Skip to content or view screen version

Leaked George Bush diary extract published online

Andy Truman | 05.11.2009 13:09

Rumours that one of George Bush's diaries had been 'lost' by his publisher have been floating in publishing circles and on the Internet for several months. Yesterday an extract of the diary was published on an African website - Afrik.com. The genuine article or hilarious parody? You decide.

Rumours that George W Bush was planning to publish a memoire having been floating in US literary circles for months, so when Herschel Lipshitz, senior partner at publishing giant Simon Schuster, had a call put through from Crawford Texas last April, he could hardly believe his luck. Two weeks later at a top secret meeting with a senior Bush aid on the 10th floor of the publishers’ New York offices, Lipshitz was handed a sample batch of six leather-bound diaries, taken from different periods of the former President’s eight year tenure. That evening, as Lipshitz sat in the back of a taxi on his way back home he could not resist the temptation of flicking through the diaries. And that is how the unthinkable happened. In his excitement, the publishing executive got out of the taxi and went into his Park Avenue apartment block without noticing that he had left one of the diaries, dated 4th July – 21st October 2008, on the back seat of the cab.

Although the incident was hushed-up, speculation about the whereabouts of the missing diary and its contents nevertheless found its way on to the Internet. That might have been where the story ended until, last week when investigative journalist Stefan Simanowitz was approached by Puerto Rican cab-driver, Raul Arroya. Arroya claimed to have found the diary in his taxi and, after some deliberation, chose to contact the press.

Following extensive tests, the diaries have been authenticated and today we publish this installment of the ‘private thoughts of George W Bush’. It reveals how, in the dying days of his presidency, just how close America came to attacking Iran.

Read the explosive extracts at  http://en.afrik.com/article16411.html?artpage=1-3 and decide for yourself whether they're for real.

Andy Truman

Comments

Display the following 3 comments

  1. Axles of evil — Anonymous
  2. Hilarious — Steve Lankester
  3. Clearly a spoof — Read it