Kennedy: The George Bush Connection
by Mark Turner
THE KENNEDY FILES
FILE #3
© 1992 by Mark D. Turner
P.O. Box 1955, Bluefield, WV 24701-6955
The Outer Limits BBS - (540) 322-2529
This file may be freely distributed but Mark D. Turner retains
all copyrights. Do not make any changes to this file, please.
Comments and suggestions for future issues are appreciated.
THE GEORGE BUSH CONNECTION
In this day and age when some people can not even name the president
of the United States, it is not the least bit surprising that
most have no knowledge of George Bush's possible connections to
the Kennedy assassination. The relationship has its roots in Bush's
"former" employment with the CIA. As CIA agents have
been quoted in the past, you never really leave the Agency.
THE CIA DID IT!
Many researchers place the blame for the murder of John F. Kennedy
on the CIA. The easiest way to clear the mafia or other non-governmental
groups is to look at the massive cover-up that the government
has participated in over the years. If mafia boss Carlos Marcello
had really ordered the hit, could he have had the CIA and FBI
suppress so much evidence from the public for so long? Could he
have had the normal security lowered for the assassination? Could
he have had the Washington D.C. phone system knocked out of order
for an hour right as the shooting took place? Could he have convinced
the Warren Commission to release such an idiotic official version
of the murder? Of course not. The set-up and cover-up had to take
place INSIDE of the government, not outside.
The CIA seemed to have the most (and best) motives for the elimination
of Kennedy. During the Eisenhower presidency, the CIA came up
with a plan to invade Cuba at the Bay of Pigs. The thought was
that the citizens would hear of the attack and join in to overthrow
Castro. Former Cubans were trained by the CIA and the U.S. government
fur- nished them with weapons and transportation. Since it was
near the end of his administration, Eisenhower put the plan on
hold so the new president would not have to deal with any problems
which might arise from the mission.
Upon entering office Kennedy decided that the plan's requirement
of 16 planes would obviously reveal American backing of the plot.
The plan had hoped that American involvement would not become
known to the world. The use of 16 planes would make American backing
obvious to everyone. Kennedy cut the number of planes down to
six. As the date of the invasion neared, Kennedy decided against
the plan and announced in the press that the United States would
not invade Cuba with the military.
The CIA went ahead with the plan and quickly found that things
were not going as they had hoped for. They asked for more planes
but were told they would have to be held back until the forces
captured a Cuban airport. Then, the planes could be sent and the
explanation would be that they were captured planes which the
rebels had put into use. The CIA-backed rebels never got that
far and were quickly defeated. The citizens of Cuba never joined
them in the fight. The CIA, as has been revealed in books by participants,
blamed Kennedy for the defeat. The books and papers reveal a deep
hatred for the imagined betrayal.
Later, Kennedy formed a panel to keep him informed as to what
was going on in Vietnam. American involvement was still low at
this point but Kennedy was worried. He has been quoted as saying
he could not justify sending American boys half-way around the
world to fight communism when it existed just south of Florida
in Cuba. One of the panel's members was Allen Dulles, head of
the CIA. Kennedy caught him in various lies and fired him. The
fact that the CIA had kept training Cubans for another invasion
until Kennedy finally sent in FBI agents to break up their camps
and confiscate their weapons was another reason for the dismissal.
Other high-ranking CIA officials were fired, too, including the
brother of Dallas' mayor. Kennedy changed the operating procedure
of the CIA so they would have to get approval for any future covert
actions from Robert Kennedy.
Due to persistent problems with the CIA and their continual involve-
ment in matters which were not their concern, Kennedy declared
that he was going to shatter the CIA into a thousand pieces and
scatter them to the winds. Even former president Truman, who had
created the CIA, expressed concerns about their behavior. Kennedy
was apparently going to leave their destruction until after the
next election but did start withdrawing troops from Vietnam, much
to the dislike of the CIA. One of Johnson's first moves after
he replaced Kennedy as president was to increase American involvement
in Vietnam. It seems he owned an airline company that was contracted
to fly troops back and forth across the Pacific Ocean, but that
is another matter.
Later, E. Howard Hunt, on behalf of the CIA, faked cables to implicate
John F. Kennedy in the assassination of South Vietnam's president,
Ngo Dinh Diem. So, it is apparent that the CIA disliked Kennedy
and had the means to set-up and cover-up the assassination. Now,
it is known that they convinced the Warren Commission that the
Soviet Union and Cuba had murdered Kennedy. They scared the members
into believing that revealing this to the American public would
result in a nuclear war in which millions would be killed. To
further this theory, they produced fake evidence showing that
Oswald had visited the Soviet and Cuban embassies in Mexico to
arrange the killing and escape. The head of the CIA operations
in Mexico has since admitted that no such real evidence ever existed.
A Warren Commission investigator has admitted that they acted
to save millions by sacrificing one man (Oswald).
The job was not too hard to pull off since former CIA-head Allen
Dulles was a member of the Commission. He was the only one to
attend more than half of the hearings and was also in charge of
deciding what intelligence data was seen by the other members.
President Johnson didn't seem to find it strange to appoint the
man that Kennedy had fired to investigate his hated former boss'
murder.
SO HOW DOES BUSH FIT IT?
Although he denies it, there is a growing body of evidence that
George Bush was working for the CIA as early as 1961. Many feel
he was actually recruited during his college days (which is when
he joined the Skull and Bones Society, a front for the Illuminati).
