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Octafish

(55,745 posts)
35. Nixon pulled a Bush on Eisenhower...
Thu Sep 5, 2013, 06:55 PM
Sep 2013

...Eisenhower, Nixon and the Dulles brothers worked like demons to protect Big Money, from Iran to Guatemala to Vietnam.

After Ike suffered a heart attack, young Tricky Dick Nixon was at the ready to stamp out the evils of communism, socialism, social security, liberalism, Democrats and democracy. Take the time he hired the Mafia to kill Castro -- lots of CIA types to the present day like to make out it was the Kennedy brothers.

When Pruneface got shot, Poppy pulled his own little coup and got busy.



From Christopher Simpson, details on how Poppy Bush started the big ball of surveillance wax after he pried control of the spyworks out of the bed-ridden Pruneface:



George Bush Takes Charge: The Uses of "Counter-Terrorism"

By Christopher Simpson
Covert Action Quarterly 58

A paper trail of declassified documents from the Reagan‑Bush era yields valuable information on how counter‑terrorism provided a powerful mechanism for solidifying Bush's power base and launching a broad range of national security initiatives.

During the Reagan years, George Bush used "crisis management" and "counter‑terrorism" as vehicles for running key parts of the clandestine side of the US government.

Bush proved especially adept at plausible denial. Some measure of his skill in avoiding responsibility can be taken from the fact that even after the Iran‑Contra affair blew the Reagan administration apart, Bush went on to become the "foreign policy president," while CIA Director William Casey, by then conveniently dead, took most of the blame for a number of covert foreign policy debacles that Bush had set in motion.

The trail of National Security Decision Directives (NSDDS) left by the Reagan administration begins to tell the story. True, much remains classified, and still more was never committed to paper in the first place. Even so, the main picture is clear: As vice president, George Bush was at the center of secret wars, political murders, and America's convoluted oil politics in the Middle East.

SNIP...

Reagan and the NSC also used NSDDs to settle conflicts among security agencies over bureaucratic turf and lines of command. It is through that prism that we see the first glimmers of Vice President Bush's role in clandestine operations during the 1980s.

CONTINUED...

http://books.google.com/books?id=YZqRyj_QXf8C&pg=PA75&lpg=PA75&dq=christopher+simpson+The+Uses+of+%E2%80%98Counter-Terrorism%E2%80%99&source=bl&ots=8klB0PzATX&sig=hi9DpE3qF43Oefh7iGn79W4jXQs&hl=en&ei=zAFQTeriBsr2gAfu1Mgc&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=1&ved=0CBYQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&q=christopher%20simpson%20The%20Uses%20of%20%E2%80%98Counter-Terrorism%E2%80%99&f=false



Because none of this sees the light of television, the American people wonder why there's always money for war and the rich get richer and the rest get poor and poorer.

Recommendations

0 members have recommended this reply (displayed in chronological order):

It always should be peace first, Octafish. Always. nt Mnemosyne Sep 2013 #1
Absolutely peace first. When we're the strongest nation in history... Octafish Sep 2013 #3
I absolutely love it when you "get all didactic"! It spreads knowledge every time. Mnemosyne Sep 2013 #20
Warfuckingmongers malaise Sep 2013 #26
JFK upon hearing news his friend Lumumba had been assassinated... Octafish Sep 2013 #27
Any smart rational person already knows that the "Gulf of Tonkin" incident Drale Sep 2013 #2
I'd bet you're in the minority. Octafish Sep 2013 #4
I am one teacher who brings this up in class. iemitsu Sep 2013 #19
I think many knew it was a lie. malthaussen Sep 2013 #28
Yes, that's why it was called an "illegal war" from the get go. Waiting For Everyman Sep 2013 #6
As a loyal American, I must point out how you consistently "forget" truedelphi Sep 2013 #5
NSA boss has got more power than any one person has held in US history... Octafish Sep 2013 #8
Much of that is not old stuff for me. Thanks for all the info - truedelphi Sep 2013 #9
God forbid the NSA is 'uncomfortable' felix_numinous Sep 2013 #7
Are you Robert McKee? Octafish Sep 2013 #21
No, thank you though felix_numinous Sep 2013 #25
Goddamn I thought this was pro-war satire at first. AtheistCrusader Sep 2013 #10
I thought it was an Onion article. nt awoke_in_2003 Sep 2013 #12
Wink...wink...wink Supersedeas Sep 2013 #31
I thought this might have been the Onion.. awoke_in_2003 Sep 2013 #11
BFEE script plays Groundhog Day without the happy ending. Octafish Sep 2013 #22
Savak was trained felix_numinous Sep 2013 #29
"Analysts Made 'SIGINT fit the claim'" sounds a lot like: johnnyreb Sep 2013 #13
Lock Them Up. Octafish Sep 2013 #32
K & R !!! WillyT Sep 2013 #14
Media, Propaganda and Vietnam Octafish Sep 2013 #33
As it fucking should gopiscrap Sep 2013 #15
I have been corrected here on DU for stating WHEN CRABS ROAR Sep 2013 #18
Nixon pulled a Bush on Eisenhower... Octafish Sep 2013 #35
Trust me I have pictures of me as a 7 year old gopiscrap Sep 2013 #38
From John Pilger... Octafish Sep 2013 #34
Hey no problem, my honor gopiscrap Sep 2013 #37
Nixon was ''supposed'' to succeed Eisenhower and Vietnam... Octafish Sep 2013 #39
Interesting how the NSA is central to suffragette Sep 2013 #16
Secret Government is un-American Octafish Sep 2013 #30
Yes, those who control the secrets get their way suffragette Sep 2013 #42
I could write a book coldbeer Sep 2013 #17
More from John Pilger... Octafish Sep 2013 #36
I find it interesting that they called it "shoe" Aerows Sep 2013 #41
From Senator Leahy's speech against the IWR on the eve of the vote: cali Sep 2013 #23
Thank you, cali! Here's another voice we sorely miss today... Octafish Sep 2013 #40
The NSA's Panopticon society Ichingcarpenter Sep 2013 #24
K&R + more truth to fuel those "uncomfortable comparisons" bobthedrummer Sep 2013 #43
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