"...JM/WAVE ...proliferated across
[Florida] in preparation for the Bay of Pigs invasion. A subculture of
fronts, proprietaries, suppliers, transfer agents, conduits, dummy
corporations, blind drops, detective agencies, law firms, electronic
firms, shopping centers, airlines, radio stations, the mob and the
church and the banks: a false and secret nervous system twitching to
stimuli supplied by the cortex in Clandestine Services in Langley.
After defeat on the beach in Cuba, JM/WAVE became a continuing and
extended Miami Station, CIA's largest in the continental United
States. A large sign in front of the [...] building complex reads: US
GOVERNMENT REGULATIONS PROHIBIT DISCUSSION OF THIS ORGANIZATION OR
FACILITY.
Donald Freed, Death
in Washington (Westport, Connecticut, 1980), p. 141.
The review offered so
far of George Bush's activities during the late 1950's and early 1960's
is almost certainly incomplete in very important respects. There is good
reason to believe that Bush was engaged in something more than just the
oil business during those years. Starting about the time of the Bay of
Pigs invasion in the spring of 1961, we have the first hints that Bush,
in addition to working for Zapata Offshore, may also have been a
participant in certain covert operations of the US intelligence
community.
Such participation would
certainly be coherent with George's role in the Prescott Bush, Skull and
Bones, and Brown Brothers, Harriman networks. During the twentieth
century, the Skull and Bones/Harriman circles have always maintained a
sizable and often decisive presence inside the intelligence
organizations of the State Department, the Treasury Department, the
Office of Naval Intelligence, the Office of Strategic Services, and the
Central Intelligence Agency. Indeed, the Harriman and related Anglophile
financier factions of Wall Street have generally regarded those parts of
the state apparatus dealing with intelligence and covert operations as
their own very special property, property which had to be kept seeded
with control networks in order to be effectively steered from above. For
George Bush to interface with the intelligence community while
ostensibly engaged in his business career would be coherent with that
well-established pattern.
A body of leads has been
assembled which suggests that George Bush may have been associated with
the CIA at some time before the autumn of 1963. According to Joseph
McBride of The Nation, "a source with close connections to the
intelligence community confirms that Bush started working for the agency
in 1960 or 1961, using his oil business as a cover for clandestine
activities." 1 By the time of the Kennedy assassination, we have an
official FBI document which refers to "Mr. George Bush of the Central
Intelligence Agency," and despite official disclaimers there is every
reason to think that this is indeed the man in the White House today.
The mystery of George Bush as a possible covert operator hinges on four
points, each one of which represents one of the great political and
espionage scandals of postwar American history. These four cardinal
points are:
1. The abortive Bay of
Pigs invasion of Cuba, launched on April 16-17, 1961, prepared with
the assistance of the CIA's "Miami Station" (also known under the code
name JM/WAVE). After the failure of the amphibious landings of Brigade
2506, Miami station, under the leadership of Theodore Shackley, became
the focus for Operation Mongoose, a series of covert operations
directed against Castro, Cuba, and possibly other targets.
2. The assassination
of President John F. Kennedy in Dallas on November 22, 1963, and the
coverup of those responsible for this crime.
3. The Watergate
scandal, beginning with an April, 1971 visit to Miami, Florida by E.
Howard Hunt on the tenth anniversary of the Bay of Pigs invasion to
recruit operatives for the White House Special Investigations Unit
(the "Plumbers" and later Watergate burglars) from among
Cuban-American Bay of Pigs veterans.
4. The Iran-contra
affair, which became a public scandal during October-November 1986,
several of whose central figures, such as Felix Rodriguez, were also
veterans of the Bay of Pigs.
