-Caveat Lector-

from:
http://www.radix.net/~tarpley/bush24.htm
<A HREF="http://www.radix.net/~tarpley/bush24.htm">Bush book: Chapter -24-</A>
--[24a]--
George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography --- by Webster G. Tarpley &
Anton Chaitkin
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Chapter -XXIV- The New World Order

Roma caput mundi regit orbis frena rotundi

(Rome, the chief of the world, hold the reins of this round orb.)

Inscription on the imperial crown of Diocletian.

During late 1989 and 1990, George Bush traversed a decisive watershed in
his political career and in his own personal mental life. Up until this
transition, Bush had attempted to secure advancement through an attitude
of deference and propitiation, currying favor with a series of
politicians and power brokers whom he despised as his social inferiors,
and whom he never hesitated to stab in the back once he got the chance
to do so. This was the old duplicitious "have half" persona of his early
childhood. During the long years of Bush's quest for the vice
presidency, and during the eight long years of his tenure in that
office, the public face of Bush was that of dog-like fidelity and
Reaganite orthodoxy. During these years Bush exhibited the same relative
cognitive impairment which he had exhibited since his Andover days. On
the surface, he was a top-level bureuacratic functionary of the US
police state, sharing the moral insanity of the policy committments of
the government apparatus which he represented.

Severe and debilitating mental strains had been evident in Bush's
personality from his earliest years. Such tensions were an inevitable
result of the inhuman self-discipline demanded by his mother, Dorothy
Walker Bush, whose regimen combined the most ruthless pursuit of
personal affirmation for its own sake, with the imperative that all this
single-minded striving be dissembled behind the elaborate pose of
fairness and concern for the rights of others. During 1989 and 1990, the
tensions converging on Bush's personal psychological structures were
greatly magnified not just by the Panama adventure and the Gulf war, but
also by the crisis of the Anglo-American financial interests, by the
threat posed to Anglo-American plans by German reunification, by the
thorny problems of preparing his own re-election, and by the foundering
of his condominium partners in the Kremlin. As a result of this surfeit
of tensions, Bush's personality entered into a process of
disintegration. The whining accents of the wimp, so familiar to
 Bush-watchers of years past, were now increasingly supplanted by the
hiss of frenetic spleen.

The successor personality which emerged from this upheaval differed in
several important respects from the George Bush who had sought and
occupied the vice-presidency. The George Bush who emerged in late 1990
after the dust had settled was far less restrained than the man who had
languished in Reagan's shadow. The hyperthyroid "presidential" persona
of Bush was equipped with little self-control, and rather featured a
series of compulsive, quasi-psychotic episodes exhibited in the public
glare of the television lights. These were typically rage-induced
outbursts of verbal abuse and threats made in the context of
international crises, first against Noriega and later against Iraqi
president Saddam Hussein.

Some might argue that the public rage fits that became increasingly
frequent during 1989-90 were calculated and scripted performances,
calibrated and staged according to the methods of mind war for the
express purpose of intimidating foreign adversaries and, not least of
all, the American population itself. Bush's apprenticeship with
Kissinger would have taught him the techniques we have seen Kissinger
employ in his secret communications with Moscow during the
Indo-Pakistani war of 1970: Kissinger makes clear that an integral part
of his crisis management style is the studied attempt to convince his
adversary that the latter is dealing with a madman who will not shun any
expedient, no matter how irrational, in order to prevail. But with the
Bush of 1990 we are far beyond such calculating histrionics. There were
still traces of method in George Bush's madness, but the central factor
was now the madness itself.

