George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography

(Ann) #1

  1. Memo by Leo Cherne, February 6, 1976, in Ford Library Leo Cherne Papers, Box 1.

  2. For Ford's reorganization, see Loch K. Johnson, A Season of Inquiry, pp. 194-197, and New York
    Times, February 18, 1976.

  3. For Koregate, see Robert B. Boettcher, Gifts of Deceit (New York, Holt Rinheart and Winston, 1980).

  4. Nathan Miller, Spying For America: The Hidden History of US Intelligence (New York, Paragon
    House, 1989), pp. 402-403.

  5. Ranelagh, The Agency, p. 632.

  6. Scott Armstrong and Jeff Nason, "Company Man," Mother Jones, October, 1988.

  7. John Stockwell, In Search of Enemies, (New York, 1978).

  8. David Corn, "The Same Old Dirty Tricks," The Nation, August 23, 1988.

  9. David Corn, "The Same Old Dirty Tricks," The Nation, August 23, 1988.

  10. Chapman Pincher, The Spycatcher Affair(New York, 1988), p. 147.

  11. For the CIA-Harold Wilson affair, see: David Leigh, The Wilson Plot (New York, 1988); Philip
    Knightley, The Second Oldest Profession (New York, Norton); Richard Deacon, The British Connection
    (London, Hamish Hamilton); and Chapman Pincher, The Spycatcher Affair (New York, 1988). Tom
    Mangold, Cold Warrior (New York, 1991) joins the red Studebaker school of historiography on Bush in the
    Angleton-Wilson affair.

  12. Accounts of the Letelier Affairs include John Dinges and Saul Landau, Assassination on Embassy Row
    (New York, 1980); Donald Freed, Death in Washington (Westport, Connecticut, 1980), and Scott
    Armstrong and Jeff Nason, "Company Man," Mother Jones, October 1988.

  13. See Armstrong and Nason, p. 43.

  14. Freed, p. 174.

  15. Dinges and Landau, p. 384.

  16. Taylor Branch and Eugene M. Propper, Labyrinth (New York, 1982), p. 72.

  17. Labyrinth, pp. 74-75.

  18. Freed, Death in Washington, p. 174.

  19. Jefferson Morley, "Bush's Drug Problem- and Ours," The Nation, August 27, 1988.

  20. Richard Pipes, "Team B: The Reality Behind the Myth," Commentary, October 1986.

  21. Pipes, "Team B," Commentary, October, 1986, p. 34. Pipes makes clear that it was Bush and Richard
    Lehman who both leaked to David Binder of the New York Times. Lehman also encouraged Pipes to leak.
    The verson offered by William R. Corson et al. in Widows (New York, 1989), namely that Paisley did the
    leaking, may also be true, but will not exonerate Bush. The authors of Widows are in grave danger of being

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