George Bush's role in
both Watergate and the October surprise/Iran-contra complex will be
treated in detail at later points in this book. Right now it is
important to see that thirty years of covert operations, in many
respects, form a single continuous whole. This is especially true in
regard to the dramatis personae. Georgie Anne Geyer points to the
obvious in a recent book: "...an entire new Cuban cadre now emerged from
the Bay of Pigs. The names Howard Hunt, Bernard Barker, Rolando
Martinez, Felix Rodriguez and Eugenio Martinez would, in the next
quarter century, pop up, often decisively, over and over again in the
most dangerous American foreign policy crises. There were Cubans flying
missions for the CIA in the Congo and even for the Portuguese in Africa;
Cubans were the burglars of Watergate; Cubans played key roles in
Nicaragua, in Irangate, in the American move into the Persian Gulf." 2
Felix Rodriguez tells us that he was infiltrated into Cuba with the
other members of the "Grey Team" in conjunction with the Bay of Pigs
landings; this is the same man we will find directing the contra supply
effort in central American during the 1980's, working under the direct
supervision of Don Gregg and George Bush. 3 Theodore Shackley, the JM/WAVE
station chief, will later show up in Bush's 1979-80 presidential
campaign.
To a very large degree,
such covert operations (and the great political scandals attendant upon
them) have drawn upon the same pool of personnel. They are a significant
extent the handiwork of the same crowd. It is therefore revealing to
extrapolate forward and backward in time the individuals and groups of
individuals who appear as the cast of characters in one scandal and
compare them with the cast of characters for the other scandals,
including the secondary ones that have not been enumerated here. Howard
Hunt, for example, shows up as a confirmed part of the overthrow of the
Guatemalan government of Jacopo Arbenz in 1954, as an important part of
the chain of command in the Bay of Pigs, as a person repeatedly accused
of having been in Dallas on the day Kennedy was shot, and as one of the
central figures of Watergate. (One wonders what secrets, after all, were
contained in Howard Hunt's safe, the contents of which were so
conveniently "deep sixed" by FBI Director Patrick Gray.)
George Bush is
demonstrably one of the most important protagonists of the Watergate
scandal, and was the overall director of Iran-contra. Since he appears
especially in Iran-contra in close proximity to Bay of Pigs holdovers,
it is surely legitimate to wonder when his association with those Bay of
Pigs Cubans might have started.
1959 was the year that
Bush started operating out of his Zapata Offshore headquarters in
Houston; it was also the year that Fidel Castro seized power in Cuba.
Officially, as we have seen, George was now a businessman whose work
took him at times to Louisiana, where Zapata had offshore drilling
operations. George must have been a frequent visitor to New Orleans.
Because of his family's estate on Jupiter Island, he would also have
been a frequent visitor to the Hobe Sound area. And then, there were
Zapata Offshore drilling operations in the Florida Strait. On all of
these activities, the official "red Studebaker" biographical material
and the Zapata Offshore annual reports are extremely cryptic.
The Jupiter Island
connection and father Prescott's Brown Brothers, Harriman/Skull and
Bones networks are doubtless the key. Jupiter Island meant Averell
Harriman, Robert Lovett, C. Douglas Dillon and other Anglophile
financiers who had directed the US intelligence community long before
there had been a CIA at all. And, in the back yard of the Jupiter Island
Olympians, and under their direction, a powerful covert operations base
was now being assembled, in which George Bush would have been present at
the creation as a matter of birthright.
During 1959-60, Allen
Dulles and the Eisenhower Administration began to assemble in south
Florida the infrastructure for covert action against Cuba. This was the
JM/WAVE capability, later formally constituted as the CIA Miami station.
JM/WAVE was an operational center for the Eisenhower regime's project of
staging an invasion of Cuba using a secret army of anti-Castro Cuban
exiles organized, armed, trained, transported, and directed by the CIA.
The Cubans, called Brigade 2506, were trained in secret camps in
Guatemala, and they had air support from B-26 bombers based in
Nicaragua. This invasion was crushed by Castro's defending forces in
less than three days.
Before going along with
the plan so eagerly touted by Allen Dulles, Kennedy had established the
pre-condition that under no circumstances whatsoever would there be
direct intervention by US military forces against Cuba. On the one hand,
Dulles had assured Kennedy that the news of the invasion would trigger
an insurrection which would sweep Castro and his regime away. On the
other, Kennedy had to be concerned about provoking a global
thermonuclear confrontation with the USSR, in the eventuality that N.S.