The thesis of this chapter is that while it is clear that the Gulf war
was a deliberate and calculated provocation by the Anglo-American
oligarchical and financier elite, the mental instability and
psychological disintegration of George Bush was an indispensable
ingredient in implementing the actions which the oligarchs and bankers
desired. Without a George Bush who was increasingly non compos mentis,
the imperialist grand design for the destruction of the leading Arab
state and the intimidation of the third world might have remained on the
shelf. Especially since the Bay of Pigs and the Vietnam debacle,
American presidents have seen excellent reasons to mistrust their
advisers when the latter came bearing plans for military adventures
overseas. The destruction of the once powerful Lyndon B. Johnson, in
particular, has stood as an eloquent warning to his successors that a
president who wants to have a political future must be very reticent
before he attempts to write a new page in the martial exploits of
imperialism. Eisenhower's repudiation of the Anglo-French Suez invasion
of 1956 can serve to remind us that even a relatively weak US president
may find reasons not to leap into the vanguard of the latest
hare-brained scheme to come out of the London clubs. The difficulty of
orchestrating a "splendid little war" is all the more evident when the
various bureaucratic, military, and financier factions of the US
establishment are not at all convinced that the project is a winner or
even worthwhile, as the pro-sanctions, wait and see stance of many
Democratic members of the House and Senate indicates. The subjectivity
of George Bush is therefore a vital link in the chain of any explanation
of why the war happened, and that subjectivity centers an increasingly
desperate, aggravated, infantile id, tormented by the fires of a raging
thyroid storm.

Bush's new desire to strut and posture as a madman on the world stage,
as contrasted with his earlier devotion to secret, behind-the-scenes
iniquity has certain parallels in Suetonius's portrait of the Emperor
Nero. Before Nero had fully consolidated his hold on power, he
cultivated outward and public displays of filial piety, and strove to
manifest "good intentions." These were the veneer for monstrous crimes
that were at first carried out covertly: "...at first his acts of
wantonness, lust, extravagance, avarice, and cruelty were gradual and
secret...." But once Nero had firmly established his own regime, the
monster became more and more overt: "little by little, however, as his
vices grew stronger, he dropped jesting and secrecy and with no attempt
at disguise openly broke out into worse crime." [fn 1] Something similar
can be observed in the case of Caligula, who had a wimp problem of sorts
during the time that he lived on the island of Capri in the shadow of
the aging emperor Tiberius, in somewhat the same way that Bush had lived
in the shadpw of Reagan, as least as far as the public was concerned. In
the case of Caligula, "although at Capri every kind of wile was resorted
to by those who tried to lure him or force him to utter complaints, he
never gave them any satisfaction...." Caligula was "...so obsequious
towards his grandfather [Tiberius] and his household, that it was well
said of him that no one had ever been a better slave or a worse master."
[fn 2] Later, when Caligula came into his own, he exacted a terrible
price from the world for his earlier humiliations.

The process of mental and moral degeneration, the loss of previous
self-control observable in Bush during this period is not merely an
individual matter. The geek act in the White House was typical of the
collective mental and political behavior of the faction to which Bush
belongs by birth and pedigree, the Anglo-American financiers. During
1989 and 1990, outbursts of megalomania, racism, and manic flight
forward were common enough, not just in Washington, but in Wall Street,
Whitehall, and the City of London as well. These moods provided the
psychic raw material for the strategic construct which Bush would
proclaim during the late summer of 1990 as "The New World Order."

By the autumn of 1989, it was evident that the Soviet Empire, the
cold-war antagonist and then the uneasy partner of the Anglo-Americans
over more than four decades, was falling apart. During the middle
1980's, the Anglo-Americans and their counterparts in the Kremlin had
arrived at the conclusion that, since they could no longer dominate the
planet through their rivarly (the cold war), they must now attempt to
dominate it through their collusion. The new detente of Reagan's second
term, in which Bush had played a decisive role, was a worldwide
condominium of the Soviets and Anglo-Saxons, the two increasingly feeble
and gutted empires who now leaned on each other like two drunks, each
one propping the other up. That had been the condominium, incarnated in
the figure of Gorbachov.

