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<div class="article">
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<p>Article 15189 of alt.activism:
|
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From: covici@ccs.covici.com (John Covici)
|
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Newsgroups: alt.activism
|
||
Subject: Part 1: Unauthorized Biography Of George Bush
|
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<info type="Message-ID"> 1RokeB1w164w@ccs.covici.com</info>
|
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Date: 15 Jan 92 03:55:59 GMT
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Organization: Covici Computer Systems
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Lines: 1361</p>
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<p>George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography</p>
|
||
<p>by Webster Griffin Tarpley and Anton Chaitkin</p>
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||
<p>With this issue of the New Federalist, Vol. V, No. 39, we begin
|
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to serialize the book, {George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography,}
|
||
by Webster Griffin Tarpley and Anton Chaitkin. This book will
|
||
soon be published by {Executive Intelligence Review}.</p>
|
||
<p> At the heart of any effort at biography is the attempt to
|
||
discover the essence of the subject as a human personality. The
|
||
essential character of the subject is what the biographer must
|
||
strive to capture, since this is theindispensable ingredient
|
||
that will provide coherence to the entire story whose unity must
|
||
be provided by the course of a single human life.</p>
|
||
<p> During the preparation of the present work, there was one
|
||
historical moment which more than any other delineated the
|
||
character of George Bush. The scene was the Nixon White House
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||
during the final days of the Watergate debacle. White House
|
||
officials, including George Bush, had spent the morning of that
|
||
Monday, August 5, 1974 absorbing the impact of Nixon's notorious
|
||
"smoking gun" tape, the recorded conversation between Nixon and
|
||
his chief of staff, H.R. Haldemann, shortly after the original
|
||
Watergate break-in, which could now no longer be withheld from
|
||
the public. In that exchange of June 23, 1972, Nixon ordered
|
||
that the CIA stop the FBI from further investigating how various
|
||
sums of money found their way from Texas and Minnesota via Mexico
|
||
City to the coffers of the Committee to Re-Elect thePresident
|
||
(CREEP) and thence into the pockets of the "Plumbers" arrested
|
||
in the Democratic Party headquarters in the Watergatebuilding.
|
||
These revelations were widely interpreted as establishing a
|
||
{prima facie} case of obstruction of justice against Nixon. That
|
||
was fine with George, who sincerely wanted his patron and
|
||
benefactor Nixon to resign. George's great concern was that the
|
||
smoking gun tape called attention to a money-laundering mechanism
|
||
which he, together with Bill Liedtke of Pennzoil, and Robert
|
||
Mosbacher, had helped to set up at Nixon's request. When Nixon,
|
||
in the "smoking gun" tape, talked about "the Texans" and
|
||
"some Texas people," Bush, Liedtke, and Mosbacher were among
|
||
the most prominent of those referred to. The threat to George's
|
||
political ambitions was great.</p>
|
||
<p> The White House that morning was gripped by panic. Nixon
|
||
would be gonebeforethe end of the week. In the midst of the
|
||
furor, White House Congressional liaison William Timmons wanted
|
||
to know if everyone who needed to be informed had been briefed
|
||
about the smoking gun transcript. In a roomful of officials,
|
||
some of whom were already sipping Scotch to steady their nerves,
|
||
Timmons asked Dean Burch,</p>
|
||
<p>"Dean, does Bush know about the transcript yet?"
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||
"Yes," responded Burch.
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||
"Well, what did he do?" inquired Timmons.
|
||
"He broke out into assholes and shit himself to death,"
|
||
replied Burch.
|
||
Inthis exchange, which is recordedin Woodward and
|
||
Bernstein's {The Final Days,} we grasp the essential George Bush,
|
||
in a crisis, and for all seasons.</p>
|
||
<p>Introduction</p>
|
||
<p> The thesis of this book is simple: if George Bush were to be
|
||
re-elected in November 1992 for a second term as the President of
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||
the United States, this country and the rest of the world would
|
||
face a catastrophe of gigantic proportions.</p>
|
||
<p> The necessity of writing this book became overwhelming in the
|
||
minds of the authors in the wake of the ghastly slaughter of the
|
||
Iraq war of January-February 1991. That war was an act of savage
|
||
and premeditated genocide on the part of Bush, undertaken in
|
||
connivance with a clique in London which has, in its historical
|
||
continuity, represented boththe worst enemy of the long-term
|
||
interests of the American people, and the most implacable
|
||
adversary of the progress of the human species.</p>
|
||
<p> Theauthors observed George Bush as the Gulf crisis and the
|
||
war unfolded, and had no doubt that his enraged publicoutbursts
|
||
constituted real psychotic episodes, indicative of a deranged
|
||
mental state that was full of ominous portent for humanity. The
|
||
authors were also horrified by the degree to which their fellow
|
||
citizens willfully ignored the shocking reality of these public
|
||
fits. A majority of the American people proved more than willing
|
||
to lend its support to a despicable enterprise of killing.</p>
|
||
<p> By their role-call votes of January 12, 1991, the Senate and
|
||
the House ofRepresentatives authorized Bush's planned war
|
||
measures to restore the Emir of Kuwait, who owns and holds
|
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chattel slaves. That vote was a crime against God's justice.</p>
|
||
<p> This book is part of an attempt to help the American people to
|
||
survive this terrible crime, both for the sake of the world and
|
||
for their ownsake. It is intended as a contribution to a
|
||
process of education that might help to save the American people
|
||
from the awesome destruction of a second Bush presidency. It is
|
||
further intended as a warning to all citizens that if they fail
|
||
to deny Bush a second term, they will deserve what they get after
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||
1993.</p>
|
||
<p> As this book goes to press, public awareness of the long-term
|
||
depression of the American economy is rapidly growing. If Bush
|
||
were re-elected, he would view himself as beyond the reach of the
|
||
American electorate; with the federal deficit rising over a
|
||
billion dollars a day, a second Bush administration would dictate
|
||
such crushing austerity as to bring the country to thebrink of
|
||
civil war. Some examples of this point are described in the last
|
||
chapter of this book.</p>
|
||
<p> Ourgoal has been to assemble as much of the truth about Bush
|
||
as possible within thetime constraints imposed bythe 1992
|
||
election. Time and resources have not permitted us meticulous
|
||
attention to certain matters of detail; we can say, nevertheless,
|
||
that both our commitment to the truth and our final product are
|
||
betterthan anythinganyoneelse has been able to muster,
|
||
including news organizationsand intelligence agencies with
|
||
capabilities that far surpass our own.</p>
|
||
<p> Why do we fight the Bush power cartel with a mere book? We
|
||
have no illusions of easy success, but we were encouraged in our
|
||
work by the hope that a biography might stimulate opposition to
|
||
Bush and his policies.It will certainly pose a new set of
|
||
problems for those seeking to get Bush re-elected. For although
|
||
Bush is now what journalists call a world leader, no accurate
|
||
account of his actual career exists in the public domain.</p>
|
||
<p> Thevolumewhich we submit to the court of world public
|
||
opinion is, to the best of our knowledge, the first book-length,
|
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unauthorized biography ofGeorgeBush. It is the first
|
||
approximation of the truth about his life. This is the first
|
||
biography worthy of the name, a fact that says a great deal about
|
||
the sinister and obsessive secrecy of this personage. None of
|
||
the other biographies (including Bush's campaign autobiography)
|
||
can be takenseriously; each of these books is a pastiche of
|
||
lies, distortions and banalities that run the gamut from campaign
|
||
panegyric, to the Goebbels Big Lie, to fake but edifying stories
|
||
for credulous children. Almost without exception, the available
|
||
Bush literature is worthless as a portrait of the subject.</p>
|
||
<p> Bush's family pedigree establishes him as a networkasset of
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Brown Brothers Harriman, one of the most powerful political
|
||
forces in the United States during much of the twentieth century,
|
||
and for many years the largest private bank inthe world. It
|
||
suffices in this context to think of Averell Harriman negotiating
|
||
duringWorld War IIin the name of the United States with
|
||
Churchill and Stalin, or of the role of Brown Brothers Harriman
|
||
partner Robert Lovett in guiding John F. Kennedy's choice of his
|
||
cabinet, to begin to see the implications of Senator Prescott
|
||
Bush's post as managing partner of this bank. Brown Brothers
|
||
Harriman networks pervade government and the mass media. Again
|
||
and again in the course of the following pages wewill see
|
||
stories embarrassing to George Bush refused publication,
|
||
documents embarrassing to Bush suspiciously disappear, and
|
||
witnesses inculpatoryto Bush be overtaken by mysterious and
|
||
conveniently timed deaths. The few relevant facts which have
|
||
found their way into the public domain have necessarily been
|
||
filtered by this gigantic apparatus. This problemhas been
|
||
compounded by thecorruption and servility of authors,
|
||
journalists, news executives and publishers who have functioned
|
||
more and more as kept advocates for a governmental regime of
|
||
which Bush has been a prominent part for a quarter-century.</p>
|
||
<p>The Red Studebaker Myth</p>
|
||
<p> George Bush wants key aspects of his life to remain covert.
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||
At the same time, he senses thathis need for coverup is a
|
||
vulnerability.The need to protect this weak flank accounts for
|
||
the steady stream of fake biographical material concerning
|
||
George, as well as the spin given to many studies that may never
|
||
mention Georgedirectly. Over the past several months, we have
|
||
seen a new book about Watergate that pretends to tell the public
|
||
something newby fingering Al Haig as Deep Throat, but ignoring
|
||
the central role of George Bush and his business partners in the
|
||
Watergate affair. We have a new book by Lt. Col. Oliver North
|
||
which alleges that Reagan knew everything about the Iran-Contra
|
||
affair, but that George Bush was not part of North's chain of
|
||
command. The latter point merely paraphrasesBush'sown lame
|
||
excusethat he was "out of the loop" during all those illegal
|
||
transactions. During the hearings on the nomination of Robert
|
||
Gates to become director of Central Intelligence, nobody had
|
||
anything new to add about the role of George Bush, the boss of
|
||
the National Security Council's Special Situation Group crisis
|
||
staff that was a command center for the whole affair. These
|
||
charades are peddledto a very credulous public by operatives
|
||
whose task goes beyond mere damage control to mind control--the
|
||
"MK" in the government's MK-Ultra operation.</p>
|
||
<p> Part of the free ride enjoyed by George Bush during the 1988
|
||
elections is reflected in the fact that at no point in the
|
||
campaign was there any serious effort byany of the news
|
||
organizations to provide the public with an accurate and complete
|
||
account of his political career. At least two biographies of
|
||
Dukakis appeared which, although hardly critical,were not
|
||
uniformly laudatory either. But in the case of Bush, all the
|
||
public could turn to was Bush's old 1980 campaign biography and a
|
||
newer campaign autobiography, both of them a tissue of lies.</p>
|
||
<p> Early in the course of our research for the present volume it
|
||
became apparent that all books and most longerarticles dealing
|
||
with the life of George Bush had been generated from a single
|
||
print-out of thoroughly approved "facts" about Bush and his
|
||
family. We learned that during 1979-80, Bush aide Pete Roussel
|
||
attempted to recruit biographers to prepare a life of Bush based
|
||
on a collection of press releases, news summaries, and similar
|
||
pre-digested material. Most biographical writing about Bush
|
||
consists merely of the points from this printout, strung out
|
||
chronologically and made into anarrative through the
|
||
interpretation of comments, anecdotes, embellishments, or special
|
||
stylistic devices.</p>
|
||
<p> Thecanonical Bush-approved printout is readily identified.
|
||
One dead giveaway is the inevitability with which the hacks out
|
||
to cover up the substance of Bush's life refer to a 1947 red
|
||
Studebaker which George Bush allegedly drove into Odessa, Texas
|
||
in 1948. This is the sort of detail which has been introduced
|
||
into Bush's real life in a deliberate and deceptive attempt to
|
||
humanize his image.It has been our experience that any text
|
||
that features a reference to Bush's red Studebaker has probably
|
||
been derived from Bush's list of approved facts, and is therefore
|
||
practically worthless for serious research into Bush's life. We
|
||
therefore assign such texts to the "red Studebaker school" of
|
||
coverup and falsification.</p>
|
||
<p> Some examples? This is from Bush's campaign autobiography,
|
||
{Looking Forward,} ghost-written by his aide Vic Gold:"Heading
|
||
into Texas in my Studebaker, all I knewabout the state's
|
||
landscape was what I'd seen from the cockpit of a Vultee Vibrator
|
||
during my training days in the Navy."s1
|
||
Here is the same moment as recaptured by Bush's crony Fitzhugh
|
||
Green, a friend of the Malthusian financier Russell Train, in his
|
||
{George Bush: An Intimate Portrait,} published after Bush had won
|
||
the presidency: "He (Bush) gassed up his1948 Studebaker,
|
||
arranged for his wife and son to follow, and headed for Odessa,
|
||
Texas."s2</p>
|
||
<p> Harry Hurt III wrote the followinglines in a 1983 Texas
|
||
magazine article that was even decorated with a drawing of what
|
||
apparently is supposed to be a Studebaker, but whichdoes not
|
||
look like a Studebaker of that vintage at all: "When George
|
||
Herbert Walker Bush drove his battered red Studebaker into Odessa
|
||
in the summer of 1948, the town's population, though constantly
|
||
increasing with newly-arrived oil field hands, was still under
|
||
30000."s3</p>
|
||
<p> We see that Harry Hurt has more imagination than many Bush
|
||
biographers, and hisarticle does provide a few useful facts.
|
||
More degraded is the version offered by Richard Ben Kramer, whose
|
||
biography of Bush is expected to be published during 1992. Cramer
|
||
was given the unenviable task of breathing life once more into
|
||
the same tired old printout. But the very fact that the Bush
|
||
team feels that it requires another biography indicates that it
|
||
still feels that it has a potential vulnerability here. Cramer
|
||
has attempted to solve his problem byrecasting thesame old
|
||
garbage into a frenetic and hyperkinetic, we would almost say
|
||
{hyperthyroid} style. The following is from an excerpt of this
|
||
forthcoming book that was published in {Esquire} in June 1991:
|
||
"In June, after the College World Series and graduation day in
|
||
New Haven, Poppy packed up his new red Studebaker (a graduation
|
||
gift from Pres), and started driving south."s4</p>
|
||
<p> Was that Studebakershiny and new, or old andbattered?
|
||
Perhaps the printout is not specific on this point; in any case,
|
||
as we see, our authorities diverge.</p>
|
||
<p> Joe Hyams's 1991 romance of Bush at war, the {Flight of the
|
||
Avenger,}s5 does notinclude the obligatory "red Studebaker"
|
||
reference, but this is more than compensated for bythe most
|
||
elaborate fawning over other details of our hero's war service.
|
||
The publication of {Flight of the Avenger,} which concentrates on
|
||
an heroic retelling of Bush's war record,and ignores all
|
||
evidence that might tend to puncture this myth, was timed to
|
||
coincide with Bush's war with Iraq. This is a vile tract written
|
||
with the open assistance of Bush, Barbara Bush, and the White
|
||
House staff. {Flight of the Avenger} recallsthe practice of
|
||
totalitarian states according to which a war waged by the regime
|
||
should be accompanied by propaganda which depicts the regime's
|
||
strong man ina martial posture. In any case, this book deals
|
||
with Bush's life up to the end of World War II; we never reach
|
||
Odessa.</p>
|
||
<p> Only one of the full-length accounts produced by the Bush
|
||
propaganda machine neglects the red Studebaker story. This is
|
||
Nicholas King's {George Bush: A Biography,} the first book-length
|
||
version of Bush's life, produced as a result of Pete Roussel's
|
||
efforts for the 1980 campaign. Nicholas King had served as
|
||
Bush'sspokesman when he was U.S.Ambassador to the United
|
||
Nations. King admits in his preface that he can be impugned for
|
||
writing a work of the most transparent apologetics: "In
|
||
retrospect," he says , "this book may seem open to the charge
|
||
of puffery, for the view of its subject is favorable all
|
||
around."s6 Indeed.</p>
|
||
<p> Books about Barbara Bush slavishly rehearse the same details
|
||
from the sameprintout. Here is the relevant excerpt from the
|
||
warmly admiring {Simply Barbara Bush: A Portrait ofAmerica's
|
||
CandidFirst Lady,} writtenby Donnie Radcliffe and published
|
||
after Bush's 1988 election victory: "With $3000 left over after
|
||
he graduated in June, 1948, he headed for Texas in the1947 red
|
||
Studebaker his father had given him for graduation after George's
|
||
car died on the highway."s7</p>
|
||
<p> Even foreign journalists attempting to inform their publics
|
||
about conditions in the United States have fallen victim to the
|
||
same old Bushprintout. The German author and reporter Rainer
|
||
Bonhorst, the former Washington correspondent of the
|
||
{Westdeutsche Allgemeine Zeitung,} in his 1988 book {George Bush:
|
||
The New Man in the White House,} named a chapter of this Bush
|
||
political biography "To Texas in the Red Studebaker." Bonhorst
|
||
writesas follows: "Then there was still the matter of the red
|
||
Studebaker. It plays--rightafter the world wareffort--a
|
||
central role in thelife history of George Bush. It is the
|
||
history of his rebellion. The step which made a careless Texan
|
||
out of a stiff NewEnglander, a self-made man out ofa
|
||
patrician's son, born into wealth.... Thus, George and Barbara
|
||
Bush, 24 and23 years old, he having just finished with his
|
||
studies, she having prematurely withdrawn from her university and
|
||
become a mother a few months earlier, packed their baby and their
|
||
suitcases and loaded them into their glaring red Studebaker
|
||
coupe.</p>
|
||
<p> "Asupermodern, smart car, certainly somewhat loud for the
|
||
New England taste,' the Bushes later recalled. But finally it
|
||
departed towards Texas."s8
|
||
We see that Bonhorst isacutely awareof the symbolic
|
||
importance assumed by the red Studebaker in these hagiographic
|
||
accounts of Bush's life.</p>
|
||
<p> What is finally the truth of the matter? There is good reason
|
||
to believe that George Bush did not first come to Odessa, Texas,
|
||
in a red Studebaker. One knowledgeable source is the well-known
|
||
Texas oil man and Bush campaign contributor Oscar Wyatt of
|
||
Houston. In arecentletterto the {Texas Monthly,} Wyatt
|
||
specifies that "when people speak of Mr. Bush's humble
|
||
beginnings in the oil industry, it should be noted that he rode
|
||
down to Texas on Dresser's private aircraft. He was accompanied
|
||
by his father, who at that time was one of the directors of
|
||
Dresser Industries.... I hate it when people make statements
|
||
about Mr. Bush's humble beginnings in the oil industry. It just
|
||
didn'thappenthat way," writes Mr. Wyatt.s9 Dresser was a
|
||
Harriman company, and Bush got his start working for one of its
|
||
subsidiaries.One history of Dresser Industries contains a
|
||
photograph of George Bush with his parents, wife, and infant son
|
||
"in front of a Dresser company airplane in West Texas."s1s0 Can
|
||
this be a photo of Bush's arrival in Odessa during the summer of
|
||
1948? In anycase, this most cherished myth ofthe Bush
|
||
biographers is very much open to doubt.</p>
|
||
<p>The Roman Propaganda Machine</p>
|
||
<p> Fawning biographies of bloodthirsty tyrants are nothing new in
|
||
world literature. The red Studebaker school goes back a long
|
||
way; these writers of today can be usefullycompared witha
|
||
certain Gaius Velleius Paterculus, who lived in the Roman Empire
|
||
under the emperors Augustus and Tiberius, and who was thus an
|
||
approximate contemporary of Jesus Christ. Velleius Paterculus was
|
||
an historian and biographer who is known today, if at all, for
|
||
his biographical notes on the Emperor Tiberius, which are
|
||
contained within Paterculus's history of Rome.</p>
|
||
<p> Paterculus,writing underTiberius, gave a very favorable
|
||
treatment of Julius Caesar, and became fulsome when he came to
|
||
write of Augustus. But the worst excesses of flattery came in
|
||
Velleius Paterculus's treatment of Tiberius himself. Here is
|
||
part of what he writes about that tyrannical ruler:</p>
|
||
<p> "Of the transactions of the last sixteen years, which have
|
||
passed in the view, and are fresh in the memory of all, who shall
|
||
presume to give a full account? ... credit has been restored to
|
||
mercantile affairs, seditionhas been banished from the forum,
|
||
corruption from the Campus Martius, and discord from the
|
||
senate-house; justice, equity and industry, which had long lain
|
||
buried in neglect, have been revived in the state; authority has
|
||
been given to the magistrates, majesty to the senate, and
|
||
solemnity to the courts of justice; the bloody riots in the
|
||
theatre have been suppressed, and all men have had either a
|
||
desire excited in them, or a necessity imposed on them, of acting
|
||
with integrity. Virtuous actsare honored, wicked deeds are
|
||
punished. The humble respects the powerful, without dreading
|
||
him; the powerful takes precedenceof the humble without
|
||
condemning him. When were provisions more moderate in price?
|
||
When were the blessings of peace more abundant? Augustan peace,
|
||
diffused overall the regions of the east and the west, and all
|
||
that lies between the south and the north, preserves every corner
|
||
of the world free from all dread of predatory molestation.
|
||
Fortuitous losses, not only of individuals, but of cities, the
|
||
munificence of the prince is ready to relieve. The cities of
|
||
Asia have been repaired; the provinces have been secured from the
|
||
oppression of their governors. Honor promptly rewards the
|
||
deserving, and the punishment of the guilty, ifslow, is
|
||
certain. Interest gives place to justice, solicitation to
|
||
merit.For the best of princes teaches his countrymen to act
|
||
rightly by his own practice; and while he is the greatest in
|
||
power, he is still greater in example.</p>
|
||
<p> "Having exhibited a general view of the administration of
|
||
Tiberius Caesar, let us now enumerate a few particulars
|
||
respecting it.... How formidable a war, excited by the Gallic
|
||
chief Sacrovir and Julius Florius, did he suppress, and with such
|
||
amazing expedition and energy, that the Roman people learned that
|
||
they were conquerors, before they knew that they were at war, and
|
||
the news of the victory outstripped the news of the danger! The
|
||
African war too, perilous as it was, and daily increasing in
|
||
strength, was quickly terminatedunder his auspices and
|
||
direction...."s1s1</p>
|
||
<p> All of this was written in praise of the regime that crucified
|
||
Jesus Christ, and one of the worst genocidal tyrannies in the
|
||
history of the world.Paterculus, we must sadly conclude, was a
|
||
sycophant of the Tiberius administration. Some of his themes are
|
||
close parallels to the propaganda of today's Bush machine.</p>
|
||
<p> In addition to feeding the personality cult ofTiberius,
|
||
Paterculus also lavished praise on Lucius Aelius Sejanus, the
|
||
Prefect of the Praetorian Guard and for manyyears Tiberius's
|
||
number one favorite, second in command, and likely successor. In
|
||
many respectsSejanus was not unlike James Baker III under the
|
||
Bush regime. While Tiberius spent all of his time inseclusion
|
||
on his island of Capri near Naples, Sejanus assumed day to day
|
||
control of the vastempireand its 100 millionsubjects.
|
||
Paterculus wrote of Sejanusthat he was "a most excellent
|
||
coadjutor in all the toils of government ... aman of pleasing
|
||
gravity, and of unaffected cheerfulness ... assuming nothing to
|
||
himself." That was the voice of the red Studebaker school in
|
||
about 30 A.D. Paterculus should have limited his fawning to
|
||
Tiberius himself; somewhat later, the emperor, suspecting a coup
|
||
plot, condemned Sejanus andhad him tornlimb from limb in
|
||
gruesome retribution.</p>
|
||
<p> But why bring up Rome? Some readers may be scandalized by the
|
||
things that truth obliges us to record about a sittingpresident
|
||
of the United States. Are we not disrespectful to this high
|
||
office? No. One of the reasons for glancing back at Imperial
|
||
Rome is to remind ourselves that in times of moral and cultural
|
||
degradation like our own, rulers of great evil haveinflicted
|
||
incalculable sufferingon humanity.In our modern time of war
|
||
and depression, this is once again the case.If Caligula was
|
||
possible then, who could claim that the America of the New World
|
||
Order should be exempt? Let us therefore tarry for a moment with
|
||
these old Romans, because they can show us much about ourselves.</p>
|
||
<p> In order to find Roman writers who tell us anything reliable
|
||
about the first dozen emperors, we must wait until the infamous
|
||
Julio-Claudian dynastyof Julius Caesar, Augustus,Tiberius,
|
||
Caligula, Claudius, Nero, and the rest had entirely passed from
|
||
the scene, to be supplanted by new ruling houses. Tiberius
|
||
reigned from 14 to 37 A.D.; Caligula, his designated successor,
|
||
from 37 to 41 A.D.; and Nero from 54 to 68 A.D. But the first
|
||
accurate account of the crimes of some of these emperors comes
|
||
from Publius Cornelius Tacitus in about 115-17 A.D., late in the
|
||
reign of the emperor Trajan. It was feasible for Tacitus to write
|
||
and publish a more realistic account of the Julio-Claudian
|
||
emperors because oneof the constant themes of Trajan's
|
||
propaganda was to glorify himself as an enlightened emperor
|
||
through comparison with the earlier series of bloody tyrants.</p>
|
||
<p> Tacitus manages to convey how the destructivenessof these
|
||
emperors in their personal lives correlated with their mass
|
||
executions and their genocidal economic policies. Tacitus was
|
||
familiar withthe machinery of Roman Imperial power: he was of
|
||
senatorial rank, served as consul in Italy in 97 A.D., and was
|
||
the governor of theimportant province of western Anatolia
|
||
(today's Turkey) which the Romans referred tosimplyas Asia.