Khrushchev decided to respond to a US Cuban gambit by, for example,
cutting off US access to Berlin.
Hints of the covert
presence of George Bush are scattered here and there around the Bay of
Pigs invasion. According to some accounts, the code name for the Bay of
Pigs was Operation Pluto. 4 But Bay of Pigs veteran Howard Hunt
scornfully denies that this was the code name used by JM/WAVE personnel;
Hunt writes: "So perhaps the Pentagon referred to the Brigade invasion
as PLUTO. CIA did not." 5 But Hunt does not tell us what the CIA code
name was, and the contents of Hunt's Watergate era White House safe,
which might have told us the answer, were of course "deep-sixed" by FBI
Director Patrick Gray. One code name frequently used by CIA Miami
Station personnel appears to have been "Don Eduardo," roughly the
Spanish equivalent of "Mr. Edward" or perhaps "Mr. Ed." 6
According to reliable
sources and published accounts, the CIA code name for the Bay of Pigs
invasion was Operation Zapata, and the plan was so referred to by
Richard Bissell of the CIA, one of the plan's promoters, in a briefing
to President Kennedy in the Cabinet Room on March 29, 1961. 7 Does
Operation Zapata have anything to do with Zapata Offshore? The
run-of-the-mill Bushman might respond that Emiliano Zapata, after all,
had been a public figure in his own right, and the subject of a recent
Hollywood movies starring Marlon Brando. As J. Hugh Liedtke had
observed, he was the classic figure for the revolutionary-cum-bandit. A
more knowledgeable Bushman might argue that the main landing beach, the
Playa Giron, is located south of the city of Cienfuegos on the Zapata
Peninula, on the south coast of Cuba.
Then there is the
question of the Brigade 2506 landing fleet, which was composed of five
older freighters bought or chartered from the Garcia Steamship Lines,
bearing the names of Houston, Rio Esondido,
Caribe, Atlantic, and Lake Charles. In addition to
these vessels, which were outfitted as transport ships, there were two
somewhat better armed fire support ships, the Blagar and the
Barbara. (In some sources Barbara J.) 8 The Barbara
was originally an LCI (Landing Craft Infantry) of earlier vintage. Our
attention is attracted at once to the Barbara and the Houston,
in the first case because we have seen George Bush's habit of naming his
combat aircraft after his wife, and, in the second case, because Bush
was at this time a resident, booster, and Republican activist of
Houston, Texas. But of course, the appearance of names like "Zapata,"
Barbara, and Houston can by itself only arouse suspicion, and
proves nothing.
After the ignominious
defeat of the Bay of Pigs invasion, there was great animosity against
Kennedy among the survivors of Brigade 2506, some of whom eventually
made their way back to Miami after being released from Castro's prisoner
of war camps. There was also great animosity against Kennedy on the part
of the JM/WAVE personnel.
During the early 1950's,
E. Howard Hunt had been the CIA station chief in Mexico City. As David
Atlee Phillips (another embittered JM/WAVE veteran) tells us in his
autobiographical account, The Night Watch, Howard Hunt had
been the immediate superior of a young CIA recruit named William F.
Buckley, the Yale graduate and Skull and Bones member who later founded
the National Review. In his autobiographical account written
during the days of the Watergate scandal, Hunt includes the following
tirade about the Bay of Pigs:
No event since the
communization of China in 1949 has had such a profound effect on the
United States and its allies as the defeat of the US-trained Cuban
invasion brigade at the Bay of Pigs in April 1961.
Out of that
humiliation grew the Berlin Wall, the missile crisis, guerrilla
warfare throughout Latin American and Africa, and our Dominican
Republic intervention. Castros' beachhead triumph opened a bottomless
Pandora's box of difficulties that affected not only the United
States, but most of its allies in the Free World. These bloody and
subversive events would not have taken place had Castro been toppled.
