LETTER TO MR. LOEB FROM GEORGE BUSH

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Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP88-01315R000200500003-8
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
12
Document Creation Date: 
December 16, 2016
Document Release Date: 
September 13, 2004
Sequence Number: 
3
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
May 26, 1976
Content Type: 
LETTER
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PDF icon CIA-RDP88-01315R000200500003-8.pdf511.17 KB
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Approved For Release 2004/10/13 : CIA-RDP88-01315R00020050000 ~$F ctutiv RW ri+tr %G 913/)A f ~ t. v e ~J, Ltio,' I (' Nay 6, 1375 iYtla~E~ v Dar. A r. b e?r. - /ft delighted '1?aaJ' k you for your letter of `M ry 24th. I'm that `' . Finnegan fou id A:1y coorienccment Cz N remarks at r:7. adge useful in putting together his flay 19th editorial. I also appreciate your words of support for the important worn of this Agency. I a=;i convinced that the ~~merican people strongly support the aaission of the Central Intelligence ency. I cam. assure you that this institution has not been devastated by recent publicity, and I an determined to do what I can to, see that our country continues to have an antelligeuce cap,-ability second to none. Thanks for writing. Sincerely yours, /s/ Gaorgu Bush George Bush Mr. William Loeb President and Publisher Manchester Union Leader L.Inion Leader Corporation 1'= a:chester, `ew fashire 03105 DCI/GB/dlg Orin; -- Arise 1 DCI (w/basic) I -- ER X A/DCI (w/basic) Approved For Release 2004/10/13 : CIA-RDP88-01315R000200500003-8 Approved For Relea ,~ 4(ji~f QPg 1315R0002600003-8 Who Cares About Freedom? Speaking last Sunday at the eleventh Com- mencement exercise of Franklin Pierce College in Rindge. Central Intelligence Agency Director George Push raised the most important issue of our times, one to which every student, parent. faculty member and guest who heard him should give top priority it. his. thinking. (A strikingly similar theme, was sounded by former United Nations Ambassador Daniel Patrick Aloynihan in his commencement address last Sunday at St.. -~nselm's College). "All througk our history," bush pointed out, we have had a commitment to freedom," but now, both our friends and foes all over the world are questioning the commitment of the United States to stop communism and to defend liberty and are wondering if that commitment is strong enough to make this country willing to sacrifice ,for its goals. TIIE ANSWER, IVE FEAR, IS THAT NOT ONLY IS AMERICA NO LONGER WILLING TO SACRIFICE FOR FREEDOM, PUT ALSO THAT OUR CURRENT LEAL)ERSHII' HAS DECIDED TO ACCOMMODATE THE ENEMIES OF FREE- DOM AROUND THE WORLD. In a recent column, former U.S. Ambassador to Switzerland Henry J. Taylor reflects on Secretary of State Henry Kissinger's visits with and prom- ises ref aid to leaders of African "nations" which prattle about democracy, but whose sole interest is power. In Kenya, his host was.the former murderous Mau Mau leader, President .lomo:Kenyatta, who- has "killed off his opponents with all the eclat of a Borg is at a?feast," and for whore "no glittering luxury is today too good." In Zaire, Kissinger saw dictator Mobutu Sese Aeko, a "fake soothsaver.'with his rheumy meta- physics and huckster's magic," a. "carny quack and total swine" who "lives a champagne life while Zaire's impoverished people are tog diseased to work at a trade and too miserable to have hope." Columnist Taylor also cites "Field Marshal" hit Amin, President of Uganda. who is notorious for blasting the United States, and Marien Ngouahi, President of the Brazzaville Congo -- bu_h of whom are ruthless killers who care not a whit for their enslaved people. Commenting on the lunacy of proposing assis- tance to countries that lack :'the essential under- pinnings for an equivalent of the Marshall Plan that saved Europe." Taylor points out that the current total U.S. government debt and that of every segment of our society has increased to more than three trillion - yes, trillion -- dollars! There is a direct correlation, we suggest, be- tween this nuzzling up to African dictators and the feeling of the new isolationists that the United States must accommodate itself to communism, its military power, the massive populations under its control, the persuasiveness of Marxist ideology to the masses of mankind. The view that there is nothing extraordinarily wrong with communism as such, which holds also that the Soviet Union is not significantly worse than the United States, has become a major concern to increasing numbers of political com- mentators. For example, consider the question posed by CIA Director Bush before the backdrop of the perceptive observations offered by Com- mentary editor Norman Podhoretz in the April issue of the American Jewish Committee's month- iv publication: "What we see in this newly tolerant, aria even benevolent, attitude toward communism is the slow erosion of our own sense of - political value in response to the Communist challenge - an accommodation in the sphere of ideas to match the accommodation we - have been making in. the sphere of power. Our own political culture has always held tip liberty as the highest political valve, while the political culture of communism has always scoffed at and denigrated liberty as a bour- geois delusion. "Therefore, our unwillingness or inability to condemn their.crimes against political liberty - which they of course do not regard as crimes at all - can t'airly be described as a. symptom of the surrender of our political eui.? ture to theirs." Approved For Release 2004/10/13 : CIA-RDP88-01315R000200500003-8 Approved For Release 2004/10/13 : CIA-RDP88-01315R0002005 0003-8 B'OSTO:v, ".?. ' ACFi1: .TT' HERALD AMERICAN 11 -- 371,664 1 " 7 Bill Lee, Purdue honored CIA director spears to Pierce grads - By JAMES McPARLAND RINDGE, N.H.--Central Intelligence Agency Director George H. W. Bush said yesterday he was worried "about - the credibility and the commitment of our country as seen through the eyes of foreign countries-friend and foe alike." Speaking At Franklin Pierce College commencement exercises, Bush, former U.S. Ambassador' to the United Nations, said many countries, including China, "are looking at its and trying to decide where we are at". after 200 yearrs of freedom of speech, religion and enterprise, CHINA IS asking itself if the USA is committed after 200 years of democracy or whatever one calls our magnifi- cent system," stated Bush, a former U.S. Envoy to China. "Many other countries are asking the same questions. These are questions all of us should ask." Bush, who received an honorary doctor of laws degree at the commencement, noted that both China and the Soviet Union are committed to world socialism. Cuba and Russia displayed credibility- in Angola while the USA did not, he said. . "The administrationmade a commitment to the Roberto Savimbia factions in Angola, much like Cuba and Russia made a commitment to the.MPLA in Angola," the former, Texas congressman. asserted. "Our commitment proved to be a commitment without` credibility.. Their's was credible. Angola hurt us some in Africa but it hurt elsewhere, too. -t "JAPAN, A.jillion miles away from -Angola, : wonders: whether we'll stand firm. - China, concerned about Soviet: troops on its northern border, also wonders,.;. "Our Asian allies in Southeast Asia say we didn't keep that commitment (Angola) and will we keep a commitment to help them stay free, Our NATO allies talk about isola- tion and withdrawal. "It is a worldwide problem,"! stressed Bush.. Bush said he was not suggesting this country was dedi- cated to intervention, "nor am I suggesting we must export our system to other countries. -- "I am saying we have obligations to countries that want C i' ~2f~,v~v !"retc "WE ARE A world power and we properly have world- wide obligations." Franklin Pierce College, a four-year liberal arts school, also awarded honorary degrees to humanitarian Roy Nie- man, Frank Purdue, the chicken king, C. Robertson Trow- bridge, publisher of Yankee Magazine and the Old Farmer's Almanac, and Red Sox pitcher Bill Lee. The latter was not Approved Pfi-9%1&%W"01Dkl4 V C DP88-01315R0p0200500003-8 f 1~ c I