|
||
Tacitus writes of Tiberius: "... his criminal lusts shamed him.
|
||
Their uncontrollable activity was worthy of anoriental tyrant.
|
||
Free-born children were his victims. He was fascinated by
|
||
beauty, youthful innocence, and aristocratic birth. New names
|
||
for types of perversions were invented. Slaves were charged to
|
||
locate and procure his requirements.... It was like the sack of
|
||
a captured city."</p>
|
||
<p> Tiberius was ableto dominate the legislative branch of his
|
||
government, the senate, by subversion and terror: "It was,
|
||
indeed, a horrible feature of this period that leading senators
|
||
became informers evenon trivial matters--some openly, many
|
||
secretly. Friends and relatives were as suspect as strangers,
|
||
old stories as damaging as new. Inthe Main Square, ata
|
||
dinner-party, a remark on any subject might mean prosecution.
|
||
Everyone competed forpriority in marking down the victim.
|
||
Sometimes this was self-defense, but mostly it was a sort of
|
||
contagion, like an epidemic.... I realize that many writers omit
|
||
numerous trials and condemnations, bored by repetition or afraid
|
||
that catalogues they themselves have found over-long and dismal
|
||
may equally depress their readers.But numerous unrecorded
|
||
incidents, which have come to my attention, ought to be known.</p>
|
||
<p> "... Even women were in danger.They could not be charged
|
||
with aiming at supreme power. So they were charged with weeping:
|
||
one old lady was executed for lamenting her son's death. The
|
||
senate decidedthis case.... In the same year the high price of
|
||
corn nearly caused riots....</p>
|
||
<p> "Frenzied with bloodshed, (Tiberius) now ordered the
|
||
execution of all those arrested for complicity with Sejanus. It
|
||
was a massacre. Without discrimination of sex or age, eminence
|
||
or obscurity, therethey lay, strewn about--or in heaps.
|
||
Relatives and friends were forbidden to stand by or lament them,
|
||
or even gaze for long. Guards surrounded them, spying on their
|
||
sorrow, and escorted the rotting bodies until, dragged to the
|
||
Tiber,they floated away or grounded--with none to cremate or
|
||
touch them. Terror had paralyzed human sympathy. The rising
|
||
surge of brutality drove compassion away."s1s2</p>
|
||
<p> This is the sameTiberius administration so extravagantly
|
||
praised by Velleius Paterculus.
|
||
Because of lacunae in the manuscripts of Tacitus's work that
|
||
have come down to us, much of what we know of the rule of
|
||
Caligula (Gaius Caesar, in power from 37 to 41 A.D.) derives from
|
||
{The Lives of the Twelve Caesars,} a book by GaiusSuetonius
|
||
Tranquillus. The character and administration of Caligula present
|
||
some striking parallels with the subject of the present book.</p>
|
||
<p> Asa stoic, Caligula was a great admirer of his own
|
||
"immovable rigor." His motto was "Remember that Ihave the
|
||
right to do anything to anybody." He made no secret of his
|
||
bloodthirsty vindictiveness. Caligula was a fan of the green
|
||
team in the Roman arena, and when the crowd applaudeda
|
||
charioteer who wore a different color, Caligula criedout, "I
|
||
wish the Roman people had but a single neck." At one of his
|
||
state dinnersCaligula burst into a fit of uncontrollable
|
||
laughter, andwhen a consul askedhim what was so funny, he
|
||
replied that it was the thought that as emperor Caligula had the
|
||
power to have the throats of the top officials cut at any time he
|
||
chose. Caligula carried this same attitude into his personal
|
||
life: whenever he kissed or caressed the neck of his wife or one
|
||
of his mistresses, he liked to remark: "Off comes this beautiful
|
||
head whenever I give the word."</p>
|
||
<p> Above all, Caligula was vindictive. After his death, two
|
||
notebooks were found among his personal papers, one labelled
|
||
"The Sword"and the other labelled "The Dagger." These were
|
||
lists of the persons he had proscribed and liquidated,and were
|
||
the forerunners of the enemies lists and discrediting committee
|
||
of today. Suetonius frankly calls Caligula "a monster," and
|
||
speculates on thepyschologicalrootsof his criminal
|
||
disposition: "I think I may attributeto mental weakness the
|
||
existence of two exactly opposite faults in the same person,
|
||
extreme assurance and, on theotherhand,excessive
|
||
timorousness." Caligula was"full of threats" against "the
|
||
barbarians," but at the same time prone to precipitous retreats
|
||
and flights of panic. Caligula worked on his "body language"
|
||
by "practicing all kinds of terrible and fearsome expressions
|
||
before a mirror."</p>
|
||
<p> Caligula built an extension of his palace to connect with the
|
||
Temple of Castor and Pollux, and often went there to exhibit
|
||
himself as an object of public worship, delighting in being
|
||
hailed as "Jupiter Latiaris" by the populace. Later Caligula
|
||
would officially opentemples in his own name. Caligula was
|
||
brutal in his intimidation of the senate, whose members he
|
||
subjected to open humiliations and covert attacks; many senators
|
||
were "secretly put to death." "He often inveighed against all
|
||
the Senators alike.... He treated the other orders with like
|
||
insolence and cruelty." Suetonius recites whole catalogues of
|
||
"special instances of his innate brutality" toward persons of
|
||
all walks of life. He enjoyed inflicting torture, and revelled
|
||
in liquidating political opponents or those who had insulted or
|
||
snubbed him in some way. He had a taste for capital executions
|
||
as theperfect backdrop for parties and banquets. Caligula also
|
||
did everything he could to denigrate the memory of the great men
|
||
of past epochs, so that their fame could not eclipse his own:
|
||
"He assailed mankind of almost every epoch with no less envy and
|
||
malice than insolence and cruelty. He threw down the statues of
|
||
famous men" and tried to destroy all the texts of Homer.</p>
|
||
<p> Caligula "respected neither his own chastity nor that of any
|
||
one else." He was reckless in his extravagance, and soon emptied
|
||
out the imperial treasury of all the funds that old Tiberius had
|
||
squirreled away there. After that, Caligula tried to replenish
|
||
his coffers through a system of spies, false accusations,
|
||
property seizures, and public auctions. He also "levied new and
|
||
unheard-of taxes," to the point that "no class of commodities
|
||
was exempt from some kind of tax or other." Caligula taxed all
|
||
foodstuffs, took a fortiethof the award in any lawsuit, an
|
||
eighth of the daily wages of the porters, and demandedthat the
|
||
prostitutes pay him a daily fee equal to the average price
|
||
charged to each individual customer. (It is rumored that this
|
||
part of Caligula's career is under study by those planning George
|
||
Bush's second term.) Caligula also opened a brothel in his palace
|
||
as anadditional source of income, which may prefigure today's
|
||
White House staff. Among Caligula's moresingular hobbies
|
||
Suetonius includes his love of rolling and wallowing in piles of
|
||
gold coins.</p>
|
||
<p> Caligula kept his wife, Caesonia (describedby Suetonius as
|
||
"neither beautiful nor young") with him until the very end.
|
||
But his greatest devotion was to his horse, whom he made consul
|
||
of theRoman state. Ultimately Caligula fell victim to a
|
||
conspiracy of the Praetorian Guard, led by the tribune Gaius
|
||
Chaerea, a man whomCaligula had taken special delight in
|
||
humiliating.s1s3</p>
|
||
<p> The authors of the present study are convinced that these
|
||
references tothe depravityof the Roman emperors, and to the
|
||
records of that depravity provided by such authors as Tacitus and
|
||
Suetonius, are directly germane to our present task offollowing
|
||
the career of a member of the senatorial class of the
|
||
Anglo-American elite through the various stages of hisformation
|
||
and ultimate ascent to imperial power. The Roman Imperial model
|
||
is germane because the American rulingelite of today is far
|
||
closerto the world of Tiberius and Caligula than it is to the
|
||
world of the American Revolution or the Constitutional Convention
|
||
of 1789. The leitmotif of modern American presidential politics
|
||
is unquestionably an imperial theme, most blatantly expressed by
|
||
Bush in his slogan for 1990, "The NewWorld Order," and for
|
||
1991, the "pax universalis." The central project of the Bush
|
||
presidency isthe creation and consolidation of a single,
|
||
universal Anglo-American (orAnglo-Saxon) empire very directly
|
||
modelled on the various phases of the Roman Empire.</p>
|
||
<p>The Olympian Delusion</p>
|
||
<p> There is one other aspect of the biographical-historical
|
||
methodof the Graeco-Roman world which we have sought to borrow.
|
||
Ever since Thucydides composed hismonumental work on the
|
||
PeloponnesianWar, those who have sought to imitate his
|
||
style--with the Roman historian Titus Livius prominent among
|
||
them--have employed the device of attributing long speeches to
|
||
historical personages, even when it appears very unlikely that
|
||
such lengthy orations could have been made by the protagonists at
|
||
the time. This has nothing to do with the synthetic dialogue of
|
||
current American political writing, which attempts to present
|
||
historical events asa series of trivial and banal soap-opera
|
||
exchanges, which carry on for such interminable lengths as to
|
||
suggest that the authors are getting paid by the word. Our idea
|
||
of fidelity to the classical style has simply been to let George
|
||
Bush speak for himself wherever possible, through direct
|
||
quotation. We are convinced that by letting Bush express himself
|
||
directly in this way, we afford the reader a more faithful--and
|
||
damning--account of Bush's actions.</p>
|
||
<p> George Bush might agreethat "history is biography,"
|
||
although we suspect that he would not agree with any of our other
|
||
conclusions. There may be a few peculiarities of the present
|
||
work as biography that are worthy of explanation at the outset.</p>
|
||
<p> One of our basic theses is that George Bush is, and considers
|
||
himself to be, an oligarch. The notion of oligarchy includes
|
||
first of all the idea of a patrician and wealthy family capable
|
||
of introducing its offspring into such elite institutions as
|
||
Andover, Yale,and Skull and Bones. Oligarchy also subsumes the
|
||
self-conception of the oligarch as belonging to a special,
|
||
exalted breed of mankind, one that is superior to the common run
|
||
of mankind as a matter of hereditary genetic superiority. This
|
||
mentality generallygoes togetherwith a fascination for
|
||
eugenics, race science and just plain racism as a means of
|
||
building a case that one's own family tree and racial stock are
|
||
indeed superior. These notions of "breeding" are a constant in
|
||
the history of the titled feudal aristocracy of Europe,
|
||
especially Britain, towards inclusion in which an individual like
|
||
Bush must necessarily strive.At the very least, oligarchs like
|
||
Bush see themselves as demigods occupying a middle ground between
|
||
the immortals above and the {hoi polloi} below. The culmination
|
||
of this insane delusion, which Bush has demonstrably long since
|
||
attained, is the obsessive belief that the principal families of
|
||
the Anglo-American elite, assembled in their freemasonic orders,
|
||
by themselves directly constitute an Olympian Pantheon of living
|
||
deities who have the capability of abrogating and disregarding
|
||
the laws of the universe according to their own irrational
|
||
caprice. If we do not take into account this element of fatal
|
||
and megalomaniac hubris, the lunatic Anglo-American policies in
|
||
regardto the Gulf War, international finance, or the AIDS
|
||
epidemic must defy all comprehension.</p>
|
||
<p> Part of the ethos of oligarchism as practiced by George Bush
|
||
is theemphasis on one's own family pedigree.This accounts for
|
||
the attention we dedicate in the opening chapters of this book to
|
||
Bush's family tree, reaching back to the nineteenth century and
|
||
beyond. It is impossible to gain insight into Bush's mentality
|
||
unless we realize that it is important for him to be considered a
|
||
cousin, however distant, of Queen Elizabeth II of theHouse of
|
||
Mountbatten-Windsor and for his wife Barbara to be viewed in some
|
||
sense a descendant of President Franklin Pierce.</p>
|
||
<p>The Family Firm</p>
|
||
<p> Forrelated reasons, it is our special duty to illustrate the
|
||
role played in the formation of George Bush as a personality by
|
||
his maternal grandfather and uncle, George Herbert Walker and
|
||
George Herbert Walker, Jr., and by George H.W. Bush's father, the
|
||
late Senator Prescott Bush. In the course of this task, we must
|
||
speak at length about the institution to which George Bush owes
|
||
the most, the Wall Street international investment bank of Brown
|
||
Brothers Harriman, the political and financial powerhouse
|
||
mentioned above. For George Bush, Brown Brothers Harriman was
|
||
and remains the family firm in the deepest sense. The formidable
|
||
power of this bank and its ubiquitous network, wielded by Senator
|
||
Prescott Bush up through the time of his death in 1972, and still
|
||
activeon George's behalf down to the present day, is the single
|
||
most important key to every step of George'sbusiness, covert
|
||
operations, and political career.</p>
|
||
<p> In the case of George Bush, as many who have known him
|
||
personally have noted, the networklooms much larger than
|
||
George's own character and will. The reader will search in vain
|
||
for strong principled commitments in George Bush's personality;
|
||
the most that will be found is a series of characteristic
|
||
obsessions, of which the most durable are race, vanity, personal
|
||
ambition, and settling scores with adversaries. What emerges by
|
||
contrast is the decisive importance of Bush's network of
|
||
connections. His response to the Gulf crisis of 1991 will be
|
||
largely predetermined, not by any great flashes of geopolitical
|
||
insight, but rather by his connections to the British oligarchy,
|
||
to Kissinger, to Israeli and Zionist circles, to Texas oilmen in
|
||
his fundraising base, to the Saudi Arabian and Kuwaiti royal
|
||
houses. If the question is one of finance, then the opinions of
|
||
J. Hugh Liedtke, Henry Kravis, Robert Mosbacher,T. Boone
|
||
Pickens, Nicholas Brady, James Baker III and the City of London
|
||
will be decisive. If covert operations and dirty tricks are on
|
||
the agenda, then there is a whole stable of CIA old boys with
|
||
whom he will consult, and so on down the line. During much of
|
||
1989, despite his control over the presidency, Bush appeared as a
|
||
weak and passive executive, waiting for his networks to show him
|
||
what it was he was supposed to do. When German reunification and
|
||
the crumblingof the Soviet empire spurred those--primarily
|
||
British--networks intoaction, Bush was suddenly capable of
|
||
violent and daring adventures. As his battle for a second term
|
||
approaches, Bush may be showing increasing signs of a rage-driven
|
||
self-starter capability, especially when it comes to starting new
|
||
wars designed to secure his re-election.</p>
|
||
<p>The United States in Decline</p>
|
||
<p> Biography has itsown inherent discipline: Itmust be
|
||
concerned with the life of its protagonist, and cannot stray too
|
||
far away. In no way has it been our intention tooffer an
|
||
account of American history during the lifetime of George Bush.
|
||
The present study neverthelessreflects manyaspects of that
|
||
recent historyof U.S. decline. It will be noted that Bush has
|
||
succeeded in proportion as the country has failed,and that
|
||
Bush's advancement has proceeded {paripassu}with the
|
||
degradation of the national stage upon which he has operated and
|
||
which he has come to dominate. At various phases in his career,
|
||
Bush has come into conflict with persons who were intellectually
|
||
and morally superior to him. Onesuch was Senator Ralph
|
||
Yarborough, and another was Senator Frank Church. Our study will
|
||
be found to catalogue the constant decline in the qualities of
|
||
Bush's adversaries as human types until the 1980s, by which time
|
||
his opponents, as in the case of Al Haig, are no better than Bush
|
||
himself.</p>
|
||
<p> Theexception to this trend is Bush's long-standing personal
|
||
vendetta against Lyndon LaRouche, his most consistent and capable
|
||
adversary. LaRouche was jailed seven days after Bush's
|
||
inauguration in the most infamous political frameup of recent
|
||
U.S. history. As our study will document, at critical moments in
|
||
Bush's career, LaRouche's political interventions have frustrated
|
||
some of Bush's best-laid political plans: A very clear example is
|
||
LaRouche's role in defeating Bush's 1980 presidential bid in the
|
||
New Hampshire primary. Over the intervening years, LaRouche has
|
||
become George Bush's "man in the iron mask," the principled
|
||
political adversary whom Bush seeks to jail and silence at all
|
||
costs.The restoration of justice in this country must include
|
||
the freeing of Lyndon LaRouche, LaRouche's political associates,
|
||
and all the other political prisoners of the Bush regime.</p>
|
||
<p> As for the political relevance of our project, we think that
|
||
it is very real. During the Gulf crisis, it would have been
|
||
important for the public to know more about Bush's business
|
||
dealings withthe Royal Family ofKuwait. During the 1992
|
||
presidential campaign, as Wall Street's recent crop ofjunk-bond
|
||
assisted leveraged buyouts line up at the entrance to bankruptcy
|
||
court, and state workers all across the United States are
|
||
informed that the retirement pensions they had been promised will
|
||
never be paid, the relations between George Bush and Henry Kravis
|
||
will surely constitute an explosive political issue. Similarly,
|
||
once Bush's British and Kissingerian pedigree is recognized, the
|
||
methods he is likely to pursue in regard to situations such as
|
||
the planned Romanian-style overthrow of the Castro regime in
|
||
Cuba, or theprovocation of a splendid little nuclear war
|
||
involving North Korea, or of a new Indo-Pakistani war, will
|
||
hardly be mysterious.</p>
|
||
<p> Theauthors have been at some pains to makethis work
|
||
intelligible to readers around the world. We offer this book to
|
||
those who share our aversion to the imperialist-colonialist New
|
||
World Order, and our profound horror at the concept ofa return
|
||
to a single, worldwide Roman Empire as suggested by Bush's "pax
|
||
universalis" slogan. This work is tangible evidence that there
|
||
is anopposition to Bush inside the United States, and that the
|
||
new Caligula is very vulnerable indeed on the level of the
|
||
exposure of his own misdeeds.</p>
|
||
<p> It will be argued that this book should have been published
|
||
before the 1988 election, when a Bush presidency might have been
|
||
avoided. That is certainly true, but it is an objection which
|
||
should also be directed to many institutions and agencies whose
|
||
resources far surpassour modest capabilities. We can only
|
||
remind our fellow citizens that when he asks for their votes for
|
||
his re-election, George Bush also enters that court of public
|
||
opinion in which he is obliged to answer their questions. They
|
||
shouldnot waste this opportunity to grill him on all aspects of
|
||
his career and future intentions, since it is Bush who comes
|
||
forward appealing for their support. To aid in this process, we
|
||
have provided a list of TwentyQuestions forCandidate George
|
||
Bush on the campaign trail, and this will be found in the
|
||
appendix.</p>
|
||
<p> We do not delude ourselves that we have said the last word
|
||
about George Bush. But we have for the first time sketched out at
|
||
least some of the most salient features and gathered them into a
|
||
comprehensible whole. We encourage an aroused citizenry, as well
|
||
as specialized researchers, to improve upon what we have been
|
||
able to accomplish.In sodoing, we recall the words of the
|
||
Florentine Giovanni Boccaccio when he reluctantly accepted the
|
||
order of a powerful king to produce an account of the old Roman
|
||
Pantheon: "If I don't succeed completely in this exposition, at
|
||
least I will provide a stimulus for the better work of others who
|
||
are wiser."--Boccaccio, {Genealogy of the National Gods}
|
||
{To be continued.}</p>
|
||
<p> Notes</p>
|
||
<p> 1. George Bush andVic Gold, {Looking Forward,} (New York:
|
||
Doubleday, 1987), p. 47.</p>
|
||
<p>2.
|
||
Fitzhugh Green, {Looking Forward,} (New York: Hippocrene, 1989),
|
||
p. 53.</p>
|
||
<p>3. Harry Hurt III, "George Bush, Plucky Lad," {TexasMonthly,}
|
||
June, 1983, p.142.</p>
|
||
<p>4. Richard Ben Cramer, "How He Got Here," {Esquire,} June,
|
||
1991, p. 84.</p>
|
||
<p>5. Joe Hyams, {Flight of the Avenger} (New York, 1991).</p>
|
||
<p>6.
|
||
Nicholas King, {George Bush: A Biography} (New York, Dodd, Mead,
|
||
1980), p. xi.</p>
|
||
<p>7. Donnie Radcliffe, {Simply Barbara Bush,} (New York: Warner,
|
||
1989), p. 103.</p>
|
||
<p>8. Rainer Bonhorst, {George Bush, Der Neue Mann im Weissen Haus,}
|
||
(Bergisch Gladbach: Gustav Luebbe Verlag, 1988), pp. 80-81.</p>
|
||
<p>9. See "TheRoar of the Crowd," {Texas Monthly,} November,
|
||
1991. See also Jan Jarboe, "Meaner Than a Junkyard Dog," {Texas
|
||
Monthly,} April 1991, p. 122 ff. Here Wyatt observes: "I knew
|
||
from the beginning George Bush came to Texas only because he was
|
||
politically ambitious.He flew out here on an airplane owned by
|
||
Dresser Industries. His daddy was a member of the board of
|
||
Dresser."</p>
|
||
<p>10. Darwin Payne, {Initiative in Energy} (NewYork: Simon and
|
||
Shuster, 1979), p. 233.</p>
|
||
<p>11. John Selby Watson (translator), {Sallust, Florus, and
|
||
Velleius Paterculus} (London: George Bell andSon, 1879), pp.
|
||
542-46.</p>
|
||
<p>12. CorneliusTacitus, {The Annals of Imperial Rome} (Penguin,
|
||
1962), pp. 193-221.</p>
|
||
<p>13. Gaius Suetonius Tranquillus, {The Lives of the Twelve
|
||
Caesars} (New York: Modern Library,1931),pp. 165-204, {
|
||
passim.</p>
|
||
<p>Any comments, please send by email, as I get very far behind on
|
||
this group.</p>
|
||
<p>Thanks.</p>
|
||
<p> John Covici</p>
|
||
<p>coviciccs.covici.com</p>
|
||
<p>Article 15244 of alt.activism:
|
||
From: covici@ccs.covici.com (John Covici)
|
||
Newsgroups: alt.activism
|
||
Subject: Part 2: George Bush Unauthorized Biography
|
||
<info type="Message-ID"> mV3LeB1w164w@ccs.covici.com</info>
|
||
Date: 15 Jan 92 21:58:09 GMT
|
||
Organization: Covici Computer Systems
|
||
Lines: 1495</p>
|
||
<p>The followingis from the New Federalist serialization of a
|
||
forthcoming book concerning George Bush.</p>
|
||
<p>For further information or to subscribe to New Federalist, please
|
||
contact me by e-mail.</p>
|
||
<p>CHAPTER 2 THE HITLER PROJECT</p>
|
||
<p>1. Bush Property Seized--Trading with the Enemy</p>
|
||
<p>In October 1942, ten months after entering World War II, America
|
||
was preparingits first assault against Nazi military forces.
|
||
Prescott Bush was managing partner of Brown BrothersHarriman.