Instead of standing firm, our government pyramided crucially wrong
decisions and allowed Brigade 2506 to be destroyed. The Kennedy
administration yielded Castro all the excuse he needed to gain a
tighter grip on the island of Jose Marti, then moved shamefacedly into
the shadows and hoped the Cuban issue would simply melt away.9
Hunt was typical of the
opinion that the debacle had been Kennedy's fault, and not the
responsibility of men like Allen Dulles and Richard Bissell, who had
designed it and recommended it. After the embarrassing failure of the
invasion, which never evoked the hoped-for spontaneous anti-Castro
insurrection, Kennedy fired Allen Dulles, his Harrimanite deputy
Bissell, and CIA deputy Director Charles Cabell (whose brother was the
mayor of Dallas at the time Kennedy was shot).
During the days after
the Bay of Pigs debacle, Kennedy was deeply suspicious of the
intelligence community and of proposals for military escalation in
general, including in places like South Vietnam. Kennedy sought to
procure an outside, expert opinion on military matters. For this he
turned to the former commander in chief of the Southwest Pacific Theatre
during World War II, General Douglas MacArthur. Almost ten years ago, a
reliable source shared with one of the authors an account of a meeting
between Kennedy and MacArthur in which the veteran general warned the
young president that there were elements inside the US government who
emphatically did not share his patriotic motives, and who were seeking
to destroy his administration from within. MacArthur's warned that the
forces bent on destroying Kennedy were centered in the Wall Street
financial community and its various tentacles in the intelligence
community.
It is a matter of public
record that Kennedy met with MacArthur in the latter part of April,
1961, after the Bay of Pigs. According to Kennedy aide Theodore
Sorenson, MacArthur told Kennedy, "The chickens are coming home to
roost, and you happen to have just moved into the chicken house." 10 At
the same meeting, according to Sorenson, MacArthur "warned [Kennedy]
against the commitment of American foot soldiers on the Asian mainland,
and the President never forgot this advice." 11 This point is grudgingly
confirmed by Arthur M. Schlesinger, a Kennedy aide who had a vested
interest in vilifying MacArthur, who wrote that "MacArthur expressed his
old view that anyone wanting to commit American ground forces to the
mainland [of Asia] should have his head examined." 12 MacArthur restated
this advice during a second meeting with Kennedy when the General
returned from his last trip to the Far East in July, 1961.
Kennedy valued
MacArthur's professional military opinion highly, and used it to keep at
arms length those advisers who were arguing for escalation in Laos,
Vietnam, and elsewhere. He repeatedly invited those who proposed to send
land forces to Asia to convince MacArthur that this would as good idea.
If they could convince MacArthur, then he, Kennedy, might also go along.
At this time, the group proposing escalation in Vietnam (as well as
preparing the assassination of President Diem) had a heavy Brown
Brothers, Harriman/Skull and Bones overtone: the hawks of 1961-63 were
Harriman, McGeorge Bundy, William Bundy, Henry Cabot Lodge, and some key
London oligarchs and theoreticians of counterinsurgency wars. And of
course, George Bush during these years was calling for escalation in
Vietnam and challenging Kennedy to "muster the courage" to try a second
invasion of Cuba. In the meantime, the JM/WAVE-Miami station complex was
growing rapidly to become the largest of Langley's many satellites. Its
center was at the former Richmond Naval Air Station south of Miami,
which had been a base for antisubmarine blimps during World War II.
During the years after the failure of the Bay of Pigs, this complex had
as many as 3,000 Cuban agents and subagents, with a small army of case
officers to direct and look after each one. According to one account,
there were at least 55 dummy corporations to provide employment, cover,
and commercial disguise for all these operatives. There were detective
bureaus, gun stores, real estate brokerages, boat repair shops, and
party boats for fishing and other entertainments. There was the
clandestine Radio Swan, later renamed Radio Americas. There were fleets
of specially modified boats based at Homestead Marina, and at other
marinas throughout the Florida Keys. Agents were assigned to the
University of Miami and other educational institutions.
