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Octafish

(55,745 posts)
26. Poppy set the table in 1981 for what was to come via 'National Security'
Mon Jan 18, 2016, 12:11 AM
Jan 2016

Reagan was shot in March 1981 and for all intents and purposes was a walking vegetable afterward.

Through a Glass Darkly

Alexander Cockburn
Lies Of Our Times (p. 12-13)
November 1991

What was surprising to me was Reagan’s condition. He was exhausted to the point of incoherence throughout much ofthe interview and could not remember the substance of any subject that had been discussed apart from Mitterrand’s expression of anticommunism. I had not seen Reagan at such close rangesince the assassination attempt nearly four months earlier, and was shocked at his condition.... Reagan simply was unable to recall the contents of the talks in which he had just participated.... The interview concluded at a signal from Deaver,who did not seem to find the president’s condition unusual.”

Thus ran Lou Cannon’s recollections of an interview with the Commander-in-Chief in 1981, as set forth in his book President Reagan: The Role of a Lifetime (New York: Simon & Schuster,1991), published earlier this year. But how did Cannon describe Reagan’s condition to the readers of the Washington Post when he wrote up his interview? In the July 23, 1981, Washington Post,Cannon’s story appeared under the headline “Reagan Describes Summit Meeting as ‘Worth Its Weight in Gold.’ ” Cannon’s report gives the impression of a lucid chief executive returning home after a fruitful colloquy with other western leaders at the economic summit held in Ottawa in mid-July. Cannon did mention in the tenth paragraph that “Reagan appeared tired to the point of near-exhaustion,” but this observation was quickly qualified by the opinion of “aides” that the president had been doing a lot of prep for the conference and was also worried about the Middle East.

Cannon shared his brief session with Reagan aboard Air Force One with Hedrick Smith of the New York Times, who similarly gave his readers the impression of a president in touch with things rather than the incoherent old man they had actually encountered. As did Cannon, Smith wove the few quotable remarks from Reagan into a tapestry of attributed presidential dicta passed on — and no doubt confected— by Meese, Deaver,and Speakes. It is clear from Cannon’s account of the conference itself that Reagan was fogged up throughout the actual conference, occasionally interjecting trivial observations or homely jokes into the proceedings and then relapsing into bemused silence. Cannon’s memoir is one more indication of the cover-up that took place in the wake of Hinckley’s assassination bid on March 30, 1981. At the time of the shooting, the press was full of phrases like “bouncing back,” “iron constitution,” and other terms indicating that Reagan had emerged from the ordeal in good shape. In fact Reagan very nearly died on the operating table and was a dotard afterwards. He never fully recovered.

Conclusion: Unless a president is actually dead, the WhiteHouse press corps can be relied upon to present him as both sentient and sapient, no matter how decrepit his physical and mental condition.

SOURCE in PDF form:

http://liesofourtimes.org/public_html/1991/Nov1991%20V2%20N10/Nov1991%20V2%20N10.pdf


Mentally isn't physically. So he remained VP and used the opportunity to get appointed a Super Duper Presidential Helper.


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.

SNIP...

NSDD 159. MANAGEMENT OF U.S. COVERT OPERATIONS, (TOP SECRET/VEIL‑SENSITIVE), JAN. 18,1985

The Reagan administration's commitment to significantly expand covert operations had been clear since before the 1980 election. How such operations were actually to be managed from day to day, however, was considerably less certain. The management problem became particularly knotty owing to legal requirements to notify congressional intelligence oversight committees of covert operations, on the one hand, and the tacitly accepted presidential mandate to deceive those same committees concerning sensitive operations such as the Contra war in Nicaragua, on the other.

[font color="green"]The solution attempted in NSDD 159 was to establish a small coordinating committee headed by Vice President George Bush through which all information concerning US covert operations was to be funneled. The order also established a category of top secret information known as Veil, to be used exclusively for managing records pertaining to covert operations.

The system was designed to keep circulation of written records to an absolute minimum while at the same time ensuring that the vice president retained the ability to coordinate US covert operations with the administration's overt diplomacy and propaganda.

Only eight copies of NSDD 159 were created. The existence of the vice president's committee was itself highly classified.
[/font color] The directive became public as a result of the criminal prosecutions of Oliver North, John Poindexter, and others involved in the Iran‑Contra affair, hence the designation "Exhibit A" running up the left side of the document.

CONTINUED...

CovertAction Quarterly no 58 Fall 1996 pp31-40.



Sorry if this is redundant. It's not being talked about much by those who should know better, as well as the morons on tee vee.
Send this to that chump Trump. malaise Jan 2016 #1
every Republican presidential candidate should be asked ... napkinz Jan 2016 #2
Please don't hold your breath malaise Jan 2016 #3
let's hope Rachel and Lawrence and even Tweety pose the question and maybe others will follow napkinz Jan 2016 #4
Haven't seen anything on Facebook yet underpants Jan 2016 #5
"They are taking extra long on this one." napkinz Jan 2016 #15
an excellent reminder of what that scum saint ronnie ray-gun did. niyad Jan 2016 #6
so how do you think Cruz, Rubio, and Trump will respond now? napkinz Jan 2016 #7
they won't. or they will slobber all over themselves trying to rationalize and defend. niyad Jan 2016 #8
Rubio will need to take another sip ... napkinz Jan 2016 #9
GHW worked the deal for the Iranians to keep the hostages, undermining Carter's ... Mika Jan 2016 #10
The Bush family seems to be right in the middle Kingofalldems Jan 2016 #16
... napkinz Jan 2016 #29
like good ole prescott working with the nazis. . . niyad Jan 2016 #33
October Surprise, how Reagan really won! (video) napkinz Jan 2016 #22
K and R for Reagan's little internet buddies. Kingofalldems Jan 2016 #11
... napkinz Jan 2016 #23
Well. Mistakes were made. By Ed Meese and Bill Casey. Octafish Jan 2016 #12
"even after the Iran‑Contra affair blew the Reagan administration apart, Bush went on to become the napkinz Jan 2016 #19
AND he used the proceeds to fund the the contras in nicaragua spanone Jan 2016 #13
yep ... napkinz Jan 2016 #20
That's exactly the sort of thing ronnie624 Jan 2016 #35
Kick. Kingofalldems Jan 2016 #14
I mean, hello, high treason and all . . . . HughBeaumont Jan 2016 #17
Ironically, when tea-baggers claim government is corrupt, they are so ignorant lindysalsagal Jan 2016 #18
Ronald Reagan, pile of horses**t belonged in prison. Dawson Leery Jan 2016 #21
... napkinz Jan 2016 #32
Plus Ronald Reagan negotiated with Iranians to keep the Hostages until after the election UCmeNdc Jan 2016 #24
how Reagan really won ... napkinz Jan 2016 #28
And what else is new burrowowl Jan 2016 #25
Poppy set the table in 1981 for what was to come via 'National Security' Octafish Jan 2016 #26
Thanks for reply burrowowl Jan 2016 #34
GHWB quote. roamer65 Jan 2016 #27
... napkinz Jan 2016 #30
kick napkinz Jan 2016 #31
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