|
||
His 18-year-old son George, the future U.S. President, had just
|
||
begun training to become a naval pilot.</p>
|
||
<p> On October 20, 1942, the U.S. government ordered the seizure
|
||
of Nazi German banking operations in New York City which were
|
||
being conducted by Prescott Bush.</p>
|
||
<p> Under the {Trading with the Enemy Act}, the government took
|
||
over the {Union Banking Corporation,} in which Bush was a
|
||
director. The U.S. Alien Property Custodian seized Union Banking
|
||
Corp.'s stock shares, all of which were owned by Prescott Bush,
|
||
E. Roland "Bunny" Harriman, three Nazi executives, and two
|
||
other associates of Bush.s1</p>
|
||
<p> The order seizing the bank "vest[ed] [seized] all of the
|
||
capital stock of Union Banking Corporation, aNew York
|
||
corporation," and named the holders of its shares as:</p>
|
||
<p> sb|"E. Roland Harriman--3991 shares." Harriman was chairman
|
||
and director of Union Banking Corp. (UBC); this is"Bunny"
|
||
Harriman, described by Prescott Bush as a place holder who didn't
|
||
get much into banking affairs; Prescott managed his personal
|
||
investments.</p>
|
||
<p> sb|"Cornelis Lievense--4 shares." Lievense was president and
|
||
director of UBC, and a New York resident banking functionary for
|
||
the Nazis.</p>
|
||
<p> sb|"Harold D. Pennington--1 share." Pennington was treasurer
|
||
and director of UBC, and an office manager employed by Bush at
|
||
Brown Brothers Harriman.</p>
|
||
<p> sb|"Ray Morris--1 share." Morris was director of UBC, anda
|
||
partner of Bush and the Harrimans.</p>
|
||
<p> sb|"Prescott S. Bush--1 share." Bush was director of UBC,
|
||
which was co-founded and sponsored by his father-in-law George
|
||
Walker; he was senior managing partner for E. Roland Harriman and
|
||
Averell Harriman.</p>
|
||
<p> sb|"H.J. Kouwenhoven--1 share" Kouwenhoven was director of
|
||
UBC; he organized UBCas the emissary of Fritz Thyssen in
|
||
negotiations with George Walker and Averell Harriman; he was also
|
||
managing director ofUBC's Netherlands affiliate under Nazi
|
||
occupation; industrial executive inNazi Germany,and also
|
||
director and chief foreign financial executive of the German
|
||
Steel Trust.</p>
|
||
<p> sb|"Johann G. Groeninger--1 share." Groeninger was director
|
||
of UBC and of its Netherlands affiliate; he was an industrial
|
||
executive in Nazi Germany.</p>
|
||
<p> The order also specified: "all of which shares areheld for
|
||
the benefit of ... membersof the Thyssen family, [and] is
|
||
property of nationals ... of a designated enemy country...."</p>
|
||
<p> By October 26, 1942, U.S. troops were underway for North
|
||
Africa. On October 28, the government issued orders seizing two
|
||
Nazi front organizations run by theBush-Harriman bank: the
|
||
{Holland-American Trading Corporation} and the {Seamless Steel
|
||
Equipment Corporation.}s2</p>
|
||
<p> U.S. forces landed under fire nearAlgiers on November 8,
|
||
1942; heavy combat raged throughout November. Nazi interests in
|
||
the {Silesian-American Corporation,} long managed by Prescott
|
||
Bush and his father-in-law George Herbert Walker, were seized
|
||
under the Trading with the Enemy Act on November 171942. In
|
||
this action, the government announced that it was seizing only
|
||
the Nazi interests, leaving the Nazis' U.S. partners to carry on
|
||
the business.s3</p>
|
||
<p> These and other actions taken by the U.S. government in
|
||
wartime were, tragically, too little and too late.President
|
||
Bush'sfamily had already played a central role in financing and
|
||
arming Adolf Hitler for his takeover of Germany; in financing and
|
||
managing the buildup of Nazi war industries for the conquest of
|
||
Europe and war against the U.S.A.; and in the development of Nazi
|
||
genocide theories and racial propaganda, with their well-known
|
||
results.</p>
|
||
<p> The facts presented here must be known, and their implications
|
||
reflected upon, for a proper understanding ofPresident George
|
||
Herbert Walker Bush and ofthe danger to mankind that he
|
||
represents. The President's family fortune was largely a result
|
||
of theHitlerproject. The powerful Anglo-American family
|
||
associations, which later boosted him into the Central
|
||
Intelligence Agency and up to the White House, were his father's
|
||
partners in the Hitler project.</p>
|
||
<p> President Franklin Roosevelt's Alien Property Custodian, Leo
|
||
T. Crowley, signed Vesting Order Number 248 seizing the property
|
||
of Prescott Bush under the Trading with Enemy Act. The order,
|
||
published in obscure government record books and kept out of the
|
||
news,s4 explained nothing about the Nazis involved; only that the
|
||
Union BankingCorporation was run for the "Thyssen family" of
|
||
"Germany and/or Hungary"--"nationals ... of a designated enemy
|
||
country."</p>
|
||
<p> By deciding that Prescott Bush and the other directors of the
|
||
Union BankingCorp. were legally {front men for the Nazis}, the
|
||
government avoided the more important historical issue: In what
|
||
way {were Hitler's Nazis themselves hired, armed, and instructed
|
||
by} the New York and London clique of which Prescott Bush was an
|
||
executive manager? Let us examinethe Harriman-Bush Hitler
|
||
project from the 1920s until it was partially broken up, to seek
|
||
an answer for that question.</p>
|
||
<p>2. Origin and Extent of the Project</p>
|
||
<p> Fritz Thyssen andhis business partners are universally
|
||
recognized as the most important German financiersof Adolf
|
||
Hitler's takeover ofGermany. At the time of the order seizing
|
||
the Thyssen family's Union Banking Corp., Mr. Fritz Thyssen had
|
||
already published his famous book, {I Paid Hitler},s5 admitting
|
||
that he had financed Adolf Hitler and the Nazi movement since
|
||
October 1923.Thyssen's role as the leading early backer of
|
||
Hitler's grab for power in Germany had been noted by U.S.
|
||
diplomats in Berlin in 1932.s6 The order seizing the Bush-Thyssen
|
||
bank was curiously quiet and modest about the identity of the
|
||
perpetrators who had been nailed.</p>
|
||
<p> Buttwo weeks before the official order, government
|
||
investigators had reported secretly that "W. Averell Harriman
|
||
was in Europe sometime prior to 1924 and at that time became
|
||
acquainted with Fritz Thyssen, the German industrialist."
|
||
Harriman and Thyssen agreed to set up a bank for Thyssen in New
|
||
York. "[C]ertain of[Harriman's] associates would serve as
|
||
directors...." Thyssen agent "H.J. Kouwenhoven ... came to the
|
||
United States ... prior to 1924 for conferences with the Harriman
|
||
Company in this connection...."s7</p>
|
||
<p> When exactly was "Harriman in Europe sometimeprior to
|
||
1924"? In fact, he was in Berlin in 1922 to set up the Berlin
|
||
branch of W.A. Harriman & Co. under George Walker's presidency.</p>
|
||
<p> The Union Banking Corporation wasestablished formally in
|
||
1924, as a unit in the Manhattan offices of W.A. Harriman & Co.,
|
||
interlocking with the Thyssen-owned {Bank voor Handel en
|
||
Scheepvaart} (BHS) inthe Netherlands. The investigators
|
||
concluded that "theUnion BankingCorporation has since its
|
||
inception handled funds chiefly supplied to it through the Dutch
|
||
bank by the Thyssen interests for American investment."</p>
|
||
<p> Thus by personal agreement between Averell Harriman and Fritz
|
||
Thyssen in 1922, W.A. Harriman & Co. (alias Union Banking
|
||
Corporation) would be transferring funds back and forth between
|
||
New York and the "Thyssen interests" in Germany. By putting up
|
||
about $400000, the Harriman organization would be joint owner
|
||
and manager of Thyssen's banking operations outside of Germany.</p>
|
||
<p> {How important was the Nazienterprise for whichPresident
|
||
Bush's father was the New York banker?}</p>
|
||
<p> The 1942 U.S. government investigative report said that Bush's
|
||
Nazi-front bank was an interlocking concern with the Vereinigte
|
||
Stahlwerke (United Steel Works Corporation or {German Steel
|
||
Trust}) led by FritzThyssen and his two brothers.After the
|
||
war, congressional investigators probed the Thyssen interests,
|
||
Union Banking Corp. and related Nazi units.The investigation
|
||
showed that the Vereinigte Stahlwerke had produced thefollowing
|
||
approximate proportions of total German national output: "50.8%
|
||
of Nazi Germany's pig iron; 41.4% of Nazi Germany'suniversal
|
||
plate;36.0% of Nazi Germany's heavy plate; 38.5% of Nazi
|
||
Germany's galvanized sheet; 45.5% of Nazi Germany's pipes and
|
||
tubes;22.1% of Nazi Germany's wire; 35.0% of Nazi Germany's
|
||
explosives."s8</p>
|
||
<p> This accounts for many, many Nazi submarines, bombs, rifles,
|
||
gas chambers, etc.</p>
|
||
<p> Prescott Bush became vice president of W.A. Harriman & Co. in
|
||
1926. That same year, a friend of Harriman and Bush set up a
|
||
giant new organization for their client Fritz Thyssen, prime
|
||
sponsor of politician Adolf Hitler. The new {German Steel Trust,}
|
||
Germany's largest industrial corporation, was organized in 1926
|
||
by Wall Street banker Clarence Dillon. Dillon was the old comrade
|
||
of Prescott Bush's father Sam Bush from the "Merchants of
|
||
Death" bureau in World War I.</p>
|
||
<p> In return for putting up $70 millionto create his
|
||
organization, majority owner Thyssen gave the Dillon Read company
|
||
two or more representativeson the boardof the new Steel
|
||
Trust.s9</p>
|
||
<p> Thus there is a division of labor: Thyssen's own confidential
|
||
accounts, forpolitical and related purposes, were run through
|
||
the Walker-Bush organization; the Steel Trust did itscorporate
|
||
banking through Dillon Read.</p>
|
||
<p> TheWalker-Bush firm's banking activities werenot just
|
||
politically neutral money-making ventures which happened to
|
||
coincide withthe aims of German Nazis. All of the firm's
|
||
European business in those days was organized around
|
||
anti-democratic political forces.</p>
|
||
<p> In 1927, criticism of their support for totalitarianism drew
|
||
this retort from BertWalker, written fromKennebunkport to
|
||
Averell Harriman: "It seems to me that the suggestion in
|
||
connection with Lord Bearsted's views that we withdraw from
|
||
Russia smacks somewhat of the impertinent.... I think that we
|
||
have drawn our line and should hew to it."s1s0</p>
|
||
<p> Averell Harriman met with Italy's fascistdictator, Benito
|
||
Mussolini. A representative of the firm subsequently telegraphed
|
||
good news back to his chief executive Bert Walker: "... During
|
||
these last days ... Mussolini ... has examined and approved our
|
||
c[o]ntract 15 June."s1s1</p>
|
||
<p> Thegreat financial collapse of1929-31 shook America,
|
||
Germany, and Britain,weakening all governments. It also made
|
||
the hard-pressed Prescott Bush even more willing to do whatever
|
||
was necessary to retain his new place in the world.It was in
|
||
this crisis that certain Anglo-Americans determined on the
|
||
installation of a Hitler regime in Germany.</p>
|
||
<p> W.A. Harriman & Co., well-positioned for this enterprise and
|
||
rich in assets from their German and Russianbusiness, merged
|
||
with the British-American investment house, Brown Brothers, on
|
||
January 1, 1931. Bert Walker retired to his own G.H.Walker&
|
||
Co. This left the Harriman brothers, Prescott Bush, and Thatcher
|
||
M. Brown as the senior partners ofthe new Brown Brothers
|
||
Harriman firm. (The London, England branch of the Brown family
|
||
firm continued operating under its historic name--Brown,
|
||
Shipley.)</p>
|
||
<p> Robert A. Lovett also came over as a partner from Brown
|
||
Brothers. His father, E.H. Harriman's lawyer and railroad chief,
|
||
had been on the War Industries Board with Prescott's father.
|
||
Though he remained a partner in Brown Brothers Harriman, the
|
||
juniorLovettsoon replacedhis father as chief exexcutive of
|
||
Union Pacific Railroad.</p>
|
||
<p> Brown Brothers had a racial tradition that fitted it well for
|
||
the Hitler project. American patriots had cursed its name back
|
||
in Civil War days. Brown Brothers, with offices in the U.S.A.
|
||
and in England, had carried on their ships fully 75 percent of
|
||
the slave cotton from the American South overto British mill
|
||
owners; through their usurious credit they controlled and
|
||
manipulated the slave-owners.</p>
|
||
<p> Now, in 1931, the virtual dictator of world finance, Bank of
|
||
England Governor Montagu Collet Norman, was a former Brown
|
||
Brothers partner, whose grandfather had been bossof Brown
|
||
Brothers during the U.S. Civil War. Montagu Norman was known as
|
||
the most avidof Hitler's supporters within British ruling
|
||
circles, and Norman's intimacy with this firm was essential to
|
||
his management of the Hitler project.</p>
|
||
<p> In 1931, while Prescott Bush ran the New York office of Brown
|
||
Brothers Harriman, Prescott's partner wasMontagu Norman's
|
||
intimate friend Thatcher Brown. The Bank of England chief always
|
||
stayedat the home of Prescott's partner on his hush-hush trips
|
||
to New York. Prescott Bush concentrated on the firm's German
|
||
actitivites, and Thatcher Brown saw to their business in old
|
||
England, under the guidance of his mentor Montagu Norman.s1s2</p>
|
||
<p>3. Hitler's Ladder to Power</p>
|
||
<p> Adolf Hitler became Chancellor of Germany January 30, 1933,
|
||
and absolute dictator in March 1933, after two years of expensive
|
||
and violent lobbying and electioneering. Two affiliates of the
|
||
Bush-Harriman organization played great parts in this criminal
|
||
undertaking:Thyssen's German Steel Trust;and the
|
||
Hamburg-Amerika Line and several of its executives.s1s3</p>
|
||
<p> Letus look moreclosely at the Bushfamily's German
|
||
partners.</p>
|
||
<p> {Fritz Thyssen} told Allied interrogators after the war about
|
||
some of his financial support for the Nazi Party: "In 1930 or
|
||
1931 ... I told [Hitler's deputy Rudolph]Hess ... I would
|
||
arrange a credit for him with a Dutch bank in Rotterdam, the Bank
|
||
fuaur Handel und Schiff [i.e. Bank voor Handel en Scheepvaart
|
||
(BHS), the Harriman-Bush affiliate].I arranged the credit ...
|
||
he would pay it back in three years.... I chose a Dutch bank
|
||
because I did not want to be mixed up with German banks in my
|
||
position, and because I thought it was better to do business with
|
||
a Dutch bank, and I thought I would have the Nazis a little more
|
||
in my hands....</p>
|
||
<p> "The credit was about 250-300000 [gold] marks--about the sum
|
||
I had given before. The loan has been repaid in part to the
|
||
Dutch bank, but I think some money is still owing on it...."s1s4</p>
|
||
<p> The overall total of Thyssen's political donations and loans
|
||
to the Nazis was well over a million dollars, including funds he
|
||
raised from others--in a period of terrible money-shortage in
|
||
Germany.</p>
|
||
<p> {Friedrich Flick} was the major co-owner of the German Steel
|
||
Trust with Fritz Thyssen, Thyssen's longtimecollaborator and
|
||
sometime competitor. In preparation for the war crimes tribunal
|
||
at Nuremberg, the U.S.government said that Flick was"one of
|
||
leading financiers and industrialists who from 1932 contributed
|
||
large sums to the Nazi Party ... member of 'Circle of Friends' of
|
||
Himmler who contributed large sums to the SS."s1s5</p>
|
||
<p> Flick, like Thyssen, financed the Nazis to maintain their
|
||
private armies called Schutzstaffel (S.S. or Black Shirts) and
|
||
Sturmabteilung (S.A., storm troops or Brown Shirts).</p>
|
||
<p> The Flick-Harriman partnership was directly supervised by
|
||
Prescott Bush, President Bush's father, and by George Walker,
|
||
President Bush's grandfather.</p>
|
||
<p> The Harriman-Walker Union Banking Corp. arrangements for the
|
||
GermanSteel Trust had made them bankers for Flick and his vast
|
||
operations in Germany by no later than 1926.</p>
|
||
<p> The {Harriman Fifteen Corporation} (George Walker, president,
|
||
Prescott Bushand Averell Harriman, sole directors) held a
|
||
substantial stake in the Silesian Holding Co. at the time of the
|
||
merger with Brown Brothers, January 1, 1931. This holding
|
||
correlated to Averell Harriman's chairmanshipof the
|
||
{Consolidated Silesian Steel Corporation,} the American group
|
||
owning one-third of a complex of steelmaking, coal-mining and
|
||
zinc-mining activities in Germany and Poland, in which Friedrich
|
||
Flick owned two-thirds.s1s6</p>
|
||
<p> The Nuremberg prosecutor characterized Flick as follows:</p>
|
||
<p> "Proprietor and head of a large group of industrial
|
||
enterprises (coal and iron mines, steel producing and fabricating
|
||
plants) ... 'Wehrwirtschaftsfuehrer,' 1938[title awarded to
|
||
prominent industrialists for merit in armaments drive--'Military
|
||
Economy Leader']...."s1s7</p>
|
||
<p> For this buildup of the Hitler war machine with coal, steel,
|
||
and arms production, using slave laborers, the Nazi Flick was
|
||
condemned to seven years in prison at the Nuremberg trials; he
|
||
served three years. With friends in New York and London,
|
||
however, Flick lived into the 1970s and died a billionaire.</p>
|
||
<p> On March 19, 1934, Prescott Bush--then director of the German
|
||
Steel Trust's Union Banking Corporation--initiated analert to
|
||
the absent Averell Harriman about a problem which had developed
|
||
in the Flick partnership.s1s8 Bush sent Harriman a clipping from
|
||
the {New York Times} of that day, which reported that the Polish
|
||
government was fighting back against American and German
|
||
stockholders who controlled "Poland's largest industrial unit,
|
||
the Upper Silesian Coal and Steel Company...."</p>
|
||
<p> The {Times} article continued: "The company has long been
|
||
accused of mismanagement,excessive borrowing, fictitious
|
||
bookkeeping and gambling in securities. Warrants were issued in
|
||
December for several directors accused of tax evasions. They
|
||
were German citizens and they fled. They were replaced by Poles.
|
||
Herr Flick, regarding this as an attempt to make thecompany's
|
||
board entirely Polish, retaliated by restricting credits until
|
||
the new Polish directors were unable to pay the workmen
|
||
regularly."</p>
|
||
<p> The{Times} noted that the company's mines and mills "employ
|
||
25000 men and account for 45 percent of Poland's total steel
|
||
output and 12 percent of her coal production.Two-thirds of the
|
||
company's stock is owned by Friedrich Flick, a leading German
|
||
steel industrialist, and the remainder is owned by interests in
|
||
the United States."</p>
|
||
<p> In view of the fact that a great deal of Polish output was
|
||
being exported to Hitler's Germany under depression conditions,
|
||
the Polish government thought that Bush, Harriman, and their Nazi
|
||
partners should at least pay fulltaxes on their Polish
|
||
holdings. The U.S. and Nazi owners responded with a lockout.
|
||
The letter to Harriman in Washington reported a cable from their
|
||
European representative: "Have undertaken new steps London
|
||
Berlin... please establishfriendly relations with Polish
|
||
Ambassador [in Washington]."</p>
|
||
<p> A 1935 Harriman Fifteen Corporation memo from George Walker
|
||
announced an agreement had been made "in Berlin" to sell an
|
||
8000 block of their shares in Consolidated Silesian Steel.s1s9
|
||
But the dispute with Poland did not deter the Bush family from
|
||
continuing its partnership with Flick.</p>
|
||
<p> Nazi tanksand bombs "settled" this dispute in September,
|
||
1939 with the invasion of Poland, beginning World War II. The
|
||
Nazi army had been equipped by Flick, Harriman, Walker, and Bush,
|
||
with materials essentially stolen from Poland.</p>
|
||
<p> There were probably fewpeopleat the time who could
|
||
appreciate the irony, that when the Soviets also attacked and
|
||
invaded Poland from the East, their vehicles were fueled by oil
|
||
pumpedfrom Baku wells revived bythe Harriman/Walker/Bush
|
||
enterprise.</p>
|
||
<p> Three years later, nearly a year after the Japanese attack on
|
||
Pearl Harbor, the U.S. government ordered the seizure of the
|
||
Nazis'share in theSilesian-American Corporationunder the
|
||
Trading with the Enemy Act. Enemy nationals were said to own 49
|
||
percent of the common stock and 41.67 percent of the preferred
|
||
stock of the company.</p>
|
||
<p> The order characterized the company as a "business enterprise
|
||
within the United States, owned by [a front company in] Zurich,
|
||
Switzerland, and held for the benefit of Bergwerksgesellschaft
|
||
George von Giesche's Erben, a German corporation...."s2s0</p>
|
||
<p> Bert Walker was still the senior directorof the company,
|
||
which he hadfounded back in 1926 simultaneously with the
|
||
creation of the German Steel Trust. Ray Morris, Prescott's
|
||
partner from Union Banking Corp. and Brown Brothers Harriman, was
|
||
also a director.</p>
|
||
<p> Theinvestigative report prior to the government crackdown
|
||
explained the "NATURE OF BUSINESS: The subject corporation is an
|
||
American holding company for German and Polish subsidiaries,
|
||
which own large andvaluable coal and zinc mines in Silesia,
|
||
Poland and Germany. Since September 1939, these properties have
|
||
been in the possession of and have been operated by the German
|
||
government and have undoubtedly been of considerable assistance
|
||
to that country in its war effort."s2s1</p>
|
||
<p> Thereportnoted that the American stockholders hoped to
|
||
regain control of the European properties after the war.</p>
|
||
<p>4. Control of Nazi Commerce</p>
|
||
<p> Bert Walker had arranged the credits Harriman needed to take
|
||
control of the Hamburg-Amerika Line back in 1920. Walker had
|
||
organized the {American Ship and Commerce Corp.} as a unit of the
|
||
W.A.Harriman & Co., with contractual power over
|
||
Hamburg-Amerika's affairs.</p>
|
||
<p> As the Hitler project went into high gear, Harriman-Bush
|
||
shares in American Ship and Commerce Corp. were held by the
|
||
Harriman Fifteen Corp., run by Prescott Bush and Bert Walker.s2s2</p>
|
||
<p> It was a convenient stroll for the well-tanned, athletic,
|
||
handsome Prescott Bush. From the Brown Brothers Harriman
|
||
skyscraper at59 Wall Street--where he was senior managing
|
||
partner, confidential investments manager and advisor to Averell
|
||
and his brother "Bunny"--he walked across to the Harriman
|
||
Fifteen Corporation at One Wall Street, otherwise known as G.H.
|
||
Walker& Co.--and around the corner to his subsidiary offices at
|
||
39 Broadway, former home of the old W.A. Harriman &Co., and
|
||
still the offices for American Ship and Commerce, and of the
|
||
Union Banking Corporation.</p>
|
||
<p> In many ways, Bush's Hamburg-Amerika Line was the pivot for
|
||
the entire Hitler project.</p>
|
||
<p> Averell Harriman and Bert Walker had gained control over the
|
||
steamship company in 1920 in negotiations with its post-World War
|
||
I chief executive, {Wilhelm Cuno}, and with the line's bankers,
|
||
M.M. Warburg.Cuno was thereafter completely dependent on the
|
||
Anglo-Americans, and became a member of the Anglo-German
|
||
Friendship Society.In the 1930-32 drive fora Hitler
|
||
dictatorship, Wilhelm Cuno contributed important sums to the Nazi
|
||
Party.s2s3</p>
|
||
<p> {Albert Voegler} was chiefexecutive of the Thyssen-Flick
|
||
GermanSteel Trust for which Bush's Union Banking Corp. was the
|
||
New York office. He was a director of the Bush-affiliate BHS
|
||
Bank in Rotterdam, and a director of the Harriman-Bush
|
||
Hamburg-Amerika Line. Voegler joined Thyssen and Flickin their
|
||
heavy 1930-33Nazi contributions, and helped organize the final
|
||
Nazi leap into national power.s2s4</p>
|
||
<p> The {Schroeder} family of bankers was a linchpin for the Nazi
|
||
activities ofHarriman and Prescott Bush, closely tied to their
|
||
lawyers Allen and John Foster Dulles.</p>
|
||
<p> Baron Kurt von Schroeder was co-director of the massive
|
||
Thyssen-Huettefoundry alongwith Johann Groeninger, Prescott
|
||
Bush's New York bank partner. Kurt von Schroeder wastreasurer
|
||
of the support organization for the Nazi Party's private armies,
|
||
to which Friedrich Flick contributed.Kurt von Schroeder and
|
||
Montagu Norman's proteaageaaHjalmar Schacht together made the
|
||
final arrangments for Hitler to enter the government.s2s5</p>
|
||
<p> Baron Rudolph von Schroeder was vice president and director of
|
||
the Hamburg-Amerika Line. Long an intimate contact of Averell
|
||
Harriman's inGermany, Baron Rudolph sent his grandson Baron
|
||
Johann Rudolph for a tour ofPrescott Bush's Brown Brothers
|
||
Harriman offices in New York City in December 1932--on the eve of
|
||
their Hitler-triumph.s2s6</p>
|
||
<p> Certain actions taken directly by the Harriman-Bush shipping
|
||
line in 1932 must be ranked among the gravest acts of treason in
|
||
this century.</p>
|
||
<p> TheU.S. Embassy in Berlin reported back to Washington that
|
||
the "costly election campaigns" and "the cost of maintaining a
|
||
private army of 300000 to 400000 men" had raised questions as
|
||
to theNazis'financial backers. The constitutional government
|
||
of the German republic movedto defend national freedom by
|
||
ordering the Nazi Party private armies disbanded. The U.S.