The raison d'être
of the massive capability commanded by Theodore Shackley was now
Operation Mongoose, a program for sabotage raids and assassinations to
be conducted on Cuban territory, with a special effort to eliminate
Fidel Castro personally. In order to run these operations from US
territory, flagrant and extensive violation of federal and state laws
was the order of the day. Documents regarding the incorporation of
businesses were falsified. Income tax returns were faked. FAA
regulations were violated by planes taking off for Cuba or for forward
bases in the Bahamas and elsewhere. Explosives moved across highways
that were full of civilian traffic. The Munitions Act, the Neutrality
Act, the customs and immigrations laws were routinely flaunted. 13 Above
all, the drug laws were massively violated as the gallant anti-communist
fighters filled their planes and boats with illegal narcotics to be
smuggled back into the US when they returned from their missions. By
1963, the drug-running activities of the covert operatives were
beginning to attract attention. JM/WAVE, in sum, accelerated the slide
of south Florida towards the status of drug and murder capital of the
United States it achieved during the 1980's, when it became as notorious
as Chicago during Prohibition.
It cannot be the task of
this study to even begin to treat the reasons for which certain leading
elements of the Anglo-American financial oligarchy, perhaps acting with
certain kinds of support from continental European aristocratic and
neofascist networks, ordered the murder of John F. Kennedy. The British
and the Harrimanites wanted escalation in Vietnam; by the time of his
assassination Kennedy was committed to a pullout of US forces. Kennedy,
as shown by his American University speech of 1963, was also interested
in seeking a more stable path of war avoidance with the Soviets, using
the US military superiority demonstrated during the Cuban missile crisis
to convince Moscow to accept a policy of world peace through economic
development. Kennedy was interested in the possibilities of anti-missile
strategic defense to put an end to that nightmare of mutually assured
destruction which appealed to Henry Kissinger, a disgruntled former
employee of the Kennedy administration whom the president had denounced
as a madman. Kennedy was considering moves to limit or perhaps abolish
the usurpation of authority over the national currency by the Wall
Street and London interests controlling the Federal Reserve System. If
re-elected to a second term, Kennedy was likely to have re-asserted
presidential control, as distinct from Wall Street control, over the
intelligence community. There is good reason to believe that Kennedy
would have ousted J. Edgar Hoover from his self-appointed life tenure at
the FBI, subjecting that agency to presidential control for the first
time in many years. Kennedy was committed to a vigorous expansion of the
space program, the cultural impact of which was beginning to alarm the
finance oligarchs. Above all, Kennedy was acting like a man who thought
he was president of the United States, violating the collegiality of
oligarchical trusteeship of that office that had been in force
since the final days of
Roosevelt. Kennedy furthermore had two younger brothers who might
succeed him, putting a strong presidency beyond the control of the
Eastern Anglophile Liberal Establishment for decades. George Bush joined
in the Harrimanite opposition to Kennedy on all of these points.
After Kennedy was killed
in Dallas on November 22, 1963, it was alleged that E. Howard Hunt and
Frank Sturgis had both been present, possibly together, in Dallas on the
day of the shooting, although the truth of these allegations has never
been finally established. Both Hunt and Sturgis were of course Bay of
Pigs veterans who would later appear center stage in Watergate. There
were also allegations that Hunt and Sturgis were among a group of six to
eight derelicts who were found in boxcars sitting on the railroad tracks
behind the grassy knoll near Dealey Plaza, and who were rounded up and
taken in for questioning by the Dallas police on the day of the
assassination. Some suspected that Hunt and Sturgis had participated in
the assassination. Some of these allegations were at the center of the
celebrated 1985 defamation case of Hunt v. Liberty Lobby, in
which a Florida federal jury found against Hunt. But, since the Dallas
Police Department and County Sheriff never photographed or fingerprinted
the "derelicts" in question, it has so far proven impossible
definitively to resolve this question. But these allegations and
theories about the possible presence and activities of Hunt and Sturgis
in Dallas were sufficiently widespread so as to compel the Commission on
CIA Activities Within the United States (the Rockefeller Commission) to
attempt to refute them in its 1975 report. 14
According to George
Bush's official biography, he was during 1963 a well-to-do businessman
residing in Houston, the busy president of Zapata Offshore and the
chairman of the Harris County Republican Organization, supporting Barry
Goldwater as the GOP's likely 1964 presidential candidate, while at the
same time actively preparing his own 1964 bid for the US Senate. But
during that same period of time, Bush may have shared some common
acquaintances with Lee Harvey Oswald.
