Unresolved
George H.W. Bush maintained throughout the Iran-Contra period that he was "out of the loop." On Christmas Eve 1992, six weeks after losing the presidential election, he pardoned six Iran-Contra figures — including Caspar Weinberger, whose trial was weeks away and whose diaries contained entries about what senior officials had said and known. Two weeks after the pardons, investigators learned that Bush had been keeping a personal audio diary throughout the scandal period, which had not been disclosed to investigators for six years. This episode examines the meetings record, the diary, the Weinberger connection, and what the independent counsel — a Republican appointed by Republican judges, with no political interest in overstating — said publicly about what the pardons accomplished. Sources: * Walsh, Final Report (1993) — Bush knowledge findings and pardon analysis; National Security Archive * Walsh public statement, December 24–25, 1992 — available via the National Security Archive * George H.W. Bush diary (released portions) — discussed in Walsh's report; National Security Archive * Weinberger diaries (relevant excerpts entered into the record) — National Security Archive * Bush pardon proclamations (December 24, 1992) — available via the National Archives at archives.gov * Harold Koh, The National Security Constitution (1990) Opening clip: Dan Rather, CBS News and Vice President George H.W. Bush
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