|
||
Embassy reported that the {Hamburg-Amerika Line was purchasing
|
||
and distributing propaganda attacks against the German
|
||
government, for attempting this last-minute crackdown on Hitler's
|
||
forces.}s2s7</p>
|
||
<p> Thousands of German opponents ofHitlerism were shot or
|
||
intimidated by privately armed Nazi BrownShirts. In this
|
||
connection, we note that the original "Merchant of Death,"
|
||
SamuelPryor,was a founding director of both the Union Banking
|
||
Corp. and the American Ship and Commerce Corp.Since Mr. Pryor
|
||
was executive committee chairman of Remington Arms and a central
|
||
figure in the world's private arms traffic, his use to the Hitler
|
||
project was enhanced as the Bush family's partner in Nazi Party
|
||
banking and trans-Atlantic shipping.</p>
|
||
<p> TheU.S. Senate arms-traffic investigators probed Remington
|
||
after it was joined in a cartel agreement on explosives to the
|
||
Nazi firm I.G. Farben. Looking at the period leading up to
|
||
Hitler's seizure of power, the senators found that "German
|
||
political associations, like the Nazi and others, are nearly all
|
||
armed with American ... guns.... Arms of all kinds coming from
|
||
America are transshipped in the Scheldt to river barges before
|
||
the vessels arrive in Antwerp. They then can be carried through
|
||
Holland without police inspectionor interference. The
|
||
Hitlerists and Communists arepresumed to get arms in this
|
||
manner. The principal armscomingfrom America are Thompson
|
||
submachine guns and revolvers.The number is great."s2s8</p>
|
||
<p> The beginning of the Hitler regime brought some bizarre
|
||
changes to the Hamburg-Amerika Line--and more betrayals.</p>
|
||
<p> Prescott Bush's American Ship and Commerce Corp. notified Max
|
||
Warburg of Hamburg, Germany, on March 7, 1933, that Warburg was
|
||
to bethe corporation's official, designated representative on
|
||
the board of Hamburg-Amerika.s2s9</p>
|
||
<p> Max Warburg replied on March 27, 1933, assuring his American
|
||
sponsors thatthe Hitler government was good for Germany: "For
|
||
the last few years business was considerably better than we had
|
||
anticipated, but a reactionis making itself felt for some
|
||
months. We are actually suffering also underthe very active
|
||
propaganda against Germany, caused bysome unpleasant
|
||
circumstances.These occurrences were the natural consequence of
|
||
the very excited election campaign, but were extraordinarily
|
||
exaggerated inthe foreign press.The Government is firmly
|
||
resolved to maintain public peace and order in Germany, andI
|
||
feel perfectly convinced in this respect that there is no cause
|
||
for any alarm whatsoever."s3s0</p>
|
||
<p> This seal of approval for Hitler, coming from a famous Jew,
|
||
was just what Harriman and Bush required, for they anticipated
|
||
rather serious "alarm" inside the U.S.A. against their Nazi
|
||
operations.</p>
|
||
<p> On March 29, 1933, two days after Max's letter to Harriman,
|
||
Max's son Erich sent a cable to his cousin Frederick M. Warburg,
|
||
a director ofthe Harriman railroad system. He asked Frederick
|
||
to "use all your influence" to stop all anti-Nazi activity in
|
||
America, including "atrocity news and unfriendly propaganda in
|
||
foreign press, mass meetings, etc." Frederick cabled back to
|
||
Erich: "No responsible groups here [are] urging [a] boycott [of]
|
||
Germangoods[,] merely excited individuals." Two days after
|
||
that, On March 31, 1933, the {American-Jewish Committee,}
|
||
controlled bythe Warburgs,and the {B'nai B'rith,} heavily
|
||
influenced by the Sulzbergers' ({NewYork Times}),issueda
|
||
formal, official joint statement of the two organizations,
|
||
counselling "that no American boycott against Germany be
|
||
encouraged, [and advising] ... that no further mass meetings be
|
||
held or similar forms of agitation be employed."s3s1</p>
|
||
<p> The American Jewish Committee and the B'nai B'rith (mother of
|
||
the "Anti-DefamationLeague") continued with this hardline,
|
||
no-attack-on-Hitler stance all through the 1930s, blunting the
|
||
fight mounted by many Jews and other anti-fascists.</p>
|
||
<p> Thus the decisive interchange reproduced above, taking place
|
||
entirely within the orbit of the Harriman/Bush firm, may explain
|
||
something of the relationship of George Bush to American Jewish
|
||
and Zionist leaders. Some of them, in close cooperation with his
|
||
family, played an ugly part in the drama of Naziism. Is this why
|
||
"professional Nazi-hunters" have never discovered how the Bush
|
||
family made its money?</p>
|
||
<p> The executive board of the {HamburgAmerika Line}{(Hapag)}
|
||
met jointly with the North German Lloyd company board in Hamburg
|
||
on September 5, 1933. Under official Nazi supervision, the two
|
||
firms were merged. Prescott Bush's American Ship and Commerce
|
||
Corp.installed Christian J. Beck, a longtime Harriman
|
||
executive, as manager of freight and operations in North America
|
||
for the new joint Nazi shipping lines {(Hapag-Lloyd)}) on
|
||
November 4, 1933.</p>
|
||
<p> According to testimony of officials of the companies before
|
||
Congress in 1934, a supervisor from the {Nazi Labor Front} rode
|
||
with every ship of the Harriman-Bush line; employees of the New
|
||
York offices were directly organized into the Nazi Labor Front
|
||
organization; Hamburg-Amerika provided free passage to
|
||
individuals going abroad for Nazi propaganda purposes; and the
|
||
line subsidized pro-Nazi newspapers in the U.S.A., as it had done
|
||
in Germany against the constitutional German government.s3s2</p>
|
||
<p> In mid-1936, Prescott Bush's American Ship and Commerce Corp.
|
||
cabled M.M. Warburg, asking Warburg torepresent thecompany's
|
||
heavyshareinterest atthe forthcoming Hamburg-Amerika
|
||
stockholders meeting. The Warburg office repliedwith the
|
||
information that "we represented you" at the stockholders
|
||
meeting and "exercised on your behalf your voting power for Rm
|
||
[gold marks] 3509600 Hapag stock deposited with us."</p>
|
||
<p> The Warburgs transmitted a letter received from Emil
|
||
Helfferich, German chief executive of both Hapag-Lloyd and of the
|
||
Standard Oil subsidiary in Nazi Germany: "It is the intention to
|
||
continue the relations with Mr. Harriman on the samebasis as
|
||
heretofore...." In a colorful gesture, Hapag's Nazi chairman
|
||
Helfferich sent the line's president across the Atlantic ona
|
||
Zeppelin to confer with their New York string-pullers.</p>
|
||
<p> After the meeting with theZeppelin passenger, the
|
||
Harriman-Bush office replied: "I am glad to learnthat Mr.
|
||
Hellferich [sic] hasstated that relations between the Hamburg
|
||
American Line and ourselves will be continued on the same basis
|
||
as heretofore."s3s3</p>
|
||
<p> Two months before moving against Bush's Union Banking Corp.,
|
||
the U.S. government ordered the seizure of all property of the
|
||
Hamburg-Amerika Line and North German Lloyd, under the Trading
|
||
with the Enemy Act. The investigators noted in the pre-seizure
|
||
reportthat Christian J. Beck was still acting as an attorney
|
||
representing the Nazi firm.s3s4</p>
|
||
<p> In May 1933, just after the Hitler regime was consolidated, an
|
||
agreement was reached in Berlin for the coordination of all Nazi
|
||
commerce with the U.S.A. The {Harriman International Co.,} led by
|
||
Averell Harriman's first cousin Oliver, was to head a syndicate
|
||
of 150 firms and individuals, to conduct {all exports from
|
||
Hitler's Germany to the United States}.s3s5</p>
|
||
<p> This pact had been negotiated in Berlin between Hitler's
|
||
economics minister, Hjalmar Schacht, and John Foster Dulles,
|
||
international attorney for dozens of Nazi enterprises, with the
|
||
counsel of Max Warburg and Kurt von Schroeder.</p>
|
||
<p> John Foster Dulles would later be U.S. Secretary of State, and
|
||
the great power in the Republican Party of the 1950s. Foster's
|
||
friendship and that of his brother Allen (head of the Central
|
||
Intelligence Agency), greatly aided Prescott Bush to become the
|
||
Republican U.S. senator from Connecticut. And it was to be of
|
||
inestimable value to George Bush, in his ascent to the heights of
|
||
"covert action government," that both of these Dulles brothers
|
||
were the lawyers for the Bush family's far-flung enterprise.</p>
|
||
<p> Throughoutthe 1930s, John Foster Dulles arranged debt
|
||
restructuring for German firms under a series of decrees issued
|
||
by Adolf Hitler. In these deals, Dulles struck a balance between
|
||
the interest owed to selected, larger investors, and the needs of
|
||
the growing Nazi warmaking apparatus for producing tanks, poison
|
||
gas, etc.</p>
|
||
<p> Dulles wrote to PrescottBush in 1937 concerning one such
|
||
arrangement. The German-Atlantic Cable Company, owning Nazi
|
||
Germany's only telegraph channel to the United States, had made
|
||
debt and management agreements with the Walker-Harriman bank
|
||
during the 1920s. A new decree would now void those agreements,
|
||
which had originallybeen reached with non-Nazicorporate
|
||
officials. Dulles asked Bush, whomanaged these affairs for
|
||
Averell Harriman, to get Averell's signature on a letter to Nazi
|
||
officials, agreeing to the changes. Dulles wrote:</p>
|
||
<p>"Sept. 22, 1937
|
||
"Mr. Prescott S. Bush
|
||
"59 Wall Street, New
|
||
York, N.Y.</p>
|
||
<p> "Dear Press,
|
||
"I have looked over the letter of the German-American [sic]
|
||
Cable Companyto Averell Harriman.... It would appear that the
|
||
only rights in the matter are those which inure in the bankers
|
||
and that no legal embarrassment would result, so far as the
|
||
bondholders are concerned, by your acquiescence in the
|
||
modification of the bankers' agreement.
|
||
"Sincerely yours,
|
||
"John Foster Dulles"</p>
|
||
<p> Dulles enclosed aproposed draft reply, Bush got Harriman's
|
||
signature, and the changes went through.s3s6</p>
|
||
<p> In conjunction with these arrangements, the German Atlantic
|
||
Cable Companyattempted to stop payment on its debts to smaller
|
||
American bondholders. The money was to be used instead for
|
||
arming the Nazi state, under a decree of the Hitler government.</p>
|
||
<p> Despite the busy efforts of Bush and Dulles, a New York court
|
||
decided that this particular Hitler "law" was invalid in the
|
||
UnitedStates; smallbondholders, not parties to deals between
|
||
the bankers and the Nazis, were entitled to get paid.s3s7</p>
|
||
<p> In this and a few other of the attempted swindles, the
|
||
intended victims came out with their money. But the Nazi
|
||
financial and political reorganization went ahead to its tragic
|
||
climax.</p>
|
||
<p> Forhis part in the Hitler revolution, Prescott Bush was paid
|
||
a fortune.</p>
|
||
<p> This is the legacy he left to his son, President George Bush.</p>
|
||
<p>Notes</p>
|
||
<p>1. Office of Alien Property Custodian, Vesting Order Number 248.
|
||
Signedby Leo T. Crowley, Alien Property Custodian, executed
|
||
October 20, 1942; F.R. Doc. 42-11568; Filed, November 6, 1942. 7
|
||
Fed. Reg. 9097 (November 7, 1942).
|
||
The {New York City Directory of Directors}, 1930s-40s, list
|
||
Prescott Bushas a director of Union Banking Corp. from 1934
|
||
through 1943.</p>
|
||
<p>2.
|
||
Alien Property Custodian Vesting Order No. 259: Seamless Steel
|
||
Equipment Corporation; Vesting Order Number 261: Holland-American
|
||
Trading Corp.</p>
|
||
<p>3. Alien Property Custodian Vesting Order No. 370:
|
||
Silesian-American Corp.</p>
|
||
<p>4. {New York Times,} December 16, 1944, ran a five-paragraph page
|
||
25 article on actions of the New York State Banking Department.
|
||
Only the last sentence refers to the Nazi bank, as follows: "The
|
||
Union BankingCorporation, 39 Broadway, New York, has received
|
||
authority to change its principal place ofbusiness to 120
|
||
Broadway."
|
||
The {Times} omitted the factthat the Union Banking
|
||
Corporation had been seized by the government for trading with
|
||
the enemy, and the fact that 120 Broadway was the address of the
|
||
government's Alien Property Custodian.</p>
|
||
<p>5.
|
||
FritzThyssen, {I Paid Hitler}, 1941, reprintedin (Port
|
||
Washington, N.Y.: Kennikat Press, 1972), p. 133. Thyssen says
|
||
his contributions began with 100000 marks given in October 1923,
|
||
for Hitler's attempted "putsch" against the constitutional
|
||
government.</p>
|
||
<p>6. Confidential memorandum from U.S. Embassy, Berlin, to the
|
||
U.S. Secretary of State, April 20, 1932,on microfilm in
|
||
{Confidential Reportsof U.S. State Dept., 1930s, Germany,} at
|
||
major U.S. libraries.</p>
|
||
<p>7. October 5, 1942, Memorandum to the Executive Committee of the
|
||
Officeof Alien Property Custodian, stamped CONFIDENTIAL, from
|
||
the Division of Investigation and Research, Homer Jones, Chief.
|
||
Now declassified in United States National Archives, Suitland,
|
||
Maryland annex. See Record Group 131, Alien Property Custodian,
|
||
investigative reports, in file boxrelating to Vesting Order
|
||
Number 248.</p>
|
||
<p>8. {Elimination of German Resources for War}: HearingsBeforea
|
||
Subcommittee of the Committee on Military Affairs, United States
|
||
Senate, Seventy-Ninth Congress; Part 5, Testimony of [the United
|
||
States] Treasury Department,July 2, 1945. Page 507: Table of
|
||
Vereinigte Stahlwerke output, figures are percent of German total
|
||
as of1938; Thyssenorganization including Union Banking
|
||
Corporation pp. 727-731.</p>
|
||
<p>9. Robert Sobel, {The Life and Times of Dillon Read} (New York:
|
||
Dutton-Penguin, 1991),pp. 92-111.The Dillon Read firm
|
||
cooperated in the development of Sobel's book.</p>
|
||
<p>10. George Walker to Averell Harriman, August 11, 1927, in W.
|
||
Averell Harriman papers, Library of Congress(hereafter "WAH
|
||
papers").</p>
|
||
<p>11. "Iaccarino" to G. H. Walker, RCA Radiogram Sept. 12, 1927.</p>
|
||
<p>12. Andrew Boyle, {Montagu Norman} (London: Cassell, 1967).
|
||
Sir Henry Clay, {Lord Norman} (London, MacMillan & Co., 1957),
|
||
pp. 18, 57, 70-71.
|
||
John A. Kouwenhouven, {Partners in Banking ... Brown Brothers
|
||
Harriman} (Garden City: Doubleday & Co., 1969).</p>
|
||
<p>13.
|
||
Coordination of much of the Hitler project took place ata
|
||
single New York address. The Union Banking Corporation had been
|
||
set up by George Walker at 39 Broadway. Management of the
|
||
Hamburg-Amerika Line,carried out through Harriman's American
|
||
Ship and Commerce Corp., was also set up by George Walker at 39
|
||
Broadway.</p>
|
||
<p>14. Interrogation of Fritz Thyssen, EF/Me/1 of Sept. 4, 1945 in
|
||
U.S. Control Council records, photostat on page 167 in Anthony
|
||
Sutton, {An Introduction to The Order} (Billings, Mt.: Liberty
|
||
House Press, 1986).</p>
|
||
<p>15. {Nazi Conspiracy and Aggression, Supplement B}, by the Office
|
||
of United States Chief of Counsel for Prosecution of Axis
|
||
Criminality, U. S. Government Printing Office, (Washington, D.C.,
|
||
1948), pp. 1597, 1686.</p>
|
||
<p>16. "Consolidated Silesian Steel Corporation - [minutes of the]
|
||
Meeting of Board of Directors," October 31, 1930 (WAH papers),
|
||
shows Averell Harriman as Chairman of the Board.
|
||
Prescott Bush to W.A. Harriman, Memorandum December 19, 1930
|
||
on their Harriman Fifteen Corp.
|
||
Annual Report of United Kings and Laura Steel and Iron Works
|
||
for the year 1930 (WAH papers) lists "Dr. Friedrich Flick ...
|
||
Berlin" and "William Averell Harriman ... New York" on the
|
||
Board of Directors.
|
||
"HarrimanFifteen Coporation Securities Position February
|
||
28, 1931," WAH papers. This report showsHarriman Fifteen
|
||
Corporation holding 32576 shares in Silesian Holding Co. V.T.C.
|
||
worth (in scarce depression dollars) $1628800, just over half
|
||
the value of the Harriman Fifteen Corporation's total holdings.
|
||
The {New York City Directory of Directors}volumes for the
|
||
1930s (available at the Library of Congress) show Prescott
|
||
Sheldon Bush and W.Averell Harriman as the directors of
|
||
Harriman Fifteen Corp.
|
||
"Appointments," (three typed pages) marked "Noted May 18
|
||
1931 W.A.H.," (among the papers from PrescottBush'sNew York
|
||
Officeof Brown Brothers Harriman, WAH papers), lists a meeting
|
||
between Averell Harriman and Friedrich Flick in Berlin at 4:00
|
||
P.M., Wednesday April 22, 1931. This was followed immediately by
|
||
a meeting with Wilhelm Cuno, chief executive of the
|
||
Hamburg-Amerika Line.
|
||
The "Report To the Stockholders of theHarriman Fifteen
|
||
Corporation," October19, 1933 (WAH papers) names G.H. Walker
|
||
as president of the corporation. It shows theHarriman Fifteen
|
||
Corp.'s address as 1 Wall Street--the location of G.H. Walker and
|
||
Co.</p>
|
||
<p>17. {Nazi Conspiracy and Aggression, Supplement B}, {op. cit.,}
|
||
p. 1686.</p>
|
||
<p>18. Jim Flaherty (a BBH manager, Prescott Bush's employee), March
|
||
19, 1934 to W.A. Harriman.
|
||
"Dear Averell:
|
||
"In Roland's absence Pres[cott] thought it adviseable for me
|
||
to let you know that we received the following cable from [our
|
||
European representative] Rossidated March 17th [relating to
|
||
conflict with the Polish government]...."</p>
|
||
<p>19. Harriman Fifteen Corporation notice to stockholders January
|
||
7, 1935, under the name of George Walker, President.</p>
|
||
<p>20. Order No. 370: Silesian-American Corp. Executed November 17,
|
||
1942. Signed by Leo T. Crowley, Alien Prop. Custodian.F.R. Doc.
|
||
42-14183; Filed, December 31, 1942; 8 Fed. Reg. 33 (Jan. 1,
|
||
1943).
|
||
The order confiscated the Nazis' holdings of 98000 shares of
|
||
common and 50000 shares of preferred stock in Silesian-American.
|
||
TheNazi parent company in Breslau, Germany wrote to Averell
|
||
Harriman at 59 Wall St. on Aug. 5, 1940, with "an invitation to
|
||
take part in the regular meetingof the members of the
|
||
Bergwerksgesellsc[h]aft Georgvon Giesche'sErben...." WAH
|
||
papers.</p>
|
||
<p>21. Sept. 25, 1942, Memorandum To the Executive Committee of the
|
||
Office of Alien Property Custodian, stamped CONFIDENTIAL, from
|
||
the Division of Investigation and Research, Homer Jones, Chief.
|
||
Now declassified in United States National Archives,Suitland,
|
||
Maryland annex. See Record Group 131, Alien Property Custodian,
|
||
investigative reports, in filebox relating to Vesting Order
|
||
Number 370.</p>
|
||
<p>22. George Walker was a director of American Ship and Commerce
|
||
from its organizationthrough 1928.Consult {New York City
|
||
Directory of Directors}.
|
||
"Harriman FifteenCorporation Securities Position February
|
||
28, 1931," {op. cit.} The report lists 46861 shares in the
|
||
American Ship & Commerce Corp.
|
||
See"Message from Mr. Bullfin," August 30, 1934 (Harriman
|
||
Fifteen section, WAH papers) for the joint supervision of Bush
|
||
and Walker,respectively director and president of the
|
||
corporation.</p>
|
||
<p>23. Cuno was later exposed by Walter Funk, Third Reich Press
|
||
Chief and Under Secretary of Propaganda, in Funk's postwar jail
|
||
cell at Nuremberg; but Cuno had died just as Hitler was taking
|
||
power. William L. Shirer, L., {The Rise and Fall of the Third
|
||
Reich} (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1960), p. 144. {Nazi
|
||
Conspiracy and Aggression, Supplement B}, {op. cit.,} p. 1688.</p>
|
||
<p>24. See "Elimination of German Resources for War," {op. cit.,}
|
||
pages 881-882 on Voegler.
|
||
SeeAnnualReport of the
|
||
(Hamburg-Amerikanische-Packetfahrt-Aktien-Gesel schaft (Hapag or
|
||
Hamburg-Amerika Line), March 1931, for the board of directors.A
|
||
copy is in the New York PublicLibrary Annexat 11th Avenue,
|
||
Manhattan.</p>
|
||
<p>25. {Nazi Conspiracy and Aggression--Supplement B,} {op. cit.,}
|
||
pp. 1178, 1453-1454, 1597, 1599.
|
||
See "Elimination of German Resources for War," {op. cit.,}
|
||
pp. 870-72 on Schroeder; p. 730 on Groeninger.</p>
|
||
<p>26. Annual Report of Hamburg-Amerika, {op. cit.}
|
||
Baron Rudolph Schroeder, Sr. to Averell Harriman, November 14,
|
||
1932. K[night] W[ooley] handwritten note and draft reply letter,
|
||
December 9, 1932.
|
||
In his letter, Baron Rudolph refers to the family's American
|
||
affiliate, J. Henry Schroder [name anglicized], of which Allen
|
||
Dulles was a director, and his brother John Foster Dulles was the
|
||
principal attorney.
|
||
Baron Bruno Schroder of the British branch was adviser to Bank
|
||
of England Governor MontaguNorman, and Baron Bruno's partner
|
||
Frank Cyril Tiarks was Norman's co-director of the Bank of
|
||
England throughout Norman's career. Kurt von Schroeder was
|
||
Hjalmar Schacht's delegate to the Bank for International
|
||
Settlements in Geneva, where many of the financial arrangements
|
||
for the Nazi regime were made by Montagu Norman, Schacht and the
|
||
Schroeders for several years of the Hitler regime right up to the
|
||
outbreak of World War II.</p>
|
||
<p>27.
|
||
Confidential memorandum from U.S. Embassy, Berlin, {op. cit.}</p>
|
||
<p>28. U.S. Senate "Nye Committee" hearings, Sept. 14, 1934, pp.
|
||
1197-1198, extracts from letters of Col. William N. Taylor, dated
|
||
June 27, 1932 and January 9, 1933.</p>
|
||
<p>29. American Ship and Commerce Corporation to Dr. Max Warburg,
|
||
March 7, 1933.
|
||
MaxWarburg had brokeredthe sale of Hamburg-Amerika to
|
||
Harriman and Walker in 1920. Max's brothers controlledthe Kuhn
|
||
Loeb investment banking house in New York, the firm which had
|
||
staked old E.H. Harriman to his 1890s buyout of the giant Union
|
||
Pacific Railroad.
|
||
Max Warburg had long worked with Lord Milner and others of the
|
||
racialist British Round Table concerning joint projects in Africa
|
||
and Eastern Europe.He was an advisor to Hjalmar Schacht for
|
||
several decades and was a top executive of Hitler's Reichsbank.
|
||
The reader may consult David Farrer, {The Warburgs: The Story of
|
||
A Family} (New York: Stein and Day, 1975).</p>
|
||
<p>30. Max Warburg, at M.M. Warburg and Co., Hamburg, to Averill
|
||
[sic] Harriman, c/o Messrs.Brown Brothers Harriman & Co., 59
|
||
Wall Street, New York, N.Y., March 27, 1933.</p>
|
||
<p>31. This correspondence, and the joint statement of the Jewish
|
||
organizations,are reproduced in Moshe R. Gottlieb, {American
|
||
Anti-Nazi Resistance, 1933-41: An Historical Analysis} (New York:
|
||
Ktav Publishing House, 1982).</p>
|
||
<p>32. {Investigation of Nazi PropagandaActivities and
|
||
Investigation of Certain Other Propaganda Activities}: Public
|
||
Hearings before A Subcommittee of the Special Committee on
|
||
Un-American Activities, United States House of Representatives,
|
||
Seventy Third Congress, New York City, July 9-12, 1934--Hearings
|
||
No. 73-NY-7 (Washington, D.C., U.S. Govt. Printing Office, 1934).
|
||
See testimony of Capt. Frederick C. Mensing, John Schroeder, Paul
|
||
von Lilienfeld-Toal, and summaries by Committee members.
|
||
See {New York Times,} July 16, 1933, p. 12, for organizing of
|
||
Nazi Labor Front at North German Lloyd, leading to
|
||
Hamburg-Amerika after merger.</p>
|
||
<p>33. American Ship and Commerce Corporation telegram to Rudolph
|
||
Brinckmann at M.M. Warburg, June 12, 1936.