Between October, 1962
and April, 1963, Lee Harvey Oswald and his Russian wife Marina were in
frequent contact with a Russian emigré couple living in Dallas: these
were George de Mohrenschildt and his wife Jeanne. During the Warren
Commission investigation of the Kennedy assassination, de Mohrenschildt
was interviewed at length about his contacts with Oswald. When, in the
spring of 1977, the discrediting of the Warren Commission report as a
blatant coverup had made public pressure for a new investigation of the
Kennedy assassination irresistible, the House Assassinations Committee
planned to interview de Mohrenschildt once again. But in March, 1977,
just before de Mohrenschildt was scheduled to be interviewed by Gaeton
Fonzi of the House committee's staff, he was found dead in Palm Beach,
Florida. His death was quickly ruled a suicide. One of the last people
to see him alive was Edward Jay Epstein, who was also interviewing de
Mohrenschildt about the Kennedy assassination for an upcoming book.
Epstein is one of the writers on the Kennedy assassination who enjoyed
excellent relations with the late James Angleton of the CIA. If de
Mohrenschildt were alive today, he might be able to enlighten us about
his relations with George Bush, and perhaps afford us some insight into
Bush's activities during this epoch.
Jeanne de Mohrenschildt
rejected the finding of suicide in her husband's death. "He was
eliminated before he got to that committee," the widow told a journalist
in 1978, "because someone did not want him to get to it." She also
maintained that George de Mohrenschildt had been surreptitiously
injected with mind-altering drugs. 15 After de Mohrenschildt's death,
his personal address book was located, and it contained this entry: "Bush,
George H.W. (Poppy) 1412 W. Ohio also Zapata Petroleum Midland."
There is of course the problem of dating this reference. George Bush had
moved his office and home from Midland to Houston in 1959, when Zapata
Offshore was constituted, so perhaps this reference goes back to some
time before 1959. There is also the number: "4-6355." There are, of
course, numerous other entries, including one W.F. Buckley of the
Buckley brothers of New York City, William S. Paley of CBS, plus many
oil men, stock brokers, and the like. 16
George de Mohrenschildt
recounted a number of different versions of his life, so it is very
difficult to establish the facts about him. According to one version he
was the Russian Count Sergei de Mohrenschildt, but when he arrived in
the United States in 1938 he carried a Polish passport identifying him
as Jerzy Sergius von Mohrenschildt, born in Mozyr, Russia in 1911. He
may in fact have been a Polish officer, or a correspondent for the
Polish News Service, or none of these. He worked for a time for the
Polish embassy in Washington DC. Some say that de Mohrenschildt met the
Chairman of Humble Oil, Blaffer, and that Blaffer procured him a job.
Other sources say that during this time de Mohrenschildt was affiliated
with the War Department. According to some accounts, he later went to
work for the French Deuxième Bureau, which wanted to know about
petroleum exports from the United States to Europe.