Bush claims to have been working for his own oil company during
the early 1960's. It would make for a convenient front since he
claims to have been off- shore on drilling rigs for weeks at a
time. The rigs were located all over the world. Was he really
on the rigs or was he running around on CIA business? The various
biographies of Bush are all sketchy on this phase of his life.
During this time, Bush had moved to HOUSTON, Texas. His wife was,
of course, BARBARA. His oil company was ZAPATA Off Shore Co. (which
he named after a communist Mexican revolutionary who would invade
towns and murder every man, woman and child. Bush also named an
earlier oil company after Zapata, a questionable choice for a
hero). The code name for the Bay of Pigs invasion was Operation
ZAPATA! A former high-ranking Pentagon official, Col. Fletcher
Prouty, was the man who secured two Navy ships for the operation.
He has told of seeing the two ships repainted to non-Navy colors
for the invasion. The ships were given the new names HOUSTON and
BARBARA!
Of course, maybe the names were just coincidences, but Bush was
living in Houston with Barbara and running Zapata in 1961 during
the planning of the invasion. The name "Operation Zapata"
was top secret and known only to a very few.
In 1977 and 1978, the government released nearly 100,000 pages
of documents on the Kennedy assassination. One which slipped out
by mistake was from the FBI to the State Department written a
few days after the assassination. The State Department was worried
that anti- Castro groups in Miami might stage another invasion
of Cuba in the aftermath of the JFK murder. The FBI informed them
that they had questioned both pro-Castro and anti-Castro groups
and could find no information about such plans. The memo went
on to state that the information was passed along to "George
Bush of the Central Intelli- gence Agency" the day after
the assassination.
Why was the information passed along to the CIA? Probably because
of their previous invasion attempt and other planned attacks.
Why George Bush? Probably because he was involved in previous
invasion plans!
When the document first surfaced no one paid much attention to
it. When the presidential campaigns began for the 1980 election
then the name George Bush caught researchers' eyes. When asked
about the memo, Bush denied working for the CIA at the time. As
evidence built that it was indeed him, the CIA claimed it was
a different George Bush although their policy had always been
to neither confirm nor deny a person's employment. The other George
Bush was tracked down by reporters and said that although he did
work for the CIA at the time, he was never involved in that sort
of work. The interesting point is that the CIA did not bother
to contact the other George Bush and inform him that reporters
might soon be calling. Other evidence surfaced that showed the
George Bush mentioned in the document was actually George H. W.
Bush and had the same address as the famous George Bush.
Another Bush connection involved George de Mohrenschildt, a rich
Russian oil man who lived in Texas when Lee Harvey Oswald settled
there after his trip to the Soviet Union. De Mohrenschildt was
a long-time CIA agent and quite possibly served as a CIA control
officer for Oswald. The Warren Commission described him and his
wife as being the two people friendliest to Oswald at the time
of the assassination. De Mohrenschildt's son-in-law told the Warren
Commission that if any- one had helped with the assassination
it was most likely de Mohren- schildt. De Mohrenschildt was also
the man who moved Oswald to Dallas.
Shortly before the House Select Committee on Assassinations started
meeting in the late 1970's a new doctor appeared in de Mohrenschildt's
town. De Mohrenschildt started seeing him and quickly became mentally
unstable. His wife convinced him to stop seeing the doctor. The
doctor then moved away and left a false forwarding address. The
very day the Committee tried to contact de Mohrenschildt about
testifying, he was found dead of a gun shot wound. His personal
address book was found and it contained the entry "Bush,
George H. W. (Poppy) 1412 W. Ohio also Zapata Petroleum Midland."
Bush's full name is George Herbert Walker Bush which matches the
initials given and his earlier oil company was named Zapata Petroleum
Corp. Why was his name in de Mohrenschildt's book? Is "Poppy"
his CIA code name?
It is known that in the early 1960's de Mohrenschildt made frequent
trips to Houston, which was the location of Bush's home. He told
friends he was visiting the Brown brothers, who were close friends
and financial supporters of Lyndon Johnson. CIA documents reveal
that during the planning phase of Operation Zapata, de Mohrenschildt
made frequent trips to Mexico and Panama and gave reports to the
CIA. His son-in-law told the Warren Commission that he believed
de Mohren- schildt was spying for the planned Cuban invasion.
A QUESTION OF CHARACTER
When Bush was picked to be director of the CIA in 1976, he testified
to Congress that he had never worked for the CIA before. Of course,
it did not make much sense to appoint a director who had no such
back- ground but Congress approved him anyway. Now it would seem
that Bush committed perjury in his congressional testimony.
George Bush was apparently high enough in the CIA to help plan
the Bay of Pigs invasion. It would probably be safe to assume
that he even named the operation and its two ships. Considering
the hatred that the CIA felt toward Kennedy over their failed
mission and Bush's involvement in that same mission, it would
be quite interesting to know what Bush's feelings toward John
F. Kennedy really were and what his full role in the assassination
investigation was.
Further information on the George Bush connection may be obtained
from Mark Lane's "Plausible Denial" (Thunder's Mouth
Press) and James "Bo" Gritz's "Called To Serve."
Lane's book is an excellent accounting of the CIA's involvement
(especially E. Howard Hunt and Frank Sturgis). Gritz (a 1992 presidential
candidate) tells about many of the CIA's questionable ventures
and also about his trips to Laos to attempt rescues of American
POWs who are still held by Vietnam.