|
||
Rudolph Brinckmannto Averell Harriman at 59 Wall St., June
|
||
20, 1936, with enclosed note transmitting Helferrich's letter.
|
||
Reply to Dr. Rudolph Brinkmann c/o M.M. Warburg andCo, July
|
||
6, 1936, WAH papers. The file copy of this letter carries no
|
||
signature, but is presumably from Averell Harriman.</p>
|
||
<p>34. Office of Alien Property Custodian, Vesting Order Number 126.
|
||
Signed by Leo T. Crowley, Alien Property Custodian, executed
|
||
August 28, 1942. F.R. Doc.42-8774; Filed September 4, 1942,
|
||
10:55 A.M.; 7 F.R. 7061 (Number 176, Sept. 5, 1942.)
|
||
July 18, 1942, Memorandum To the Executive Committee of the
|
||
Officeof Alien Property Custodian, stamped CONFIDENTIAL, from
|
||
the Division of Investigation and Research, Homer Jones, Chief.
|
||
Now declassified in United States National Archives, Suitland,
|
||
Maryland annex. See Record Group 131, Alien Property Custodian,
|
||
investigative reports, in file boxrelating to Vesting Order
|
||
Number 126.</p>
|
||
<p>35. {New York Times,} May 20, 1933. Leading up to this agreement
|
||
is a telegramwhich somehowescaped the shredder. It is
|
||
addressed to Nazi official HjalmarSchacht at the Mayflower
|
||
Hotel, Washington, dated May 11, 1933: "Much disappointed to
|
||
have missed seeing you Tueday afternoon....I hope to see you
|
||
either in Washington or New York before you sail.
|
||
with my regards W.A. Harriman" (WAH papers).</p>
|
||
<p>36. Dulles to Bush, letter and draft reply in WAH papers.</p>
|
||
<p>37. {New York Times,} Jan. 19, 1938.</p>
|
||
<p>Any comments, please send by email, as I get very far behind on
|
||
this group.</p>
|
||
<p>Thanks.</p>
|
||
<p> John Covici</p>
|
||
<p>coviciccs.covici.com</p>
|
||
<p>Article 15394 of alt.activism:
|
||
From: covici@ccs.covici.com (John Covici)
|
||
Newsgroups: alt.activism
|
||
Subject: Part 3: George bush Unauthorized Biography
|
||
<info type="Message-ID"> 1VVReB1w164w@ccs.covici.com</info>
|
||
Date: 19 Jan 92 01:12:47 GMT
|
||
Organization: Covici Computer Systems
|
||
Lines: 1544</p>
|
||
<p>The following is part 3 of an unauthorized biography of George Bush
|
||
-- a forthcoming book serialized in New Federalist. This article is
|
||
from Issue 1 V6.</p>
|
||
<p>For further information, or to subscribe, please contact me by
|
||
e-mail.</p>
|
||
<p>Chapter 3 RACE HYGIENE: Three Bush Family Alliances "The
|
||
[government] must put the most modern medical means in the
|
||
service of this knowledge.... Those who are physically and
|
||
mentally unhealthy and unworthy must not perpetuate their
|
||
suffering in the body of their children....The prevention of
|
||
the faculty and opportunity toprocreate on the part of the
|
||
physically degenerateand mentally sick, over a period of only
|
||
600 years, would ... free humanity froman immeasurable
|
||
misfortune."s1</p>
|
||
<p> "The per capita income gap between the developed and the
|
||
developing countries is increasing, in large part the result of
|
||
higher birth rates in the poorer countries.... Famine in India,
|
||
unwanted babies in the United States, poverty that seemed to form
|
||
an unbreakable chain for millions of people--how should we tackle
|
||
these problems?.... It is quite clearthat one of the major
|
||
challenges ofthe 1970s ... will be to curb the world's
|
||
fertility."</p>
|
||
<p>These two quotations are alike in their mock show of concern for
|
||
human suffering, and in their cynical remedy for it: Big Brother
|
||
must prevent the "unworthy" or "unwanted" people from
|
||
living.
|
||
Letus now further inquire into the family background of our
|
||
President, so as to help illustrate how the second quoted author,
|
||
{George Bush}s1 came to share the outlook of the first, {Adolf
|
||
Hitler}.s2
|
||
We shall examine here the alliance of the Bush family with
|
||
three other families: {Farish, Draper} and {Gray.}
|
||
The private associations among these families have led to the
|
||
President's relationship tohis closest, most confidential
|
||
advisers. These alliances were forged in the earlier Hitler
|
||
project and its immediate aftermath. Understanding them will
|
||
help us to explain George Bush's obsession with the supposed
|
||
overpopulation of the world's non-Anglo-Saxons, and the dangerous
|
||
means he has adopted to deal with this "problem."</p>
|
||
<p>Bush and Farish</p>
|
||
<p> When George Bush was elected vice president in 1980, Texas
|
||
mystery man William Stamps Farish III took over management of all
|
||
of George Bush's personal wealth in a "blind trust."Known as
|
||
one of the richest men in Texas, Will Farish keeps his business
|
||
affairs under the most intense secrecy. Only the source of his
|
||
immense wealth is known, not its employment.s3
|
||
Will Farish has long been Bush's closest friend and
|
||
confidante. He is also the unique private host toBritain's
|
||
Queen Elizabeth: Farish owns and boards the studs which mate with
|
||
the Queen's mares. That is her public rationale when she comes
|
||
to America and stays in Farish's house. It is a vital link in
|
||
the mind of our Anglophile President.
|
||
President Bush can count on Farish not to betray the violent
|
||
secrets surrounding the Bush family money. For Farish's own
|
||
familyfortune was made inthe same Hitler project, in a
|
||
nightmarish partnership with George Bush's father.</p>
|
||
<p> On March 25, 1942, U.S. Assistant Attorney General Thurman
|
||
Arnoldannounced that William Stamps Farish (grandfather of the
|
||
President's money manager) had pleaded "no contest" to charges
|
||
of criminal conspiracy with the Nazis. Farish was the principal
|
||
manager of a worldwide cartel between StandardOil Co. of New
|
||
Jersey and the I.G. Farben concern.The merged enterprise had
|
||
opened the Auschwitz slave labor camp on June 141940, to
|
||
produce artificial rubber and gasoline from coal. The Hitler
|
||
government supplied political opponents and Jews as the slaves,
|
||
who were worked to near death and then murdered.
|
||
Arnold disclosed that Standard Oil of New Jersey (later known
|
||
as Exxon), of which Farish was president and chief executive, had
|
||
agreedto stop hiding fromthe United States patents for
|
||
artificial rubber which the company had provided to the Nazis.s4
|
||
A Senate investigating committeeunder Senator (later U.S.
|
||
President) Harry Truman of Missouri had called Arnold to testify
|
||
at hearings on corporations' collaboration with the Nazis. The
|
||
Senators expressed outrage at the cynicalway Farish was
|
||
continuing an alliance with the Hitler regime that had begun back
|
||
in 1933, when Farish became chief of Jersey Standard. Didn't he
|
||
know there was a war on?
|
||
The Justice Department laid before the committee a letter,
|
||
written to Standard president Farish by his vice president,
|
||
shortly after the beginning of World War II (September1, 1939)
|
||
in Europe. The letter concerned arenewal of their earlier
|
||
agreements with the Nazis:</p>
|
||
<p>Report on European Trip Oct. 12, 1939 Mr. W.S. Farish 30
|
||
Rockefeller Plaza</p>
|
||
<p> Dear Mr. Farish:
|
||
... I stayed in France until Sept. 17th.... In England I met
|
||
by appointment the Royal Dutch [Shell Oil Co.] gentlemen from
|
||
Holland, and ... a general agreement was reached on the necessary
|
||
changes in our relations with the I.G. [Farben], in view of the
|
||
state of war.... [T]he Royal Dutch Shell group is essentially
|
||
British.... Ialso had several meetings with ... the [British]
|
||
Air Ministry....
|
||
I required help to obtain the necessary permission to go to
|
||
Holland.... After discussions with the [American] Ambassador
|
||
[Joseph Kennedy] the situation was cleared completely.... The
|
||
gentlemen in the Air Ministry ... very kindly offered to assist
|
||
me [later] in reentering England....
|
||
Pursuant to thesearrangements, I was able to keep my
|
||
appointments in Holland [having flown there on a British Royal
|
||
Air Force bomber], where I had three days of discussion with the
|
||
representatives of I.G. They delivered to me assignments of some
|
||
2000 foreign patents and {we did our best to work out complete
|
||
plans for a modus vivendi which could operate through the term of
|
||
the war, whether or not the U.S. came in....} [emphasis added]
|
||
Very truly yours, F[rank] A. Howards5</p>
|
||
<p> Here are some cold realities behind the tragedy of World War
|
||
II, which help explain the Bush-Farish family alliance--and their
|
||
peculiar closeness to the Queen of England:
|
||
sb|Shell Oil is principally owned by the British Royal
|
||
family. Shell's chairman, Sir Henri Deterding, helped sponsor
|
||
Hitler's rise to power,s6 by arrangement with the Royal Family's
|
||
Bank of England Governor, Montagu Norman. Their ally, Standard
|
||
Oil, would take part in the Hitler project right up to the
|
||
bloody, gruesome end.
|
||
sb|When grandfather Farish signed the Justice Department's
|
||
consent decree in March 1942, the government had already started
|
||
picking its way through the tangled web of world-monopoly oil and
|
||
chemical agreements between Standard Oil and the Nazis. Many
|
||
patents and other Nazi-owned aspects of the partnership had been
|
||
seized by the U.S. Alien Property Custodian.
|
||
Uncle Sam would not seize Prescott Bush's Union Banking
|
||
Corporation for another seven months.
|
||
The Bush-Farish axis had begun back in 1929. In that year, the
|
||
Harriman bank bought Dresser Industries, supplier of oil-pipeline
|
||
couplers to Standard and other companies. Prescott Bush became a
|
||
director and financialczar of Dresser, installinghis Yale
|
||
classmate Neil Mallon as chairman.s7 George Bush would later name
|
||
one of his sons after the Dresser executive.
|
||
William S. Farish was the main organizer of the Humble Oil Co.
|
||
of Texas, which Farish merged into the Standard Oil Company of
|
||
New Jersey. Farish built up the Humble-Standard empire of
|
||
pipelines and refineries in Texas.s8
|
||
Thestock market crashed just after the Bush family got into
|
||
the oil business. The world financial crisis led to the merger
|
||
of the Walker-Harriman bank with Brown Brothers in 1931. Former
|
||
Brown partner Montagu Norman and his protege Hjalmar Schacht, who
|
||
was to become Hitler's economics minister, paid frantic visits to
|
||
New York that year and the next, preparing the new Hitler regime
|
||
for Germany.</p>
|
||
<p>The Congress on Eugenics</p>
|
||
<p> The mostimportant American political event in those
|
||
preparations for Hitler was the infamous Third International
|
||
Congress on Eugenics, held at NewYork's American Museum of
|
||
Natural History August 21-23, 1932, supervised by the
|
||
International Federation of Eugenics Societies.s9 This meeting
|
||
took up the stubborn persistence of African-Americans and other
|
||
allegedly "inferior" and "socially inadequate"groups in
|
||
reproducing, expanding their numbers, and "amalgamating" with
|
||
others. It was recommendedthat these "dangers" to the
|
||
"better" ethnic groups and to the "well-born," could be dealt
|
||
with by sterilization or "cutting off the bad stock" of the
|
||
"unfit."
|
||
Italy's fascist government sent an official representative.
|
||
Averell Harriman's sister Mary, director of "entertainment" for
|
||
the Congress, lived down in Virginia fox-hunting country; her
|
||
state supplied the speaker on "racial purity," W.A. Plecker,
|
||
Virginia commissioner of vital statistics. Plecker reportedly
|
||
held the delegates spellbound with his account of the struggle to
|
||
stop race-mixing and interracial sex in Virginia.
|
||
TheCongress proceedings were dedicated to Averell Harriman's
|
||
mother; she had paidfor the founding ofthe race-science
|
||
movement in America back in 1910, building the Eugenics Record
|
||
Office as a branch of the Galton National Laboratory in London.
|
||
She and other Harrimans were usually escorted to the horse races
|
||
by old George Herbert Walker--they shared with the Bushes and the
|
||
Farishes a fascination with "breeding thoroughbreds" among
|
||
horses and humans.s1s0
|
||
Averell Harriman personally arranged with the Walker/Bush
|
||
Hamburg-Amerika Line to transport Nazi ideologues from Germany to
|
||
New York for this meeting.s1s1 The most famous among those
|
||
transported was Dr. Ernst Rudin, psychiatrist at the Kaiser
|
||
Wilhelm Institute for Genealogy and Demography in Berlin, where
|
||
the Rockefeller family paid for Dr.Rudin to occupy an entire
|
||
floor with his eugenics "research." Dr. Rudin had addressed the
|
||
International Federation's 1928 Munich meeting, speaking on
|
||
"Mental Aberration and Race Hygiene," while others (Germans and
|
||
Americans) spoke on race-mixing and sterilization of the unfit.
|
||
Rudin had led the German delegation to the 1930 Mental Hygiene
|
||
Congress in Washington, D.C.
|
||
At the Harrimans' 1932 New York Eugenics Congress, Ernst Rudin
|
||
was unanimously elected President of the International Federation
|
||
of Eugenics Societies. This was recognition of Rudin as founder
|
||
of the German Society for Race Hygiene, with his co-founder,
|
||
Eugenics Federation vice president Alfred Ploetz.
|
||
As depression-maddened financiersschemed in Berlin and New
|
||
York, Rudin was now official leader of the world eugenics
|
||
movement. Components of his movement included groups with
|
||
overlapping leadership, dedicated to:
|
||
sb|sterilization of mental patients ("mental hygiene
|
||
societies");
|
||
sb|execution of the insane, criminals and the terminally ill
|
||
("euthanasia societies"); and
|
||
sb|eugenical race-purification by prevention of births to
|
||
parents from inferior blood stocks ("birth control
|
||
societies").</p>
|
||
<p> Before the Auschwitz death camp became a household word, these
|
||
British-American-European groups called openly for the
|
||
elimination of the "unfit" by means including force and
|
||
violence.s1s2
|
||
Ten months later, in June 1933, Hitler's interior minister
|
||
Wilhelm Frick spoke to a eugenics meeting in the new Third Reich.
|
||
Frick called the Germans a"degenerate"race, denouncing
|
||
one-fifth of Germany's parentsfor producing"feeble-minded"
|
||
and "defective" children. The following month, on a commission
|
||
by Frick, Dr. Ernst Rudin wrote the "Law for the Prevention of
|
||
Hereditary Diseases in Posterity," the sterilization law modeled
|
||
on previous U.S. statutes in Virginia and other states.
|
||
Special courts were soon established for the sterilization of
|
||
German mental patients, the blind, the deaf, and alcoholics.A
|
||
quarter million people in these categorieswere sterilized.
|
||
Rudin, Ploetz, and their colleagues trained a whole generation of
|
||
physicians and psychiatrists--as sterilizers and as killers.
|
||
When the war started, the eugenicists, doctors, and
|
||
psychiatrists staffed the new "T4" agency, which planned and
|
||
supervised the mass killings: first at "euthanasia centers,"
|
||
where the same categories which had firstbeen subject to
|
||
sterilization were now to be murdered, their brains sent in lots
|
||
of 200 to experimental psychiatrists; then at slave camps such as
|
||
Auschwitz; and finally, for Jews andother race victims, at
|
||
straight extermination campsin Poland, such as Treblinka and
|
||
Belsen.s1s3
|
||
In 1933, as what Hitler called his"New Order"appeared,
|
||
John D. Rockefeller,Jr. appointedWilliam S. Farish the
|
||
chairman of Standard Oil Co. of New Jersey (in 1937 he was made
|
||
president and chief executive). Farish moved his offices to
|
||
Rockefeller Center, New York, where he spent a good deal of time
|
||
with Hermann Schmitz, chairman of I.G. Farben; his company paid a
|
||
publicity man,Ivy Lee, to write pro-I.G. Farben and pro-Nazi
|
||
propaganda and get it into the U.S. press.
|
||
Now that he was outside of Texas, Farish found himself in the
|
||
shipping business--like the Bush family. He hired Nazi German
|
||
crews for Standard Oil tankers. And he hired {Emil Helfferich,}
|
||
chairman of the Walker/Bush/Harriman Hamburg-Amerika Line, as
|
||
chairman also of the Standard Oil Company subsidiary in Germany.
|
||
Karl Lindemann, board member of Hamburg-Amerika, also became a
|
||
top Farish-Standard executive in Germany.s1s4
|
||
This interlock between their Nazi German operations put Farish
|
||
together with Prescott Bush ina small, select group of men
|
||
operating from abroad through Hitler's "revolution," and
|
||
calculating that they would never be punished.
|
||
In 1939, Farish's daughter Martha married Averell Harriman's
|
||
nephew, Edward Harriman Gerry, and Farish in-laws became Prescott
|
||
Bush's partners at 59 Broadway.s1s5
|
||
Both Emil Helfferich andKarl Lindemann were authorized to
|
||
write checks to Heinrich Himmler, chief of the Nazi SS, ona
|
||
special Standard Oil account. This account was managed by the
|
||
German-British-American banker, Kurt von Schroeder. According to
|
||
U.S. intelligence documents reviewed by author Anthony Sutton,
|
||
Helfferich continued his payments to the SS into 1944,when the
|
||
SS was supervising the mass murder at the Standard-I.G. Farben
|
||
Auschwitz and other death camps. Helfferich told Allied
|
||
interrogators after the warthat these were not his personal
|
||
contributions--they were corporate Standard Oil funds.s1s6
|
||
After pleading "no contest" to charges of criminal
|
||
conspiracy with the Nazis, WilliamStampsFarishwas fined
|
||
$5000. (Similar fines were levied against Standard Oil--$5000
|
||
each for the parent company and for several subsidiaries.) This
|
||
of course did not interfere with the millionsof dollars that
|
||
Farishhad acquired in conjunction with Hitler's New Order, as a
|
||
large stockholder, chairman, and president of StandardOil. All
|
||
the government sought was the use of patents which his company
|
||
had given to the Nazis--the Auschwitz patents--but had withheld
|
||
from the U.S. military and industry.
|
||
Buta warwas on, and if young men were to be asked to die
|
||
fighting Hitler something more was needed. Farish was hauled
|
||
beforethe Senate committee investigating the national defense
|
||
program. The committee chairman, Senator Harry Truman, told
|
||
newsmen before Farish testified: "I think this approaches
|
||
treason."s1s7
|
||
Farish began breaking apart at these hearings. He shouted his
|
||
"indignation" at the senators, and claimed hewas not
|
||
"disloyal."
|
||
After the March-April hearings ended, more dirt came gushing
|
||
out of the Justice Department and theCongress on Farish and
|
||
Standard Oil.Farishhad deceived the U.S. Navy to prevent the
|
||
Navy from acquiring certain patents, while supplying them to the
|
||
Nazi war machine; meanwhile, he was supplying gasoline and
|
||
tetraethyl lead to Germany's submarines and air force.
|
||
Communications between Standard and I.G. Farben from the outbreak
|
||
of World WarII were released tothe Senate, showing that
|
||
Farish's organization had arranged to deceive the U.S. government
|
||
into passing over Nazi-owned assets: They would nominally buy
|
||
I.G.'sshare in certain patents because "in the event of war
|
||
between ourselves and Germany ... it would certainly be very
|
||
undesireable to havethis 20 percent Standard-I.G. pass to an
|
||
alien property custodian of the U.S. who might sell it to an
|
||
unfriendly interest."s1s8
|
||
John D. Rockefeller, Jr. (father of David, Nelson, and John
|
||
D. Rockefeller III), the controlling owner of Standard Oil, told
|
||
the Roosevelt administration that he knew nothing of the
|
||
day-to-day affairs of his company, that all these matters were
|
||
handled by Farish and other executives.s1s9
|
||
In August, Farish was brought back for more testimony. He was
|
||
now frequently accused of lying. Farish was crushed under the
|
||
intense, public grilling; he became morose, ashen. While
|
||
Prescott Bush escaped publicity when the government seized his
|
||
Nazi banking organization in October, Farish had been nailed. He
|
||
collapsed and died of a heart attack on November 29, 1942.
|
||
The Farish family was devastated by the exposure. Son William
|
||
StampsFarish, Jr., a lieutenant in the Army Air Force, was
|
||
humiliated by the public knowledge that his father was fueling
|
||
the enemy's aircraft; he died in a training accident in Texas six
|
||
months later.s2s0
|
||
With this double death, the fortune comprising much of
|
||
Standard Oil's profits from Texas and Nazi Germany was now to be
|
||
settled upon the little four-year-old grandson, William
|
||
("Will") Stamps Farish III. Will Farish grew up a recluse, the
|
||
most secretive multimillionaire in Texas, with investments of
|
||
"that money" in a multitude of foreign countries, and a host of
|
||
exoticcontacts overlapping the intelligence andfinancial
|
||
worlds--particularly in Britain.
|
||
The Bush-Farish axis started George Bush's career.After his
|
||
1948 graduation from Yale (and theSkull and Bones secret
|
||
society), George Bush flew down to Texas on a corporate jet and
|
||
was employed by his father's Dresser Industries. In a couple of
|
||
years he got help from his uncle, George Walker, Jr., and
|
||
Farish's British banker friends, to set him up in the oil
|
||
property speculation business. Soon thereafter, George Bush
|
||
founded the Zapata Oil Company, which put oil drilling rigs into
|
||
certain locations of great strategic interest to the
|
||
Anglo-American intelligence community.
|
||
Twenty-five-year-old Will Farish was personal aide to Zapata
|
||
chairman George Bush in Bush's unsuccessful 1964 campaign for
|
||
Senate. Farish used "that Auschwitz money" to back George Bush
|
||
financially, investing in Zapata. When Bush was elected to
|
||
Congress in 1966, Farish joined the Zapata board.s2s1
|
||
When George Bush became U.S. vice-president in 1980, the
|
||
Farish and Bush family fortunes were again completely, secretly
|
||
commingled. As we shall see, the old projects were now being
|
||
revived on a breathtaking scale.</p>
|
||
<p>Bush and Draper</p>
|
||
<p> Twenty years before he was U.S. President, George Bush
|
||
brought two "race-science" professors in front of the
|
||
Republican Task Force on Earth Resources and Population. As
|
||
chairman of the Task Force, then-Congressman Bush invited
|
||
Professors William Shockley and Arthur Jensen to explain to the
|
||
committee how allegedly runaway birth-rates for African-Americans
|
||
were "down-breeding" the American population.
|
||
Afterwards, Bush personally summed up for the Congress the
|
||
testimony his black-inferiority advocates had given to the Task
|
||
Force.s2s2 George Bush held his hearings on the threat posed by
|
||
black babies on August 5, 1969, while much of the world was in a
|
||
better frame of mind--celebrating mankind's progress from the
|
||
first moon landing 16 days earlier. Bush's obsessive thinking on
|
||
this subject was guided by his family's friend, Gen. William H.
|
||
Draper, Jr., the founder and chairman of the Population Crisis
|
||
Committee, and vice chairman of the Planned Parenthood
|
||
Federation. Draper had long been steering U.S. public discussion
|
||
about the so-called "population bomb" in the non-white areas of
|
||
the world.
|
||
If Congressman Bush had explained to his colleagues {how his
|
||
family had come to know General Draper,} they would perhaps have
|
||
felt some alarm, or even panic, and paid more healthy attention
|
||
to Bush's presentation. Unfortunately,the Draper-Bush
|
||
population doctrine is now official U.S. foreign policy.
|
||
William H. Draper, Jr. had joined the Bush team in 1927, when
|
||
he was hired by Dillon Read & Co., New York investment bankers.
|
||
Draper was put into a new job slot at the firm: handling the
|
||
Thyssen account.
|
||
We recall that in 1924, Fritz Thyssen set up his Union Banking
|
||
Corporation in George Herbert Walker’s bank at 39Broadway,
|
||
Manhattan. Dillon Read & Co.'s boss, Clarence Dillon, had begun
|
||
working with Fritz Thyssen some time after Averell Harriman first
|
||
met with Thyssen--at about the time Thyssen began financing Adolf
|
||
Hitler's political career.
|
||
In January 1926, Dillon Read created the {German Credit and
|
||
Investment Corporation} in Newark,New Jersey and Berlin,
|
||
Germany, as Thyssen's short-term banker. That same year, Dillon
|
||
Read created the {Vereinigte Stahlwerke} (German Steel Trust),
|
||
incorporating the Thyssen family interests under the direction of
|
||
New York and London finance.s2s3
|
||
William H. Draper, Jr. was made director, vice president, and
|
||
assistant treasurer of the German Credit and Investment Corp. His
|
||
business was short-term loans and financial management tricks for
|
||
Thyssen and the German Steel Trust. Draper's clients sponsored
|
||
Hitler's terroristic takeover; his clients led the buildup of the
|
||
Nazi war industry; his clients made war against the United
|
||
States. The Nazis were Draper's direct partners in Berlin and New
|
||
Jersey: Alexander Kreuter, residing in Berlin, was president;
|
||
Frederic Brandi, whose father was a top coal executive in the
|
||
German Steel Trust, moved to the United States in 1926 and served
|
||
as Draper's co-director in Newark.