De Mohrenschildt in 1941
became associated with a certain Baron Konstantin von Maydell in a
public affairs venture called "Facts and Film." Maydell was considered a
Nazi agent by the FBI, and in September 1942 he was sent to North Dakota
for an internment that would last four years. De Mohrenschildt was also
reportedly in contact with Japanese networks at this time. In June,
1941, de Mohrenschildt was questioned by police at Port Arthur, Texas,
on the suspicion of espionage after he was found making sketches of port
facilities. During 1941 de Mohrenschildt applied for a post in the US
Office of Strategic Services (OSS). According to the official account,
he was not hired. Soon after he made the application, he went to Mexico
where he stayed until 1944. In the latter year he established his name
as de Mohrenschildt, jettisoning the German version of von Mohrenschildt,
and began study for a master's degree in petroleum engineering at the
University of Texas. According to some accounts, during this period de
Mohrenschildt was investigated by the Office of Naval Intelligence
because of alleged communist sympathies. After the war, de Mohrenschildt
worked as a petroleum engineer in Cuba and Venezuela, and in Caracas he
had several meetings with the Soviet ambassador. During the postwar
years he also worked in the Rangely oil field in Colorado. During the
1950's, after having married Winifred Sharpless, the daughter of an oil
millionaire, de Mohrenschildt was active as an independent oil
entrepreneur.
In 1957, de
Mohrenschildt was approved by the CIA Office of Security to be hired as
a US government geologist for a mission to Yugoslavia. Upon his return
he was interviewed by one J. Walter Moore of the CIA's Domestic Contact
Service, with whom he remained in contact. During 1958, de Morhenschildt
visited Ghana, Togo, Dahomey; during 1959 he visited Africa again and
returned by way of Poland. In 1959 he married Jeanne, his fourth wife, a
former ballet dancer and dress designer who had been born in Manchuria,
where her father had been one of the directors of the Chinese Eastern
Railroad. During the summer of 1960, George and Jeanne de Mohrenschildt
told their friends that they were going to embark on a walking tour of
11,000 miles along Indian trails from Mexico to Central America. One of
their principal destinations was Guatemala City, where they were staying
at the time of the Bay of Pigs invasion in April, 1961, after which they
made their way home by way of Panama and Haiti. After two months in
Haiti, the Mohrenschildts returned to Dallas, where they came into
contact with Lee Harvey Oswald, who had come back to the United States
from his sojourn in the Soviet Union in June, 1962. By this time de
Mohrenschildt was also frequenting Admiral Henry C. Bruton and his wife,
to whom he introduced the Oswalds. Admiral Bruton was the former
director of naval communications, and had superintended a comprehensive
modernization and reorganization of the navy's means of keeping in touch
with ships, planes, missiles, submarines, and the like.
It is established that
between October, 1962 and late April, 1963, de Mohrenschildt was a very
important figure in the life of Oswald and his Russian wife. Despite
Oswald's lack of social graces, de Mohrenschildt introduced him into
Dallas society, took him to parties, assisted him in finding employment,
and much more. It was through de Mohrenschildt that Oswald met a certain
Volkmar Schmidt, a young German geologist who had studied with Professor
Wilhelm Kuetemeyer, an expert in psychosomatic medicine and religious
philosophy at the University of Heidelberg, who compiled a detailed
psychological profile of Oswald. Jeanne and George helped Marina move
her belongings during one of her many estrangements from Oswald.
According to some accounts, de Mohrenschildt's influence on Oswald was
so great during this period that he could virtually dictate important
decisions to the young ex-marine simply by making suggestions. Oswald
was in awe of de Mohrenschildt, according to some.
According to some
versions, de Mohrenschildt was aware of Oswald's alleged April 10, 1963
attempt to assassinate the well-known right-wing General Edwin Walker.
According to Marina, de Mohrenschildt once asked Oswald, "Lee, how did
you miss General Walker?" On April 19, George and Jeanne de
Mohrenschildt went to New York City, and on April 29 the CIA Office of
Security found that it had no objection to de Mohrenschildt's acceptance
of a contract with the Duvalier regime of Haiti in the field of natural
resource development. De Mohrenschildt appears to have departed for
Haiti on May 1, 1963. In the meantime Oswald had left Dallas and
traveled to New Orleans.
According to Mark Lane,
"there is evidence that de Mohrenschildt served as a CIA control officer
who directed Oswald's actions." Much of the extensive published
literature on de Mohrenschildt converges on the idea that he was a baby
sitter, handler, case officer, or control agent for Oswald on behalf of
some intelligence agency. 17 De Mohrenschildt's pedigree evokes haunting
parallels to the typical figures of the PERMINDEX networks of Georges
Mandel, Ferenc Nagy, Max Hagerman, Max Seligman, Carlo d'Amelio, Lewis
Mortimer Bloomfield, and Clay Shaw, to which public attention was called
during the investigations of New Orleans district attorney James
Garrison.
