A true Cold War liberal, Bundy expressed his belief in the
|
|
necessity of CIA covert actions in his foreword to the book "The
|
|
Counter-Insurgency Era": "The preservation of liberal values, for
|
|
America and other nations, required the use of the full range of
|
|
U.S. power, including, if necessary, its more shady
|
|
applications." "Shady applications" is a veiled euphemism for
|
|
covert activities which support dictators, overthrow legitimate
|
|
governments, and contribute to the destabilization of world
|
|
order.
|
|
From the class of 1950 comes Bonesman Dino Pionzio. His
|
|
claim to fame was the time he spent as CIA deputy chief of
|
|
station in Santiago, Chile, in 1970, during the massive CIA
|
|
destabilization of the Allende government. He is also a member of
|
|
the Association of Former Intelligence Officers. The CIA proved
|
|
not to be lucrative enough for Pionzio so he left his
|
|
intelligence career behind and became an investment banker. As of
|
|
1983, he was a vice president at the investment firm Dillon,
|
|
Read. (Just to illustrate how small these circles really are --
|
|
Nicholas Brady, the current Secretary of the Treasury, was the
|
|
co-chair of Dillon, Read, and a graduate of Yale University.
|
|
Brady, however, was not a Bonesman. He belonged to another Yale
|
|
secret society called "Book and Snake.")
|
|
From the days of George Bush's father, Prescott Bush, comes
|
|
former spook F. Trubee Davidson. Davidson, a Bonesman from the
|
|
class of 1918, was the Director of Personnel at the CIA in 1951.
|
|
Davidson then begot little Bonesmen, Endicott Peabody Davidson
|
|
and Daniel Pomeroy Davidson. Endicott Davidson went to work at
|
|
the law firm of Winthrop, Stimson, Putnam, and Roberts (Henry
|
|
Stimson was the Secretary of War during World War II and also a
|
|
Bonesman.)
|
|
Another interesting Bonesman is David Lyle Boren, the
|
|
Senate Democrat from Oklahoma. While he is not an employee of the
|
|
CIA (some say this is open to question), Boren nevertheless is
|
|
part of the intelligence community because he is the chair of the
|
|
Select Committee on Intelligence.
|
|
Finally, but certainly not the end of the list, comes
|
|
Richard A. Moore. Moore began his intelligence career in World
|
|
War II where he served as a special assistant to the chief of
|
|
military intelligence. He was rewarded for this service with the
|
|
Legion of Merit for Intelligence Work.
|
|
In the 1970s, Moore was special assistant to President
|
|
Nixon and in the thick of things during the Watergate scandal. At
|
|
his recent congressional confirmation hearing for the post of
|
|
Ambassador to Ireland, Moore was asked by one of the committee
|
|
members if he was one of 14 unnamed and unindicted
|
|
co-conspirators of the Watergate scandal. Moore, however,
|
|
emphatically denied the accusation. It is interesting to note
|
|
that Moore, a Bonesman from 1936, was recently appointed to a
|
|
high-level State Department post by George Bush, Bonesman, 1948.
|
|
The list of Bonesmen-made-good goes on and on and includes
|
|
McGeorge Bundy (National Security Advisor to Kennedy and
|
|
Johnson), William Draper (Defense Department Import-Export Bank,
|
|
etc.), Dean Witter, Jr. (investment banker), Potter Stewart
|
|
(Supreme Court Justice who swore in George Bush as Vice
|
|
President in 1981), John Forbes Kerry (Senator from
|
|
Massachusetts), Winston Lord (Kissinger protege and former
|
|
Ambassador to China), Robert H. Gow (president of Zapata Oil,
|
|
once owned by Bush and which had possible links to the CIA), and
|
|
Henry Luce of Time-Life fame.
|
|
This old (and new) boys network helps to illustrate the old
|
|
adage "it's not what you know, it's who you know." Given the
|
|
extent of Bones members in intelligence, it is also "how you come
|
|
to know it." </p>
|
|
</div>
|