|
||
Draper's role was crucial for Dillon Read & Co., for whom
|
||
Draper was a partner and eventually vice president. The German
|
||
Credit and Investment Corp.(GCI) was a "front" for Dillon
|
||
Read: It had the same New Jersey address as U.S. & International
|
||
Securities Corp. (USIS), and the same man served as treasurer of
|
||
both firms.s2s4
|
||
Clarence Dillon and his son C. Douglas Dillon were directors
|
||
of USIS, which was spotlighted when Clarence Dillon was hauled
|
||
before the Senate Banking Committee's famous "Pecora" hearings
|
||
in 1933. USIS was shown to be one of the great speculative
|
||
pyramid schemes which had swindled stockholders of hundreds of
|
||
millions of dollars. These investment policies had rotted the
|
||
U.S. economy to the core, and led to the Great Depression of the
|
||
1930s.
|
||
But William H. Draper, Jr.'s GCI "front" was not
|
||
{apparently} affiliated with the USIS "front" or with Dillon,
|
||
and the GCI escaped the congressmen's limited scrutiny. This
|
||
oversight was to prove most unfortunate, particularly to the 50
|
||
million people who subsequently died in World War II.
|
||
Dillon Read hired public relations man Ivy Lee to prepare
|
||
their executives for their testimony and to confuse and further
|
||
baffle the congressmen.s2s5 Lee apparently took enough time out
|
||
from his duties as image-maker for William S. Farish and the Nazi
|
||
I.G. Farben Co.; he managed the congressional thinking so that
|
||
the congressmen did not disturb the Draper operation in
|
||
Germany--and did not meddle with Thyssen, or interfere with
|
||
Hitler's U.S. money men.
|
||
Thus, in 1932, Willam H. Draper, Jr. was free to finance the
|
||
International Eugenics Congress as a "Supporting Member."s2s6
|
||
Was reusing his own income as a Thyssen trust banker? Or did
|
||
the funds come from Dillon Read corporate accounts, perhaps to be
|
||
written off income tax as "expenses for German project: race
|
||
purification"? Draper helped select Ernst Rudin as chief of the
|
||
world eugenics movement, who used his office to promote what he
|
||
called Adolf Hitler's "holy, national and international racial
|
||
hygienic mission."s2s7
|
||
W.S. Farish was publicly exposed in 1942, humiliated and
|
||
destroyed. Just before Farish died, Prescott Bush's Nazi banking
|
||
office was quietly seized and shut down. But Prescott’s close
|
||
friend and partner in the Thyssen-Hitler business, William H.
|
||
Draper, Jr., {neither died nor moved out of German affairs.}
|
||
Draper listed himself as a director of the German Credit and
|
||
Investment Corp. through 1942, and the firm was not liquidated
|
||
until November1943.s2s8 Buta war was on. Draper, a colonel
|
||
from previous military service, went off to the Pacific theater
|
||
and became a general.
|
||
General Draper apparently had a hobby:magic--illusions,
|
||
sleight of hand, etc.--and he was a member of the Society of
|
||
American Magicians. This is not irrelevant to his subsequent
|
||
career.
|
||
The Nazi regime surrendered in May 1945. In July 1945, General
|
||
Draper was called to Europe by the American military government
|
||
authorities in Germany. Draper was appointed head of the
|
||
Economics Division of the U.S. Control Commission. He was
|
||
assigned to take apart the Nazi corporate cartels. There is an
|
||
astonishing but perfectly logical rationale to this--Draper knew
|
||
a lot about the subject! General Draper, who had spent about 15
|
||
years financing and managing the dirtiest of the Nazi
|
||
enterprises, was now authorized to decide {who was exposed, who
|
||
lost and who kept his business, and in practical effect, who was
|
||
prosecuted for war crimes.}s2s9
|
||
(Draper was not unique within the postwar occupation
|
||
government. Consider the case of John J. McCloy, U.S. Military
|
||
Governor and High Commissioner of Germany, 1949-1952. Under
|
||
instructions from his Wall Street law firm, McCloy had lived for
|
||
a year in Italy, serving as an adviser to the fascist government
|
||
of Benito Mussolini. An intimate collaborator of the
|
||
Harriman/Bush bank, McCloy had sat in Adolf Hitler's box at the
|
||
1936 Olympic games in Berlin, at the invitation of Nazi
|
||
chieftains Rudolf Hess and Hermann Goering.)s3s0</p>
|
||
<p> William H. Draper, Jr., as a "conservative," was paired with
|
||
the "liberal" U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Morgenthau in a
|
||
vicious game. Morgenthau demanded that Germany be utterly
|
||
destroyed as a nation, that its industry be dismantled and it be
|
||
reduced to a purely rural country. As the economic boss in 1945
|
||
and 1946, Draper "protected" Germany from the Morgenthau Plan
|
||
... but at a price.
|
||
Draper and his colleagues demanded that Germany and the world
|
||
accept the {collective guilt of the German people} as {the
|
||
}explanation for the rise of Hitler's New Order, and the Nazi war
|
||
crimes. This, of course, was rather convenient for General
|
||
Draper himself, as it was for the Bush family. It is still
|
||
convenient decades later, allowing Prescott's son,President
|
||
Bush, to lecture Germany on the danger of Hitlerism. Germans are
|
||
too slow, it seems, to accept his New World Order.
|
||
After several years of government service (often working
|
||
directly for Averell Harriman in the North Atlantic Alliance),
|
||
Draper was appointed in 1958 chairman of a committee which was to
|
||
advise President Dwight Eisenhower on the proper course for U.S.
|
||
military aid to other countries. At that time, Prescott Bush was
|
||
a U.S. senator from Connecticut, a confidential friend and golf
|
||
partner with National Security Director Gordon Gray, and an
|
||
important golf partner with Dwight Eisenhower as well.
|
||
Prescott's old lawyer from the Nazi days, John Foster Dulles, was
|
||
Secretary of State, and his brother Allen Dulles, formerly of the
|
||
Schroder bank, was head of the CIA.
|
||
This friendly environment emboldened our General Draper to
|
||
pull off a stunt with his military aid advisory committee. He
|
||
changed the subject under study. The following year, the Draper
|
||
committee recommended that the U.S. government react to the
|
||
supposed threat of the "population explosion" by formulating
|
||
plans to depopulate the poorer countries. The growth of the
|
||
world's non-white population, he proposed, should be regarded as
|
||
dangerous to the national security of the United States!s3s1
|
||
President Eisenhower rejected the recommendation. But in the
|
||
next decade, General Draper founded the "Population Crisis
|
||
Committee" and the "Draper Fund," joining with the Rockefeller
|
||
and DuPont families to promote eugenics as "population
|
||
control." The administration of President Lyndon Johnson,
|
||
advised by Draper on the subject, began financing birth control
|
||
in the tropical countries through the Agency for International
|
||
Development.
|
||
General William Draper was George Bush's guru on the
|
||
population question.s3s2 But there was also Draper's money--from
|
||
that uniquely horrible source--and Draper's connections on Wall
|
||
Street and abroad. Draper's son and heir, William H. Draper III,
|
||
was co-chairman for finance(chief of fundraising) of the
|
||
Bush-for-President national campaign organization in 1980. With
|
||
George Bush in the White House, the younger Draper heads up the
|
||
depopulation activities of the United Nations throughout the
|
||
world.
|
||
Draper was vice president of Dillon Read until 1953. During
|
||
the 1950s and 1960s, the chief executive there was Frederic
|
||
Brandi, the German who was Draper's co-director for the Nazi
|
||
investments and his personal contact man with the Nazi Steel
|
||
Trust. Nicholas Brady was Brandi's partner from 1954, and
|
||
replaced him as the firm's chief executive in 1971. Nicholas
|
||
Brady, who knows where all the bodies are buried, was chairman of
|
||
his friend George Bush's 1980 election campaign in New Jersey,
|
||
and has been United States Treasury Secretary throughout Bush's
|
||
presidency.s3s3</p>
|
||
<p>Bush and Grey</p>
|
||
<p> The U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) says
|
||
that surgical sterilization is the Bush administration's "first
|
||
choice" method of population reduction in the Third World.s3s4
|
||
The United Nations Population Fund claims that 37 percent of
|
||
contraception users in Ibero-America and the Caribbean have
|
||
already been surgically sterilized. In a 1991 report, William H.
|
||
Draper III's U.N. agency asserts that 254 million couples will be
|
||
surgically sterilized over the course of the 1990s; and that if
|
||
present trends continue, 80 percent of the women in Puerto Rico
|
||
and Panama will be surgically sterilized.s3s5
|
||
The U.S. government pays directly for these sterilizations.
|
||
Mexico is first among targeted nations, on a list which was
|
||
drawn up in July 1991, at a USAID strategy session. India and
|
||
Brazil are second and third priorities, respectively.
|
||
On contract with the Bush administration, U.S. personnel are
|
||
working from bases in Mexico to perform surgery on millions of
|
||
Mexican men and women. The acknowledged strategy in this program
|
||
is to sterilize those young adults who have not already completed
|
||
their families.
|
||
George Bush has a rather deep-seated personal feeling about
|
||
this project, in particular as it pits him against Pope John Paul
|
||
II in Catholic countries such as Mexico. (See Chapter 4 below, on
|
||
the origin of a Bush-family grudge in this regard.)
|
||
The spending for birth control in the non-white countries is
|
||
one of the few items that is headed upwards in the Bush
|
||
administration budget. As its 1992 budget was being set, USAID
|
||
said its Population Account would receive $300 million, a 20
|
||
percent increase over the previous year. Within this project, a
|
||
significant sum is spent on political and psychological
|
||
manipulations of target nations, and rather blatant subversion of
|
||
their religions and governments.s3s6
|
||
These activities might be expected to cause serious objections
|
||
from the victimized nationalities, or from U. S. taxpayers,
|
||
especially if the program is somehow given widespread publicity.
|
||
Quite aside from moral considerations, {legal} questions would
|
||
naturally arise, which could be summed up: {How does George Bush
|
||
think he can get away with this?}
|
||
In this matter the President has expert advice. Mr.
|
||
(Clayland) Boyden Gray has been counsel to George Bush since the
|
||
1980 election. As chief legal officer in the White House, Boyden
|
||
Gray can walk the President through the dangers and complexities
|
||
of waging such unusual warfare against Third World populations.
|
||
Gray knows how these things are done.
|
||
When Boyden Gray was four and five years old, his father
|
||
organized the pilot project for the present worldwide
|
||
sterilization program, from the Gray family household in North
|
||
Carolina.
|
||
It started in 1946. The eugenics movement was looking fora
|
||
way to begin again in America.
|
||
Nazi death camps such as Auschwitz had just then seared the
|
||
conscience of the world. The Sterilization League of America,
|
||
which had changed its name during the war to "Birthright,
|
||
Inc.," wanted to start up again. First they had to overcome
|
||
public nervousness about crackpots proposing to eliminate
|
||
"inferior" and "defective"people. The Leaguetried to
|
||
surface in Iowa, but had to back off because of negative
|
||
publicity: a little boy had recently been sterilized there and
|
||
had died from the operation.
|
||
They decided on North Carolina, where the Gray family could
|
||
play the perfect host.s3s7 Through British imperial contacts,
|
||
Boyden Gray's grandfather Bowman Gray had become principal owner
|
||
of the R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. Boyden's father, Gordon Gray,
|
||
had recently founded the Bowman Gray (memorial) Medical School in
|
||
Winston-Salem, using his inherited cigarette stock shares. The
|
||
medical school was already a eugenics center.
|
||
As the experiment began, Gordon Gray's great aunt, Alice
|
||
Shelton Gray,who had raised him from childhood, was living in
|
||
his household. Aunt Alice had founded the "Human Betterment
|
||
League," the North Carolina branch of the national eugenical
|
||
sterilization movement.
|
||
Aunt Alice was the official supervisor of the 1946-47
|
||
experiment. Working under Miss Gray was Dr. Claude Nash Herndon,
|
||
whom Gordon Gray had made assistant professor of "medical
|
||
genetics" at Bowman Gray medical school.
|
||
Dr. Clarence Gamble, heir to the Proctor and Gamble soap
|
||
fortune, was the sterilizers' national field operations chief.
|
||
The experiment worked as follows.{All children enrolled in
|
||
the school district of Winston-Salem, N.C., were given a special
|
||
"intelligence test." Those children who scored below a certain
|
||
arbitrary low mark were then cut open and surgically sterilized.}
|
||
We quote now from the official story of the project: "In
|
||
Winston-Salem and in [nearby] Orange County, North Carolina, the
|
||
[Sterilization League's] field committee had participated in
|
||
testing projects to identify school age children who should be
|
||
considered for sterilization. The project in Orange County was
|
||
conducted by the University of North Carolina and was financed by
|
||
a 'Mr. Hanes,' a friend of Clarence Gamble and supporter of the
|
||
field work project in North Carolina. The Winston-Salem project
|
||
was also financed by Hanes. ["Hanes" was underwear mogul James
|
||
Gordon Hanes, a trustee of Bowman Gray Medical School and
|
||
treasurer of Alice Gray's group]....
|
||
"The medical school had a long history of interest in
|
||
eugenics and had compiled extensive histories of families
|
||
carrying inheritable disease. In 1946, Dr. C. Nash Herndon ...
|
||
made a statement to the press on the use of sterilization to
|
||
prevent the spread of inheritable diseases....
|
||
"The first step after giving the mental tests to grade school
|
||
children was to interpret and make public the results. In Orange
|
||
County the results indicated that three percent of the school age
|
||
children were either insane or feeble-minded.... [Then] the field
|
||
committee hired a social worker to review each case ... and to
|
||
present any cases in which sterilization was indicated to the
|
||
State Eugenics Board, which under North Carolina law had the
|
||
authority to order sterilization...."
|
||
Race science experimenter Dr. Claude Nash Herndon provided
|
||
more details in an interview in 1990:s3s8
|
||
"Alice Gray was the general supervisor of the project. She
|
||
and Hanes sent out letters promoting the program to the
|
||
commissioners of all 100 counties in North Carolina.... What did
|
||
I do? Nothing besides riding herd on the whole thing! The
|
||
social workers operated out of my office. I was at the time also
|
||
director of outpatient services at North Carolina Baptist
|
||
Hospital. We would see the [targeted] parents and children
|
||
there.... I.Q. tests were run on all the children in the
|
||
Winston-Salem public school system. Only the ones who scored
|
||
really low [were targeted for sterilization], the real bottom of
|
||
the barrel, like below 70.
|
||
"Did we do sterilizations on young children? Yes. This was a
|
||
relatively minor operation.... It was usually not until the
|
||
child was eight or ten years old. For the boys, you just make an
|
||
incision and tie the tube.... We more often performed the
|
||
operation on girls than with boys. Of course, you have to cut
|
||
open the abdomen, but again, it is relatively minor."
|
||
Dr. Herndon remarked coolly that "we had a very good
|
||
relationship with the press" for the project. This is not
|
||
surprising, since Gordon Gray owned the {Winston-Salem Journal,}
|
||
the {Twin City Sentinel,} and radio station WSJS.
|
||
In 1950 and 1951, John Foster Dulles, then chairman of the
|
||
Rockefeller Foundation, led John D. Rockefeller III on a series
|
||
of world tours, focusing on the need to stop the expansion of the
|
||
non-white populations. In November 1952, Dulles and Rockefeller
|
||
set up the Population Council, with tens of millions of dollars
|
||
from the Rockefeller family.
|
||
At that point, the American Eugenics Society, still cautious
|
||
from the recent bad publicity vis-a-vis Hitler, left its old
|
||
headquarters at Yale University. The Society moved its
|
||
headquarters into the office of the Population Council, and the
|
||
two groups melded together. The long-time secretary of the
|
||
Eugenics Society, Frederick Osborne, became the first president
|
||
of the Population Council. The Gray family's child-sterilizer,
|
||
Dr. C. Nash Herndon, became president of the American Eugenics
|
||
Society in 1953, as its work expanded under Rockefeller
|
||
patronage.
|
||
Meanwhile, the International Planned Parenthood Federation was
|
||
founded in London, in the offices of the British Eugenics
|
||
Society.
|
||
The undead enemy from World War II, renamed "Population
|
||
Control," had now been revived.
|
||
George Bush was U.S. ambassador to the United Nations in 1972,
|
||
when with prodding from Bush and his friends, the United States
|
||
Agency for International Development first made an official
|
||
contract with the old Sterilization League of America. The league
|
||
had changed its name twice again,and was now called the
|
||
"Association for Voluntary Surgical Contraception."The U.S.
|
||
government began paying the old fascist group to sterilize
|
||
non-whites in foreign countries.
|
||
The Gray family experiment had succeeded.
|
||
In 1988, the U.S. Agency for International Development signed
|
||
its latest contract with the old Sterilization League (a.k.a.
|
||
"Association for Voluntary Sterilization"), committing the
|
||
U.S. government to spend $80 million over five years.
|
||
Having gotten away with sterilizing several hundred North
|
||
Carolina school children, "not usually less than eight to ten
|
||
years old," the identical group is now authorized by President
|
||
Bush to do it to 58 countries in Asia, Africa, and Ibero-America.
|
||
The group modestly claims it has directly sterilized only2
|
||
million people, with87 percent of the bill paid by U.S.
|
||
taxpayers.
|
||
Meanwhile, Dr. Clarence Gamble, Boyden Gray's favorite soap
|
||
manufacturer, formed his own "Pathfinder Fund" as a split-off
|
||
from the Sterilization League. Gamble’s Pathfinder Fund, with
|
||
additional millions from USAID, concentrates on penetration of
|
||
local social groups in the non-white countries, to break down
|
||
psychological resistance to the surgical sterilization teams.</p>
|
||
<p>Notes</p>
|
||
<p>1. Phyllis Tilson Piotrow, {World Population Crisis: The United
|
||
States Response} (New York: Praeger Publishers, 1973),
|
||
"Forward" by George H.W. Bush, pp. vii-viii.</p>
|
||
<p>2.
|
||
Adolf Hitler, {Mein Kampf} (Boston, Houghton Mifflin Company,
|
||
1971), p. 404.</p>
|
||
<p>3. "The Ten Richest People in Houston," in {Houston Post
|
||
Magazine,} March 11, 1984. "$150 million to $250 million from ...
|
||
inheritance, plus subsequent investments ... chief heir to a
|
||
family fortune in oil stock.... As to his financial interests,
|
||
he is ... coy. He once described one of his businesses as a
|
||
company that 'invests in and oversees a lot of smaller companies
|
||
... in a lot of foreign countries.'|"</p>
|
||
<p>4. The announcements were made in testimony before a Special
|
||
Committee of the U.S. Senate Investigating the National Defense
|
||
Program. The hearings on Standard Oil were held March 5, 24, 26,
|
||
27, 31, and April 1, 2, 3 and 7, 1942. Available on microfiche,
|
||
law section, Library of Congress. See also {New York Times,}
|
||
March 26 and March 27, 1942, and {Washington Evening Star,} March
|
||
26 and March 27, 1942.</p>
|
||
<p>5. {Ibid.,} Exhibit No. 368, printed on pp. 4584-87 of the
|
||
hearing record. See also Charles Higham,{Trading With The
|
||
Enemy} (New York: Delacorte Press, 1983), p. 36.</p>
|
||
<p>6. Confidential memorandum from U.S. Embassy, Berlin, {op.
|
||
cit.,} chapter2. Sir Henri Deterding was among the most
|
||
notorious pro-Nazis of the early war period.</p>
|
||
<p>7. See sections on Prescott Bush in Darwin Payne, {Initiative in
|
||
Energy: Dresser Industries, Inc.} (New York: Distributed by Simon
|
||
and Schuster, 1979) (published by the Dresser Company).</p>
|
||
<p>8. William Stamps Farish obituary, {New York Times,} Nov. 30,
|
||
1942.</p>
|
||
<p>9. {A Decade of Progress in Eugenics: Scientific Papers of the
|
||
Third International Congress of Eugenics held at American Museum
|
||
of Natural History New York, August 21-23, 1932.} (Baltimore:
|
||
Williams & Wilkins Company, September, 1934).
|
||
The term "eugenics" is taken from the Greek to signify
|
||
"good birth" or "well-born," as in aristocrat. Its basic
|
||
assumption is that those who are not "well-born" should not
|
||
exist.</p>
|
||
<p>10.
|
||
See among other such letters, George Herbert Walker, 39
|
||
Broadway, N.Y., to W. A. Harriman, London, February 21, 1925, in
|
||
W.A. Harriman papers.</p>
|
||
<p>11.
|
||
Averell Harriman to Dr. Charles B. Davenport, President, The
|
||
International Congress of Eugenics,Cold Spring Harbor, L.I.,
|
||
N.Y.:</p>
|
||
<p> January 21, 1932
|
||
Dear Dr. Davenport:
|
||
I will be only too glad to put you in touch with the
|
||
Hamburg-American Line they may be able to co-operate in making
|
||
suggestions which will keep the expenses to a minimum. I have
|
||
referred your letter to Mr. Emil Lederer [of the Hamburg-Amerika
|
||
executive board in New York] with the request that he communicate
|
||
with you.</p>
|
||
<p> Davenport to Mr. W.A. Harriman, 59Wall Street, New York,
|
||
N.Y.</p>
|
||
<p> January 23, 1932
|
||
Dear Mr. Harriman:
|
||
Thank you very much for your kind letter of January 21st and
|
||
the action you took which has resulted at once in a letter from
|
||
Mr. Emil Lederer. This letter will serve as a starting point for
|
||
correspondence, which I hope will enable more of our German
|
||
colleagues to come to America on the occasion of the congresses
|
||
of eugenics and genetics, than otherwise.</p>
|
||
<p> Congressional hearings in 1934 established that
|
||
Hamburg-Amerika routinely provided free transatlantic passage for
|
||
those carrying out Nazi propaganda chores. See {Investigation of
|
||
Nazi Propaganda Activities and Investigation of Certain Other
|
||
Propaganda Activities,} {op. cit.,} chapter 2.</p>
|
||
<p>12.
|
||
Alexis Carrel, {Man the Unknown} (New York: Halcyon House,
|
||
published by arrangement with Harper & Brothers, 1935), pp.
|
||
318-19.
|
||
The battle cry of the New Order was sounded in 1935with the
|
||
publication of {Man the Unknown,} by Dr. Alexis Carrel of the
|
||
Rockefeller Institute in New York. This Nobel Prize-winner said
|
||
"enormous sums are now required to maintain prisons and insane
|
||
asylums.... Why do we preserve these useless and harmful
|
||
beings? This fact must be squarely faced. Why should society
|
||
not dispose of the criminals and the insane in a more economical
|
||
manner? ... The community must be protected against troublesome
|
||
and dangerouselements.... Perhaps prisons should be
|
||
abolished.... The conditioning of the petty criminal with the
|
||
whip, or some more scientific procedure, followed by a short stay
|
||
in hospital, would probably suffice to insure order. [Criminals,
|
||
including those] who have ... misled the public on important
|
||
matters, should be humanely and economically disposed of in small
|
||
euthanasic institutions supplied with proper gases. A similar
|
||
treatment could be advantageously applied to the insane, guilty
|
||
of criminal acts."
|
||
Carrel claimed to have transplanted the head of a dog to
|
||
another dog and kept it alive for quite some time.</p>
|
||
<p>13.
|
||
Bernhard Schreiber, {The Men Behind Hitler: A German Warning to
|
||
the World,} France: La Hay-Mureaux, ca. 1975), English language
|
||
edition supplied by H.& P. Tadeusz, 369 Edgewere Road, London
|
||
W2. Acopy of this book is now held by Union College Library,
|
||
Syracuse, N.Y.</p>
|
||
<p>14.
|
||
Higham, {op. cit.,} p. 35.</p>
|
||
<p>15.
|
||
Engagement announced Feb. 10, 1939, {New York Times,}p. 20.
|
||
See also {Directory of Directors} for New York City, 1930s and
|
||
1940s.</p>
|
||
<p>16.
|
||
Higham, {op. cit.,} pp. 20, 22 and other references to
|
||
Schroeder and Lindemann.
|
||
Anthony Sutton, {Wall Street and the Rise of Hitler} (Seal
|
||
Beach: '76 Press, 1976). Sutton is also a good source on the
|
||
Harrimans.</p>
|
||
<p>17.
|
||
{Washington Evening Star,} March 27, 1942, p.1.</p>
|
||
<p>18. Higham, {op. cit.} p. 50.</p>
|
||
<p>19.
|
||
{Ibid.,} p. 48.</p>
|
||
<p>20.