It is therefore highly
interesting that George Bush's name turned up in the personal address
book of George de Mohrenschildt. The Warren Commission went to absurd
lengths to cover up the fact that George de Mohrenschildt was a denizen
of the world of the intelligence agencies. This included ignoring the
well-developed paper trial on de Mohrenschildt as Nazi and communist
sympathizer, and later as a US asset abroad. The Warren Commission
concluded:
The Commission's
investigation has developed no signs of subversive or disloyal conduct
on the part of either of the de Mohrenschildts. Neither the FBI, CIA,
nor any witnesses contacted by the Commission has provided any
information linking the de Mohrenschildts to subversive or extremist
organizations. Nor has there been any evidence linking them in any way
with the assassination of President Kennedy. 18
On the day of the
Kennedy assassination, FBI records show George Bush as reporting a
right-wing member of the Houston Young Republicans for making
threatening comments about President Kennedy. According to FBI documents
released under the Freedom of Information Act,
On November 22, 1963
Mr. GEORGE H.W. BUSH, 5525 Briar, Houston, Texas, telephonically
advised that he wanted to relate some hear say that he had heard in
recent weeks, date and source unknown. He advised that one JAMES
PARROTT had been talking of killing the President when he comes to
Houston.
PARROTT is possibly a
student at the University of Houston and is active in politics in the
Houston area.
According to related FBI
documentation, "a check with Secret Service at Houston, Texas revealed
that agency had a report that PARROTT stated in 1961 he would kill
President Kennedy if he got near him." Here Bush is described as "a
reputable businessman." FBI agents were sent to interrogate Parrott's
mother, and later James Milton Parrott himself. Parrott had been
discharged from the US Air Force for psychiatric reasons in 1959.
Parrott had an alibi for the time of the Dallas shootings; he had been
in the company of another Republican activist. According to press
accounts, Parrott was a member of the right-wing faction of the Houston
GOP which was oriented towards the John Birch Society and which opposed
Bush's chairmanship. 19 According to the San Francisco Examiner,
Bush's press office in August, 1988 first said that Bush had not made
any such call, and challenged the authenticity of the FBI documents.
Several days later Bush's spokesman said that the candidate "does not
recall" placing the call.
One day later after he
reported Parrott to the FBI, Bush received a highly sensitive,
high-level briefing from the Bureau:
Date: November 29, 1963
To: Director
Bureau of Intelligence and Research
Department of State
From: John Edgar Hoover, Director
Subject: ASSASSINATION OF PRESIDENT JOHN F. KENNEDY NOVEMBER 22, 1963
Our Miami, Florida, Office on November 23, 1963
advised that the Office of Coordinator of Cuban Affairs in Miami
advised that the Department of State feels some misguided
anti-Castro group might capitalize on the present situation and
undertake an unauthorized raid against Cuba, believing that the
assassination of President John F. Kennedy might herald a change in
US policy, which is not true.
Our sources and informants familiar with Cuban
matters in the Miami area advise that the general feeling in the
anti-Castro Cuban community is one of stunned disbelief and, even
among those who did not entirely agree with the President's policy
concerning Cuba, the feeling is that the President's death
represents a great loss not only to the US but to all Latin America.
These sources know of no plans for unauthorized action against Cuba.
An informant who has furnished reliable
information in the past and who is close to a small pro-Castro group
in Miami has advised that those individuals are afraid that the
assassination of the President may result in strong repressive
measures being taken against them and, although pro-Castro in their
feelings, regret the assassination.
The substance of the foregoing information was
orally furnished to Mr. George Bush of the Central Intelligence
Agency and Captain William Edwards of the Defense Intelligence
Agency on November 23, 1963, by Mr. W.T. Forsyth of this Bureau.