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Final_Judgment

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122 The Coming of the Messsiah [61]<br />

Indeed, it was Johnson's involvement with Bobby Baker that had led<br />

John F. Kennedy to begin laying the groundwork for dropping Johnson<br />

from the Democratic ticket in 1964. But even with Kennedy's death, the<br />

stench of corruption surrounding the Lansky-linked Baker still threatened<br />

Johnson.<br />

JOHNSON FACES PRISON?<br />

Washington lobbyist Robert N. Winter-Berger recalls a visit by then-<br />

President Johnson to the office of House Speaker John McCormack while<br />

Winter-Berger was there. Johnson burst in unexpectedly. Unconscious of<br />

Winter-Berger's presence, Johnson began shrieking and shouting and<br />

condemning his longtime friend and protégé, Bobby Baker. "John, that son<br />

of a bitch is going to ruin me. If that cocksucker talks, I'm gonna land in<br />

jail," Johnson roared. "I practically raised that motherfucker and now he's<br />

gonna make me the first President of the United States to spend the last days<br />

of his life behind bars." 155<br />

According to Winter-Berger Johnson suddenly realized that he was<br />

present. Speaker McCormack assured the president that Winter-Berger was<br />

"all right" and that Winter-Berger was close to one of Baker's other<br />

associates, Nat Voloshen.<br />

Johnson asked Winter-Berger to have this message relayed to Baker.<br />

"Tell Nat to tell Bobby that I will give him a million dollars if he takes this<br />

rap. Bobby must not talk." 156 Baker did not talk. Baker went to jail.<br />

Johnson did not.<br />

Obviously, Johnson's Lansky connection is far more complex than we<br />

might even be able to determine—but the interplay between Johnson and his<br />

intimates and those of the Lansky syndicate is indisputable, to say the least.<br />

SUDDEN POLICY CHANGES<br />

Needless to say, when Lyndon Johnson became president, the Kennedy<br />

war against organized crime came to a sudden halt. There were other<br />

important policy reversals as well, including, of course, the change in<br />

Vietnam policy (about which we will explore further in this chapter and in<br />

Chapter 9.)<br />

What, of course, however, is most significant about Lyndon Johnson's<br />

assumption of the Oval Office were the profound—and immediate—changes<br />

in U.S. policy toward Israel and the Arab world that came rapidly upon<br />

LBJ's sudden succession to the presidency.<br />

`GOOD NEWS' FROM DALLAS<br />

The earliest evidence we can find that Israel and its lobby in America<br />

were delighted by Lyndon's elevation to the presidency comes in a memo<br />

that I. L. Kenan, director of the American-Israel Public Affairs Committee

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