|
||
{Washington Post,} April 29, 1990, p. F4. Higham, {op. cit.,}
|
||
pp. 52-53.</p>
|
||
<p>21.
|
||
Zapata annual reports, 1950s-1960s, Library of Congress
|
||
microforms.</p>
|
||
<p>22.
|
||
See {Congressional Record} for Bush speech in the House of
|
||
Representatives, Sept. 4, 1969. Bush inserted in the record the
|
||
testimony given before his Task Force on August 5, 1969.</p>
|
||
<p>23. Sobel, {op. cit.,} pp. 92-111. See also Boyle, {op. cit.,}
|
||
chapter 1, concerning the Morgan-led Dawes Committee of Germany's
|
||
foreign creditors.
|
||
Like Harriman, Dillon used the Schroeder and Warburg banks to
|
||
strike his German bargains. All Dillon Read & Co. affairs in
|
||
Germany were supervised by J.P. Morgan & Co. partner Thomas
|
||
Lamont, and were authorized by Bank of England Governor Montagu
|
||
Norman.</p>
|
||
<p>24. See {Poor's Register of Directors and Executives,} (New York:
|
||
Poor's Publishing Company, late 1920s, '30s and '40s).See also
|
||
{Standard Corporation Records} (New York: Standard & Poor), 1935
|
||
edition pp. 2571-25,and 1938 edition pp. 7436-38, for
|
||
description and history of the German Credit and Investment
|
||
Corporation. For Frederic Brandi, See also Sobel, {op. cit.,} p.
|
||
213-214.</p>
|
||
<p>25. Sobel, {op. cit.,} pp. 180, 186.Ivy Lee had been hired to
|
||
improve the Rockefeller family image, particularly difficult
|
||
after their 1914 massacre of striking miners and pregnant women
|
||
in Ludlow, Colorado. Lee got old John D. Rockefeller to pass out
|
||
dimes to poor people lined up at his porch.</p>
|
||
<p>26.
|
||
Third International Eugenics Congress papers {op. cit.,}
|
||
footnote 7, p.512, "Supporting Members."</p>
|
||
<p>27.
|
||
Schreiber, {op. cit.,} p. 160. The Third Int. Eugenics Congress
|
||
papers, p. 526, lists the officers of the International
|
||
Federation as of publication date in September, 1934.Rudin is
|
||
listed as president--a year after he has written the
|
||
sterilization law for Hitler.</p>
|
||
<p>28.
|
||
{Directory of Directors for New York City,} 1942. Interview with
|
||
Nancy Bowles, librarian of Dillon Read & Co.</p>
|
||
<p>29.
|
||
Higham, {op. cit.,} p. 129, 212-15, 219-23.</p>
|
||
<p>30.
|
||
Walter Isaacson and Evan Thomas, {The Wise Men: Six Friends and
|
||
the World They Made--Acheson, Bohlen, Harriman, Kennan, Lovett,
|
||
McCloy} (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1986), pp. 122, 305.</p>
|
||
<p>31.
|
||
Piotrow, {op. cit.,} pp. 36-42.</p>
|
||
<p>32.
|
||
{Ibid.,} p. viii. "As chairman of the special Republican Task
|
||
Force on Population and Earth Resources, I was impressed by the
|
||
arguments of William H. Draper, Jr.... General Draper continues
|
||
to lead through his tireless work for the U.N. Population Fund."</p>
|
||
<p>33.
|
||
Sobel, {op. cit.,} pp. 298, 354.</p>
|
||
<p>34.
|
||
Interview July 16, 1991, with Joanne Grossi, an official with
|
||
the USAID's Population Office.</p>
|
||
<p>35. Dr. Nafis Sadik, "The State of World Population," 1991, New
|
||
York, United Nations Population Fund.</p>
|
||
<p>36.
|
||
See {User's Guide to the Office of Population,} 1991, Office of
|
||
Population, Bureau for Science and Technology, United States
|
||
Agency for International Development. Available from S&T/POP,
|
||
Room 811 SA-18, USAID, Washington D.C. 20523-1819.</p>
|
||
<p>37. "History of the Association for Voluntary Sterilization
|
||
[formerly Sterilization League of America], 1935-64," thesis
|
||
submitted to the faculty of the graduate school of the University
|
||
of Minnesota by William Ray Van Essendelft, March, 1978,
|
||
available on microfilm, Library of Congress. This is the official
|
||
history, written with full cooperation of the Sterilization
|
||
League.</p>
|
||
<p>38.
|
||
Interview with Dr. C. Nash Herndon, June 20, 1990.</p>
|
||
<p>Any comments, please send by email, as I get very far behind on
|
||
this group.</p>
|
||
<p>Thanks.</p>
|
||
<p> John Covici</p>
|
||
<p>coviciccs.covici.com</p>
|
||
<p>Article 15412 of alt.activism:
|
||
From: covici@ccs.covici.com (John Covici)
|
||
Newsgroups: alt.activism
|
||
Subject: Part 4: George Bush Unauthorized Biography
|
||
<info type="Message-ID"> uNcTeB1w164w@ccs.covici.com</info>
|
||
Date: 19 Jan 92 20:12:41 GMT
|
||
Organization: Covici Computer Systems
|
||
Lines: 1271</p>
|
||
<p>The following is part of a not yet published book being serialized in
|
||
New Federalist. For further information, or to subscribe, please
|
||
contact me by e-mail.</p>
|
||
<p>CHAPTER 4: "THE CENTER OFPOWER IS IN WASHINGTON" Brown
|
||
Brothers Harriman & Co. 59 Wall Street, New York Cable Address
|
||
"Shipley-New York" Business Established 1818
|
||
Private Bankers</p>
|
||
<p>September 5, 1944</p>
|
||
<p>The Honorable W. A. Harriman American Ambassador to the U.S.S.R.
|
||
American Embassy, Moscow, Russia</p>
|
||
<p>Dear Averell:</p>
|
||
<p> Thinking that possibly Bullitt's article in the recent issue
|
||
of "LIFE" may not have come to your attention, I have clipped
|
||
it and am sending it to you, feeling that it will interest you.
|
||
At present writing all is well here.</p>
|
||
<p>With warm regards, I am, Sincerely yours,</p>
|
||
<p> Pres</p>
|
||
<p> 'At present writing all is well here." Thus the ambassador to
|
||
Russia was reassured by the managing partner of his firm,
|
||
Prescott Bush. Only 22 and a half months before, the U.S.
|
||
government had seized and shut down the Union Banking
|
||
Corporation, which had been operated on behalf of Nazi Germany by
|
||
Bush and the Harrimans. But that was behind them now, and they
|
||
were safe. There would be no publicity on the Harriman-Bush
|
||
sponsorship of Hitlerism.
|
||
Prescott's son George, the future U.S. President, was also
|
||
safe. Three days before this note to Moscow was written, George
|
||
Bush had parachuted from a Navy bomber airplane over the Pacific
|
||
Ocean, killing his two crew members when the unpiloted plane
|
||
crashed.
|
||
Five months later, in February 1945, Prescott's boss Averell
|
||
Harriman escorted President Franklin Roosevelt to the fateful
|
||
summit meeting with Soviet leader Joseph Stalin at Yalta. In
|
||
April Roosevelt died. The agreement reached at Yalta, calling
|
||
for free elections in Poland once the war ended, was never
|
||
enforced.
|
||
Over the next eight years (1945 through 1952), Prescott Bush
|
||
was Harriman'sanchorin the New York financial world. The
|
||
increasingly powerful Mr. Harriman and his allies gave Eastern
|
||
Europe over to Soviet dictatorship. A Cold War was then
|
||
undertaken, to "counterbalance" the Soviets.
|
||
This British-inspired strategy paid several nightmarish
|
||
dividends. Eastern Europe was to remain enslaved. Germany was
|
||
"permanently" divided. Anglo-American power was jointly
|
||
exercised over the non-Soviet "Free World." The confidential
|
||
functions of the British and American governments were merged.
|
||
The Harriman clique took possession of the U.S. national security
|
||
apparatus, and in doing so, they opened the gate and let the Bush
|
||
family in.
|
||
- * * * -</p>
|
||
<p> Following his services to Germany's Nazi Party, Averell
|
||
Harriman spent several years mediating between the British,
|
||
American, and Soviet governments in the war to stop the Nazis. He
|
||
was ambassador to Moscow from 1943 to 1946.</p>
|
||
<p> President Harry Truman, whom Harriman and his friends held in
|
||
amused contempt, appointed Harriman U.S. ambassador to Britain
|
||
in 1946.
|
||
Harriman was at lunch with former British Prime Minister
|
||
Winston Churchill one day in 1946,when Truman telephoned.
|
||
Harriman asked Churchill if he should accept Truman's offer to
|
||
come back to the U.S. as Secretary of Commerce. According to
|
||
Harriman's account, Churchill told him: "Absolutely. The center
|
||
of power is in Washington."s1</p>
|
||
<p> Jupiter Island</p>
|
||
<p> The reorganization of the American government after World War
|
||
II--the creation of the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency along
|
||
British lines, for example--had devastating consequences. We are
|
||
concerned here with only certain aspects of that overall
|
||
transformation, those matters of policy and family which gave
|
||
shape to the life and mind of George Bush, and gave him access to
|
||
power.
|
||
It was in these postwar years that George Bush attended Yale
|
||
University, and was inducted into the Skull and Bones society.
|
||
The Bush family's home at that time was in Greenwich,
|
||
Connecticut. But it was just then that George's parents, Prescott
|
||
and Dorothy Walker Bush, were wintering in a peculiar spot in
|
||
Florida, a place that is excluded from mention in literature
|
||
originating from Bush circles.
|
||
Certain national news accounts early in 1991 featured the
|
||
observations on President Bush's childhood by his elderly mother
|
||
Dorothy. She was said to be a resident of Hobe Sound, Florida.
|
||
More precisely, the President's mother lived in a hyper-security
|
||
arrangement created a half-century earlier by Averell Harriman,
|
||
adjacent to Hobe Sound. Its correct name is Jupiter Island.
|
||
During his political career, George Bush has claimed many
|
||
different "home" states, including Texas, Maine, Massachusetts,
|
||
and Connecticut. It has not been expedient for him to claim
|
||
Florida, though that state has a vital link to his role in the
|
||
world, as we shall see. And George Bush's home base in Florida,
|
||
throughout his adult life, has been Jupiter Island.
|
||
The unique, bizarre setup on Jupiter Island began in 1931,
|
||
following the merger of W.A. Harriman and Co. with the
|
||
British-American firm Brown Brothers.
|
||
The reader will recall Mr. Samuel Pryor, the "Merchant of
|
||
Death." A partner with the Harrimans, Prescott Bush, George
|
||
Walker, and Nazi boss Fritz Thyssen in banking and shipping
|
||
enterprises, Sam Pryor remained executive committee chairman of
|
||
Remington Arms. In this period, the Nazi private armies (SA and
|
||
SS) were supplied with American arms--most likely by Pryor and
|
||
his company--as they moved to overthrow the German republic.
|
||
Such gun-running as an instrument of national policy would later
|
||
become notorious in the "Iran-Contra" affair.
|
||
Sam Pryor's daughter Permelia married Yale graduate Joseph V.
|
||
Reed on the last day of 1927. Reed immediately went to work for
|
||
Prescott Bush and George Walker, as an apprentice at W.A.
|
||
Harriman and Co.
|
||
During World War II, Joseph V. Reed had served in the
|
||
"special services" section of the U.S. Army Signal Corps. A
|
||
specialist insecurity, codes and espionage, Reed later wrote a
|
||
book entitled {Fun with Cryptograms}.s2</p>
|
||
<p> Sam Pryor had had property around Hobe Sound, Florida, for
|
||
some time. In 1931, Joseph and Permelia Pryor Reed bought the
|
||
entirety of Jupiter Island.
|
||
This is atypically beautiful Atlantic coast"barrier
|
||
island," a half-mile wide and nine miles long. The middle of
|
||
Jupiter Island lies just off Hobe Sound. The south bridge
|
||
connects the island with the town of Jupiter, to the north of
|
||
Palm Beach. It is about 90 minutes by auto from Miami--today,a
|
||
few minutes by helicopter.
|
||
Early in 1991, a newspaper reporter asked a friend of the Bush
|
||
family about security arrangements on Jupiter Island. He
|
||
responded, "If you called up the White House,would they tell
|
||
you how many security people they had? It's not that Jupiter
|
||
Island is the White House, although he [George Bush] does come
|
||
down frequently."
|
||
But for several decades before Bush was President, Jupiter
|
||
Island had an ordinance requiring the registration and
|
||
fingerprinting of all housekeepers, gardeners, and other
|
||
non-residents working on the island. The Jupiter Island police
|
||
department says that there are sensors in the two main roads that
|
||
can track every automobile on the island. If a car stops in the
|
||
street, the police will be there within one or two minutes.
|
||
Surveillance is a duty of all employees of the Town of Jupiter
|
||
Island. News reporters are to be prevented from visiting the
|
||
island.s3
|
||
To create this astonishing private club, Joseph and Permelia
|
||
Pryor Reed sold land only to those who would fit in. Permelia
|
||
Reed was still the grande dame of the island when George Bush was
|
||
inaugurated President in 1989. In recognition of the fact that
|
||
the Reeds know where {all} the bodies are buried, President Bush
|
||
appointed Permelia's son, Joseph V. Reed, Jr., chief of protocol
|
||
for the U.S. State Dept., in charge of private arrangements with
|
||
foreign dignitaries.
|
||
Averell Harriman made Jupiter Island a staging ground for his
|
||
1940s takeover of the U.S. national security apparatus. It was
|
||
in that connection that the island became possibly the most
|
||
secretive private place in America.
|
||
Let us briefly survey the neighborhood, back then in 1946-48,
|
||
to see some of the uses various of the residents had for the
|
||
Harriman clique.</p>
|
||
<p> Residence on Jupiter Island</p>
|
||
<p> sb|Jupiter Islander {Robert A. Lovett,}s4, Prescott Bush's
|
||
partner at Brown Brothers Harriman, had been Assistant Secretary
|
||
of War for Air from 1941 to 1945. Lovett was the leading American
|
||
advocate of the policy of terror-bombing of civilians. He
|
||
organized the Strategic Bombing Survey, carried out for the
|
||
American and British governments by the staff of the Prudential
|
||
Insurance Company, guided by London's Tavistock Psychiatric
|
||
Clinic.
|
||
In the postwar period, Prescott Bush was associated with
|
||
Prudential Insurance,one of Lovett's intelligence channels to
|
||
the British secret services. Prescott was listed by Prudential
|
||
as a director of the company for about two years in the early
|
||
1950s.
|
||
Their Strategic Bombing Survey failed to demonstrate any real
|
||
military advantage accruing from such outrages as the
|
||
fire-bombing of Dresden, Germany. But the Harrimanites
|
||
nevertheless persisted in the advocacy of terror from the air.
|
||
They glorified this as "psychological warfare," a part of the
|
||
utopian military doctrine opposed to the views of military
|
||
traditionalists such as Gen. Douglas MacArthur.
|
||
Robert Lovett later advised President Lyndon Johnson to
|
||
terror-bomb Vietnam. President George Bush revived the doctrine
|
||
with the bombing of civilian areas in Panama, and the destruction
|
||
of Baghdad.
|
||
On October 22, 1945, Secretary of war Robert Patterson created
|
||
the Lovett Committee, chaired by Robert A. Lovett, to advise the
|
||
government on the post-World War II organization of U.S.
|
||
intelligence activities. The existence of this committee was
|
||
unknown to the public until an official CIA history was released
|
||
from secrecy in 1989. But the CIA's author (who was President
|
||
Bush’s prep school history teacher; see chapter 5) gives no real
|
||
details of the Lovett Committee's functioning, claiming: "The
|
||
record of the testimony of the Lovett Committee, unfortunately,
|
||
was not in the archives of the agency when this account was
|
||
written."s5
|
||
The CIA's self-history does inform us of the advice that
|
||
Lovett provided to the Truman cabinet, as the official War
|
||
Department intelligence proposal.
|
||
Lovett decided that there should be a separate Central
|
||
Intelligence Agency. The new agency would "consult"with the
|
||
armed forces,but it must be the sole collecting agency in the
|
||
field of foreign espionage and counterespionage. The new agency
|
||
should have an independent budget, and its appropriations should
|
||
be granted by Congress without public hearings.
|
||
Lovett appeared before the Secretaries of State, War, and Navy
|
||
on November 14, 1945. He spoke highly of the FBI's work because
|
||
it had "the best personality file in the world." Lovett said
|
||
the FBI was expert at producing false documents, an art "which
|
||
we developed so successfully during the war and at which we
|
||
became outstandingly adept." Lovett pressed for a virtual
|
||
resumption of the wartime Office of Strategic Services (OSS) in a
|
||
new CIA.
|
||
U.S. military traditionalists centered around Gen. Douglas
|
||
MacArthur opposed Lovett's proposal. The continuation of the OSS
|
||
had been attacked at the end of the war on the grounds that the
|
||
OSS was entirely under British control, and that it would
|
||
constitute an American Gestapo.s6 But the CIA was established in
|
||
1947 according to the prescription of Robert Lovett, of Jupiter
|
||
Island.
|
||
sb|{Charles Payson} and his wife, {Joan Whitney Payson,} were
|
||
extended family members of Harriman's and business associates of
|
||
the Bush family.
|
||
Joan's aunt, Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney, was a relative of
|
||
the Harrimans. Gertrude's son, Cornelius Vanderbilt ("Sonny")
|
||
Whitney, long-time chairman of Pan American Airways (Prescott was
|
||
a Pan Am director), became assistant secretary of the U.S. Air
|
||
Force in 1947. Sonny's wife Marie had divorced him and married
|
||
Averell Harriman in 1930. Joan and Sonny's uncle, Air Marshal Sir
|
||
Thomas Elmhirst, was director of intelligence for the British Air
|
||
Force from 1945 to 1947.
|
||
Joan's brother, John Hay("Jock") Whitney, was to be
|
||
ambassador to Great Britain from 1955 to 1961 ... when it would
|
||
be vital for Prescott and George Bush to have such a friend.
|
||
Joan’s father, grandfather, and uncle were members of the Skull
|
||
and Bones secret society.
|
||
Charles Payson organized a uranium refinery in 1948. Later, he
|
||
was chairman of Vitro Corporation,makers of parts for
|
||
submarine-launched ballistic missiles, equipment for frequency
|
||
surveillance and torpedo guidance, and other subsurface
|
||
weaponry.
|
||
Naval warfare has long been a preoccupation of the British
|
||
Empire. British penetration of the U.S. Naval Intelligence
|
||
service has been particularly heavy since the tenure of Joan's
|
||
Anglophile grandfather, William C. Whitney, as secretary of the
|
||
Navy for President Grover Cleveland. This traditional covert
|
||
British orientation in the U.S. Navy, Naval Intelligence and the
|
||
Navy’s included service, the Marine Corps, forms a backdrop to
|
||
the career of George Bush--and to the whole neighborhood on
|
||
Jupiter Island. Naval Intelligence maintained direct relations
|
||
with gangster boss Meyer Lansky forAnglo-American political
|
||
operations in Cuba during World War II,well before the
|
||
establishment of the CIA. Lansky officially moved to Florida in
|
||
1953.s7
|
||
sb|{George Herbert Walker, Jr.} (Skull and Bones, 1927), was
|
||
extremely close to his nephew George Bush, helping to sponsor his
|
||
entry into the oil business in the 1950s. "Uncle Herbie" was
|
||
also a partner of Joan Whitney Payson when they co-founded the
|
||
New York Mets baseball team in 1960. His son, G.H. Walker III,
|
||
was a Yale classmate of {Nicholas Brady} and Moreau D. Brown
|
||
(Thatcher Brown's grandson), forming what was called the "Yale
|
||
Mafia" on Wall Street.
|
||
sb|{Walter S. Carpenter, Jr.} had been chairman of the finance
|
||
committee of the Du Pont Corporation (1930-40).In 1933,
|
||
Carpenter oversaw Du Pont's purchase of Remington Arms from Sam
|
||
Pryor and the Rockefellers, and led Du Pont into partnership with
|
||
the Nazi I.G. Farben company for the manufacture of explosives.
|
||
Carpenter became Du Pont's president in 1940. His cartel with the
|
||
Nazis was broken up by the U.S. government. Nevertheless,
|
||
Carpenter remained Du Pont's president, as the company’s
|
||
technicians participated massively in the Manhattan Project to
|
||
produce the first atomic bomb. He was chairman of Du Pont from
|
||
1948 to 1962, retaining high-level access to U.S. strategic
|
||
activities.
|
||
Walter Carpenter and Prescott Bush were fellow activists in
|
||
the Mental Hygiene Society. Originating at Yale University in
|
||
1908, the movement had been organized into the World Federation
|
||
of Mental Health by Montague Norman, himself a frequent mental
|
||
patient, former Brown Brothers partner and Bank of England
|
||
Governor. Norman had appointed as the federation’s chairman,
|
||
Brigadier John Rawlings Rees, director of the Tavistock Clinic,
|
||
chief psychiatrist and psychological warfare expert for the
|
||
British intelligence services. Prescott was a director of the
|
||
society in Connecticut; Carpenter was a director in Delaware.
|
||
sb|{Paul Mellon} was the leading heir to the Mellon fortune,
|
||
and along-time neighbor of Averell Harriman's in Middleburg,
|
||
Virginia, as well as Jupiter Island,Florida. Paul's father,
|
||
Andrew Mellon, U.S. treasury secretary 1921-32, had approved the
|
||
transactions of Harriman, Pryor, and Bush with the Warburgs and
|
||
the Nazis. Paul Mellon's son-in-law, {David K.E. Bruce,} worked
|
||
in Prescott Bush's W.A. Harriman & Co. during the late 1920s;
|
||
was head of the London branch of U.S. intelligence during World
|
||
War II; and was Averell Harriman's Assistant Secretary of
|
||
Commerce in 1947-48. Mellon family money and participation would
|
||
be instrumental in many domestic U.S. projects of the new Central
|
||
Intelligence Agency.
|
||
sb|{Carll Tucker} manufactured electronic guidance equipment
|
||
for the Navy. With the Mellons, Tucker was an owner of South
|
||
American oil properties. Mrs. Tucker was the great-aunt of
|
||
{Nicholas Brady,} later George Bush's Iran-Contra partner and
|
||
U.S. treasury secretary. Their son Carll Tucker, Jr. (Skull and
|
||
Bones,1947), was among the 15 Bonesmen who selected George Bush
|
||
for induction in the class of 1948.
|
||
sb|{C. Douglas Dillon} was the boss of William H. Draper,
|
||
Jr. in the Draper-Prescott Bush-Fritz Thyssen Nazi banking
|
||
scheme of the 1930s and 40s. His father, Clarence Dillon, created
|
||
the Vereinigte Stahlwerke (Thyssen's German Steel Trust) in 1926.
|
||
C. Douglas Dillon made{Nicholas Brady} the chairman of the
|
||
Dillon Read firm in 1971 and himself continued as chairman of the
|
||
Executive Committee. C. Douglas Dillon would be a vital ally of
|
||
his neighbor Prescott Bush during the Eisenhower administration.
|
||
sb|{Publisher Nelson Doubleday} headed his family's publishing
|
||
firm, founded under the auspices of J.P. Morgan and other British
|
||
Empire representatives. When George Bush's"Uncle Herbie"
|
||
died, Doubleday took over as majority owner and chief executive
|
||
of the New York Mets baseball team.
|
||
Some other specialized corporate owners had their place in
|
||
Harriman's strange club.
|
||
sb|{George W. Merck,} chairman of Merck & Co., drug and
|
||
chemical manufacturers, was director of the War Research Service:
|
||
Merck was the official chief of all U.S. research into biological
|
||
warfare from 1942 until at least the end of World War II. After
|
||
1944, Merck’s organization was placed under the U.S. Chemical
|
||
Warfare Service. His family firm in Germany and the United States
|
||
was famous for its manufacture of morphine.
|
||
sb|{James H. McGraw, Jr.,} chairman of McGraw Hill Publishing
|
||
Company, was a member of the advisory board to the U.S. Chemical
|
||
Warfare Service and a member of the Army Ordnance Association
|
||
Committee on Endowment.
|
||
sb|{Fred H. Haggerson,} chairman of Union Carbide Corp.,
|
||
produced munitions, chemicals, and firearms.
|
||
sb|{A.L. Cole} was useful to the Jupiter Islanders as an
|
||
executive of {Readers Digest.} In 1965, just after performing a
|
||
rather dirty favor for George Bush [which will be discussed in a
|
||
coming chapter--ed.],Cole became chairman of the executive
|
||
committee of the {Digest,} the world's largest-circulation
|
||
periodical.
|
||
From the late 1940s, Jupiter Island has served as a center for
|
||
the direction of covert action by the U.S. government and,
|
||
indeed, for the covert management of the government. Jupiter
|
||
Island will reappear later on, in our account of George Bush in
|
||
the Iran-Contra affair.</p>
|
||
<p> Target: Washington</p>
|
||
<p> George Bush graduated from Yale in 1948. He soon entered the
|
||
family's Dresser oil supply concern in Texas. We shall now
|
||
briefly describe the forces that descended on Washington, D.C.
|
||
during those years when Bush, with the assistance of family and
|
||
powerful friends, was becoming "established in business on his
|
||
own."
|
||
From 1948 to 1950, Prescott Bush's boss Averell Harriman was
|
||
U.S. "ambassador-at-large" to Europe. He was a non-military
|
||
"Theater Commander," the administrator of the
|
||
multi-billion-dollar Marshall Plan, participating in all
|
||
military/strategic decision-making by the Anglo-American
|
||
alliance.
|
||
The U.S. secretary of defense, James Forrestal, had become a
|
||
problem to the Harrimanites. Forrestal had long been an executive
|
||
at Dillon Read on Wall Street. But in recent years he had gone
|
||
astray. As secretary of the navy in 1944, Forrestal proposed the
|
||
racial integration of the Navy. As defense secretary, he pressed
|
||
for integration in the armed forces and this eventually became
|
||
the U.S. policy.
|
||
Forrestal opposed the utopians' strategy of appeasement
|
||
coupled with brinkmanship. He was simply opposed to communism.
|
||
On March 28, 1949, Forrestal was forced out of office and flown
|
||
on an Air Force plane to Florida. He was taken to "Hobe Sound"
|
||
(Jupiter Island), where Robert Lovett and an army psychiatrist
|
||
dealt with him.s8
|
||
He was flown back to Washington, locked in Walter Reed Army
|
||
Hospital and given insulin shock treatments for alleged "mental
|
||
exhaustion." He was denied all visitors except his estranged
|
||
wife and children--his son had been Averell Harriman's aide in
|
||
Moscow. On May 22, Forrestal's body was found, his bathrobe cord
|
||
tied tightly around his neck, after he had plunged from a
|
||
sixteenth-story hospital window. The chief psychiatrist called
|
||
the death a suicide even before any investigation was started.
|
||
The results of the Army's inquest were kept secret. Forrestal's
|
||
diaries were published, 80 percent deleted, after a year of
|
||
direct government censorship and rewriting.
|
||
- * * * -
|
||
North Korean troops invaded South Korea in June 1950, after
|
||
U.S. Secretary of State Dean Acheson (Harriman's very close
|
||
friend) publicly specified that Korea would not be defended.
|
||
With a new war on, Harriman came back to serve as President
|
||
Truman's adviser, to "oversee national security affairs."
|
||
Harriman replaced Clark Clifford, who had been special counsel
|
||
to Truman. Clifford, however, remained close to Harriman and his
|
||
partners as they gained more and more power. Clifford later
|
||
wrote about his cordial relations with Prescott Bush:
|
||
"Prescott Bush ... had become one of my frequent golfing
|
||
partners in the fifties, and I had both liked and respected
|
||
him.... Bush had a splendid singing voice,and particularly
|
||
loved quartet singing. In the fifties, he organized a quartet
|
||
that included my daughter Joyce.... They would sing in
|
||
Washington, and, on occasion, he invited the group to Hobe Sound
|
||
in Florida to perform. His son [George], though, had never
|
||
struck me as a strong or forceful person. In 1988, he presented
|
||
himself successfully to the voters as an outsider--no small trick
|
||
for a man whose roots wound through Connecticut, Yale, Texas oil,
|
||
the CIA, a patrician background, wealth, and the Vice
|
||
Presidency."s9</p>
|
||
<p> With Forrestal out of the way,Averell Harriman and Dean
|
||
Acheson drove to Leesburg, Virginia, on July 1, 1950, to hire the
|
||
British-backed U.S. Gen. George C. Marshall as secretary of
|
||
defense. At the same time, Prescott's partner, Robert Lovett,
|
||
himself became assistant secretary of defense.
|
||
Lovett, Marshall, Harriman, and Acheson went to work to
|
||
unhorse Gen. Douglas MacArthur, commander of U.S. forces in
|
||
Asia. MacArthur kept Wall Street's intelligence agencies away
|
||
from his command, and favored real independence for the non-white
|
||
nations. Lovett called for MacArthur's firing on March 23, 1951,
|
||
citing MacArthur’s insistence on defeating the Communist Chinese
|
||
invaders in Korea. MacArthur's famous message, that there was
|
||
"no substitute for victory," was read in Congress on April 5;
|
||
MacArthur was fired on April 10, 1951.
|
||
That September, Robert Lovett replaced Marshall as secretary
|
||
of defense. Meanwhile, Harriman was named director of the Mutual
|
||
Security Agency, making him the U.S. chief of the Anglo-American
|
||
military alliance. By now,Brown Brothers Harriman was
|
||
everything but commander-in-chief.
|
||
- * * * -
|
||
These were, of course, exciting times for the Bush family,
|
||
whose wagon was hitched to the financial gods of Olympus--to
|
||
Jupiter, that is.</p>
|
||
<p>Brown Brothers Harriman & Co. 59 Wall Street, New York 5, N.Y.
|
||
Business Established 1818 Cable Address "Shipley-New York"
|
||
Private Bankers
|
||
April 2, 1951</p>
|
||
<p>The Honorable W.A. Harriman, The White House, Washington, D.C.</p>
|
||
<p>Dear Averell:
|
||
I was sorry to miss you in Washington but appreciate your
|
||
cordial note. I shall hope for better luck another time.
|
||
I hope you had a good rest at Hobe Sound.
|
||
With affectionate regard, I am,
|
||
Sincerely yours,</p>
|
||
<p> Pres [signed]
|
||
Prescott S. Bush</p>
|
||
<p> A central focus of the Harriman security regime in Washington
|
||
(1950-53) was the organization of covert operations, and
|
||
"psychological warfare." Harriman,together with his lawyers
|
||
and business partners, Allen and John Foster Dulles, wanted the
|
||
government's secret services to conduct extensive propaganda
|
||
campaigns and mass-psychology experiments within the U.S.A., and
|
||
paramilitary campaigns abroad. This would supposedly ensure a
|
||
stable world-wide environment favorable to Anglo-American
|
||
financial and political interests.
|
||
The Harriman security regime created the Psychological
|
||
Strategy Board (PSB) in 1951. The man appointed director of the
|
||
PSB, Gordon Gray, is familiar to the reader as the sponsor of the
|
||
child sterilization experiments, carried out by the Harrimanite
|
||
eugenics movement in North Carolina following World War II.
|
||
Gordon Gray was an avid Anglophile, whose father had gotten
|
||
controlling ownership of the R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company
|
||
through alliance with the British Imperial tobacco cartel's U.S.
|
||
representatives, the Duke family of North Carolina. Gordon's
|
||
brother, R.J. Reynolds chairman Bowman Gray Jr., was also a naval
|
||
intelligence officer, known around Washington as the "founder of
|
||
operational intelligence." Gordon Gray became a close friend and
|
||
political ally of Prescott Bush; and Gray's son became for
|
||
Prescott's son, George, his lawyer and the shield of his covert
|
||
policy.
|
||
But President Harry Truman, as malleable as he was,
|
||
constituted an obstacle to the covert warriors. An insular
|
||
Missouri politician vaguely favorable to the U.S. Constitution,
|
||
he remained skeptical about secret service activities that
|
||
reminded him of the Nazi Gestapo.
|
||
So, "covert operations" could not fully take off without a
|
||
change of the Washington regime. And it was with the Republican
|
||
Party that Prescott Bush was to get his turn.</p>
|
||
<p> Prescott Runs for Senate</p>
|
||
<p> Prescott had made his first attempt to enter national politics
|
||
in 1950, as his partners took control of the levers of
|
||
governmental power. Remaining in charge of Brown Brothers
|
||
Harriman, he ran against Connecticut's William Benton for his
|
||
seat in the U.S. Senate. (The race was actually for a two-year
|
||
unexpired term, left empty by the death of the previous
|
||
senator).
|
||
In those days, Wisconsin's drunken Senator Joseph R. McCarthy
|
||
was making a circus-like crusade against communist influence in
|
||
Washington. McCarthy attacked liberals and leftists, State
|
||
Department personnel, politicians, and Hollywood figures. He
|
||
generally left unscathed the Wall Street and London strategists
|
||
who donated Eastern Europe and China to communist
|
||
dictatorship--like George Bush, their geopolitics was beyond left
|
||
and right.
|
||
Prescott Bush had no public ties to the notorious Joe
|
||
McCarthy, and appeared to be neutral about his crusade. But the
|
||
Wisconsin senator had his uses. Joe McCarthy came into
|
||
Connecticut three times that year to campaign for Bush and
|
||
against the Democrats. Bush himself made charges of "Korea,
|
||
Communism and Corruption" into a slick campaign phrase against
|
||
Benton, which then turned up as a national Republican slogan.
|
||
The response was disappointing. Only small crowds turned out
|
||
to hear Joe McCarthy, and Benton was not hurt. McCarthy's
|
||
pro-Bush rally in New Haven, in a hall that seated 6000, drew
|
||
only 376 people. Benton joked on the radio that "200 of them
|
||
were my spies."
|
||
Prescott Bush resigned from the Yale Board of Fellows for his
|
||
campaign, and the board published a statement to the effect that
|
||
the "Yale vote" should support Bush--despite the fact that
|
||
Benton was a Yale man, and in many ways identical in outlook to
|
||
Bush. Yale's Whiffenpoof singers appeared regularly for
|
||
Prescott's campaign. None of this was particularly effective,
|
||
however, with the voting population.s1s0
|
||
Then Papa Bush ran into a completely unexpected problem. At
|
||
that time, the old Harriman eugenics movement was centered at
|
||
Yale University. Prescott Bush was a Yale trustee, and his former
|
||
Brown Brothers Harriman partner, Lawrence Tighe, was Yale's
|
||
treasurer. In that connection, a slight glimmer of the truth
|
||
about the Bush-Harriman firm's Nazi activities now made its way
|
||
into the campaign.
|
||
Not only was the American Eugenics Society itself
|
||
headquartered at Yale, but all parts of this undead fascist
|
||
movement had a busy home at Yale. The coercive psychiatry and
|
||
sterilization advocates had made the Yale/New Haven Hospital and
|
||
Yale Medical School their laboratories for hands-on practice in
|
||
brain surgery and psychological experimentation. And the Birth
|
||
Control League was there, which had long trumpeted the need for
|
||
eugenical births--fewer births for parents with "inferior"
|
||
bloodlines. Prescott's partner Tighe was a Connecticut director
|
||
of the league, and the Connecticut league's medical advisor was
|
||
the eugenics advocate, Dr. Winternitz of Yale Medical School.
|
||
Now in 1950, people who knew something about Prescott Bush
|
||
knew that he had very unsavory roots in the eugenics movement.
|
||
There were then, just after the anti-Hitler war,few open
|
||
advocates of sterilization of "unfit" or "unnecessary"
|
||
people. (That would be revived later, with the help of General
|
||
Draperand his friend George Bush.) But the Birth Control League
|
||
was public--just about then it was changing its name to the
|
||
euphemistic "Planned Parenthood."
|
||
Then, very late in the 1950 senatorial campaign, Prescott Bush
|
||
was publicly exposed for being an activist in that section of the
|
||
old fascist eugenics movement. Prescott Bush lost the election
|
||
by about 1000 out of 862000 votes. He and his family blamed
|
||
the defeat on the exposeaa. The defeat was burned into the
|
||
family's memory, leaving a bitterness and perhaps a desire for
|
||
revenge.
|
||
In his foreword to a population control propaganda book,
|
||
George Bush wrote about that1950 election: "My own first
|
||
awareness of birth control as a public policy issue came with a
|
||
jolt in 1950 when my father was running for United States Senate
|
||
in Connecticut. Drew Pearson, on the Sunday before Election day,
|
||
'revealed' that my father was involved with Planned
|
||
Parenthood.... Many political observers felt a sufficient number
|
||
of voters were swayed by his alleged contacts with the birth
|
||
controllers to cost him the election...."s1s1
|
||
Prescott Bush gave a graphic description of these events in
|
||
his "oral history" interview at Columbia University: "In the
|
||
1950 campaign, when I ran against Benton, the very last week,
|
||
Drew Pearson,famous columnist, was running a radio program at
|
||
that time.... In this particular broadcast, just at the end of
|
||
our campaign [Pearson said]: "I predict that Benton will retain
|
||
his seat in the United States Senate, because it has just been
|
||
made known that Prescott Bush, his opponent, is president of the
|
||
Birth Control Society" or chairman, member of the board of
|
||
directors, or something, "of the Birth Control Society. In this
|
||
country, and of course with Connecticut's heavy Catholic
|
||
population, and its laws against birth control ... this is going
|
||
to be too much for Bush to rise above. Benton will be elected.
|
||
I predict."
|
||
The next Sunday, they handed out, at these Catholic Churches
|
||
in Waterbury and Torrington and Bridgeport, handbills, quoting
|
||
Drew Pearson's statement on the radio about Prescott Bush, you
|
||
see--I predict. Well, my telephone started ringing that Sunday
|
||
at home, and when I'd answer, or Dotty [Prescott's wife, George's
|
||
mother] would answer--"Is this true, what they say about
|
||
Prescott Bush?This can't be true. Is it true?"
|
||
She'd say, "No, it isn't true." Of course, it wasn't true.
|
||
But you never catchup with a thing like this--the election's
|
||
just day after tomorrow, you see? So there's no doubt, in the
|
||
estimate of our political leaders, that this one thing cost me
|
||
many thousand votes--whether it was 1, 3, 5 or 10 thousand we
|
||
don't know, we can't possibly tell, but it was enough. To have
|
||
overcome that thousand vote, it would only have had to be 600
|
||
switch [sic].
|
||
[Mrs. Bush then corrected the timing in Prescott Bush's
|
||
recollections.]
|
||
"I'd forgotten the exact sequence, but that was it.... The
|
||
state then--and I think still is--probably about 55 percent
|
||
Catholic population, with all the Italian derivation people
|
||
[sic],and Polish is very heavy, and the Catholic church is very
|
||
dominant here, and the archbishop was death on this birth control
|
||
thing. They fought repeal every time it came up in the
|
||
legislature, and {we never did get rid of that prohibition until
|
||
just a year or two ago,} as I recall it [emphasis added].s1s2</p>
|
||
<p> Prescott Bush was defeated, while the other Republican
|
||
candidates fared well in Connecticut. He attributed his loss to
|
||
the Catholic Church. After all, he had dependable friends in the
|
||
news media. The {New York Times}loved him for his bland
|
||
pleasantness. He just about owned CBS. Twenty years earlier,
|
||
Prescott Bush had personally organized the credit to allow
|
||
William S. Paley to buy the CBS (radio, later television) network
|
||
outright. In return, Prescott was made a director and the
|
||
financial leader of CBS; Paley himself became a devoted follower
|
||
and servitor of Averell Harriman.
|
||
Well, when he tried again, Prescott Bush would not leave the
|
||
outcome to the blind whims of the public.
|
||
Prescott Bush moved into action in 1952 as a national leader
|
||
of the push to give the Republican presidential nomination to
|
||
Gen. Dwight D. ("Ike") Eisenhower. Among the other team members
|
||
were Bush's Hitler-era lawyer John Foster Dulles, and Jupiter
|
||
Islander C. Douglas Dillon.
|
||
Dillon and his father were the pivots as the Harriman-Dulles
|
||
combination readied Ike for the presidency. As a friend put it:
|
||
"When the Dillons ... invited [Eisenhower] to dinner it was to
|
||
introduce him to Wall Street bankers and lawyers."s1s3
|
||
Ike's higher level backers believed, correctly, that Ike would
|
||
not interfere with even the dirtiest of their covert action
|
||
programs. The bland, pleasant Prescott Bush was in from the
|
||
beginning: a friend to Ike, and an original backer of his
|
||
presidency.
|
||
On July 28, 1952, as the election approached, Connecticut's
|
||
senior U.S. senator, James O'Brien McMahon, died at the age of
|
||
48. (McMahon had been Assistant U.S. Attorney General, in charge
|
||
of the Criminal Division, from 1935 to 1939. Was there a chance
|
||
he might someday speak out about the unpunished Nazi-era crimes
|
||
of the wealthy and powerful?)
|
||
This was {extremely} convenient for Prescott. He got the
|
||
Republican nomination for U.S. senator at a special delegated
|
||
meeting, with backing by the Yale-dominated state party
|
||
leadership. Now he would run in a special election for the
|
||
suddenly vacant Senate seat. He could expect to be swept into
|
||
office, since he would be on the same electoral ticket as the
|
||
popular war hero, General Ike. By a technicality, he would
|
||
instantly become Connecticut's senior senator, with extra power
|
||
in Congress. And the next regularly scheduled senatorial race
|
||
would be in 1956 (when McMahon’s term would have ended), so
|
||
Prescott could run again in that presidential election year ...
|
||
once again on Ike's coattails!</p>
|
||
<p> With this arrangement, things worked out very smoothly. In
|
||
Eisenhower's 1952 election victory,Ike won Connecticut by a
|
||
margin of 129507 votes out of 1092471. Prescott Bush came in
|
||
last among the statewide Republicans, but managed to win by
|
||
30373out of 1088799, his margin nearly 100000 behind
|
||
Eisenhower. He took the traditionally Republican towns.
|
||
In Eisenhower's 1956 re-election, Ike won Connecticut by
|
||
303036 out of 1114954 votes, the largest presidential margin
|
||
in Connecticut's history. Prescott Bush managed to win again, by
|
||
129544 votes out of 1085206--his margin this time 290082
|
||
smaller than Eisenhower's.s1s4
|
||
In January 1963, when this electoral strategy had been played
|
||
out and his second term expired, Prescott Bush retired from
|
||
government and returned to Brown Brothers Harriman.
|
||
The 1952 Eisenhower victory made John Foster Dulles Secretary
|
||
of State, and his brother Allen Dulles head of the CIA. The
|
||
reigning Dulles brothers were the "Republican" replacements for
|
||
their client and business partner, "Democrat" Averell
|
||
Harriman. Occasional public posturings aside, their strategic
|
||
commitments were identical to his.
|
||
Undoubtedly the most important work accomplished by Prescott
|
||
Bush in the new regime was on the golf links.
|
||
Those who remember the Eisenhower presidency know that Ike
|
||
played ... quite a bit of golf! Democrats sneered at him for
|
||
mindlessness, Republicans defended him for taking this healthy
|
||
recreation. Golf was Ike's ruling passion. And there at his
|
||
side was the loyal, bland, pleasant Senator Prescott Bush, former
|
||
president of the U.S. Golf Association, son-in-law of the very
|
||
man who had reformulated the rules of the game.
|
||
Prescott Bush was Dwight Eisenhower's favorite golf partner.
|
||
Prescott could reassure Ike about his counselors, allay his
|
||
concerns, and monitor his moods. Ike was very grateful to
|
||
Prescott, who never revealed the President's scores.
|
||
The public image of his relationship to the President may be
|
||
gleaned from a 1956 newspaper profile of Prescott Bush's role in
|
||
the party. The {New York Times,}which 11 years before had
|
||
consciously protected him from public exposure as a Nazi banker,
|
||
fawned over him in an article entitled, "His Platform:
|
||
Eisenhower":"A tall, lean, well-dressed man who looks exactly
|
||
like what he is--a wealthy product of the Ivy League--is chairman
|
||
of the Republican Convention's platform committee. As such,
|
||
Prescott Bush, Connecticut's senior United States Senator, has a
|
||
difficult task: he has to take one word and expand it to about
|
||
5000.
|
||
"The one word, of course, is 'Ike'--but no party platform
|
||
could ever be so simple and direct....
|
||
"Thus it is that Senator Bush and his fellow committee
|
||
members ... find themselves confronted with the job of wrapping
|
||
around the name Eisenhower sufficient verbiage to persuade the
|
||
public that it is the principles of the party, and not the grin
|
||
of the man at the head of it, which makes it worthy of
|
||
endorsement in [the] November [election].
|
||
"For this task Prescott Bush, a singularly practical and
|
||
direct conservative, may not be entirely fitted. It is likely
|
||
that left to his own devices he would simply offer the country
|
||
the one word and let it go at that.
|
||
"He is ... convinced that this would be enough to do the
|
||
trick ... if only the game were played that way.</p>
|
||
<p> "Since it is not, he can be expected to preside with dignity,
|
||
fairness and dispatch over the sessions that will prepare the
|
||
party credo for the 1956 campaign.
|
||
"If by chance there should be any conflicts within the
|
||
committee ... the Senator's past can offer a clue to his
|
||
conduct.
|
||
"A former Yale Glee Club and second bass in the All-Time
|
||
Whiffenpoofs Quartet,he is ...[called] 'the hottest
|
||
close-harmony man at Yale in a span of twenty-five years.'
|
||
"Close harmony being a Republican specialty under President
|
||
Eisenhower, the hottest close-harmony man at Yale in twenty-five
|
||
years would seem to be an ideal choice for the convention job he
|
||
holds at San Francisco....
|
||
"[In addition to his business background,he] also played
|
||
golf, competing in a number of tournaments. For eight years he
|
||
was a member of the executive committee of the United States Golf
|
||
Association....
|
||
"As a Senator, Connecticut's senior spokesman in the upper
|
||
house has followed conservative policies consistent with his
|
||
business background.
|
||
He resigned all his corporate directorships, took a leave from
|
||
Brown Brothers, Harriman, and proceeded to go down the line for
|
||
the Eisenhower program....
|
||
"Around the Senate, he is known as a man who does his
|
||
committee work faithfully, defends the Administration stoutly,
|
||
and fits well into the club like atmosphere of Capitol
|
||
Hill...."s1s5
|
||
{To be continued.}</p>
|
||
<p> Notes</p>
|
||
<p>1.
|
||
Walter Isaacson and Evan Thomas, {The Wise Men}: Six Friends and
|
||
the World They Made--Acheson, Bohlen, Harriman, Kennan, Lovett,
|
||
McCloy} (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1986), p. 377.</p>
|
||
<p>2.
|
||
Reed was better known in high society as a minor diplomat, the
|
||
founder of the Triton Press and the president of the American
|
||
Shakespeare Theater.</p>
|
||
<p>3.
|
||
{Palm Beach Post,} January 13, 1991.</p>
|
||
<p>4.
|
||
For Lovett's residency there see Isaacson and Thomas, {op.
|
||
cit.,} p. 417. Some Jupiter Island residencies were verified by
|
||
their inclusion in the 1947 membership list of the Hobe Sound
|
||
Yacht Club, in the Harriman papers, Library of Congress; others
|
||
were established from interviews with long-time Jupiter
|
||
Islanders.</p>
|
||
<p>5.
|
||
Arthur Burr Darling, {The Central Intelligence Agency: An
|
||
Instrument of Government,to 1950}, (College Station:
|
||
Pennsylvania State University, 1990), p. 59.</p>
|
||
<p>6. The {Chicago Tribune}, Feb 9, 1945,for example, warned of
|
||
"Creation of an all-powerful intelligence service to spy on the
|
||
postwar world and to pry into the lives of citizens sat home.
|
||
{Cf. Anthony Cave Brown, {Wild Bill Donovan: The Last Hero}, (New
|
||
York: Times Books, 1982), p.625, on warnings to FDR about the
|
||
British control of U.S. intelligence.</p>
|
||
<p>7. Dennis Eisenberg, Uri Dan, Eli Landau, {Meyer Lansky: Mogul of
|
||
the Mob} (New York: Paddington Press, 1979) pp. 227-28.</p>
|
||
<p>8. See John Ranelagh, {The Agency: The Rise and Decline of the
|
||
CIA}, (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1987), pp. 131-32.</p>
|
||
<p>9. Clark Clifford, {Counsel to the President} (New York: Random
|
||
House, 1991).</p>
|
||
<p>10. Sidney Hyman, {The Life of William Benton} (Chicago: The
|
||
University of Chicago Press, 1969), pp. 438-41.</p>
|
||
<p>11. Phyllis Tilson Piotrow, {World Population Crisis: The United
|
||
States Response} (New York: Praeger Publishers, 1973),
|
||
"Forward" by George H.W. Bush, p. vii.</p>
|
||
<p>12. Interview with Prescott Bush in the Oral History Research
|
||
Project conducted by Columbia University in1966, Eisenhower
|
||
Administration Part II; pp. 62-4.</p>
|
||
<p>13. Herbert S. Parmet, {Eisenhower and the American Crusades}
|
||
(New York: The Macmillan Company, 1972), p. 14.</p>
|
||
<p>14. {New York Times}, Sept. 6, 1952, Nov. 5, 1952, Nov. 7, 1956.</p>
|
||
<p>15. {New York Times}, Aug. 21, 1956.</p>
|
||
<p>Any comments, please send by email, as I get very far behind on
|
||
this group.</p>
|
||
<p>Thanks.</p>
|
||
<p> John Covici
|
||
|
||
coviciccs.covici.com
|
||
</p>
|
||
</div>
|
||
</xml>
|