Both empires were collapsing at an exceedingly rapid pace, but during
the second half of the 1980's the rate of Soviet decay outstripped that
of the Anglo-Americans. That took some doing, since between 1985 and
1990, the global edifice of Anglo-American speculation and usury had
been shaken by the panic of 1987, and by the deflationary contraction of
1989, both symptoms of a lethal disorder. But the Anglo-Americans,
unlike the Soviets, were insulated within their North Atlantic
metropolis by the possession of a global, as distinct from a merely
continental, base of economic rapine, so the economic and political
manifestations of the Soviet collapse were more spectacular.

The day of reckoning for the Anglo-Americans was not far off, but in the
meantime the breathtaking collapse of the Soviets opened up megalomaniac
vistas to the custodians of the Imperial idea in London drawing rooms
and English country houses. The practitioners of the Great Game of
geopolitics were now enticed by the perspective of the Single Empire, a
worldwide Imperium that would be a purely Anglo-Saxon show, with the
Russians and Chinese forced to knuckle under. Like the contemporaries of
the Duke of Wellington in 1815, the imbecilic Anglo-American
think-tankers and financiers contemplated the chimera of a new century
of world domination, not unlike the British world supremacy that had
extended from the Congress of Vienna until the First World War. The old
Skull and Bones slogan of Henry Luce's "American Century" of 1945, which
had been robbed of its splendid lustre by the Russians and the Cold War,
could now ride again.

True, there were still some obstacles. The Great Russian rout meant that
German reunification could not be avoided, which brought with it the
danger of a Wirtschaftswunder reaching from the Atlantic to the Urals.
That, and the continued economic dynamism of the Japanese-oriented
sphere in the Far East, would be combatted, by economic conflicts and
trade wars that would take advantage of the Anglo-American control of
raw materials and above all oil, with the Anglo-American lease on the
Persian Gulf to be vigorously reaffirmed. Even so, the end of the
partition of Germany was a real trauma for the Anglo-Saxons, and would
elicit a wave of true hysteria on the part of Mrs. Thatcher, Nicholas
Ridley, and the rest of their circle, and a parallel public episode of
consternation and chagrin on the part of Bush. The Anglo-Americans were
moved to sweeping countermeasures. A little further down the line, a war
in the Balkans could bring chaos to the German economic Hinterland. From
the standpoint of British and Kissingerian geopolitics, the
countermeasures were necessary to restore the balance of power, which
now risked shifting in favor of the new Germany. German ascendancy would
mean that London would occupy the place to which Thatcher's economics
had entitled that wretched nation- a niche of impotence, impoverishment,
isolation, and irrelevance. But the British were determined to be
important, and war was a way to attain that goal.

There were also governments in the developing sector whose obedience to
the Anglo-Saxon supermen was in doubt. The 250,000,000 Arabs, who were
in turn the vanguard of a billion Moslems, would always be intractable.
The out-of-area deployments doctrine of the Atlantic Alliance would now
be the framework for the ritual immolation of the leading Arab state,
which happened to be Iraq. Later, there would be time to crush and
dismember India, Malaysia, Brazil, Indonesia and some others.

Then there was the inherent demographic weakness of the Anglo-Saxons,
especially the falling birth rate, now exacerbated by Hollywood,
television, and heavy metal. How could such a small master race prevail
against the black, brown, yellow, Mediterranean and Slavic masses? The
answer to that could only be genocide on a collossal scale, with
economic breakdown, famine, epidemics and pestilence completing the job
that war had begun. If the birth rate of Nigeria seemed destined to
catapult that country into second place among the world demographic
powers, the AIDS epidemic in central Africa was the remedy. General
Death was the main ally of the Anglo-Saxons.

Despite these problems, Bush and his co-thinkers were confident that
they could subjugate the planet for a full century. But they had to
hurry. Unless the Soviets, Chinese, Germans, Japanese, and third world
powers could be rapidly dealt with, the Anglo-Americans might be
overtaken by their own accelerating economic collapse, and they might
soon find themselves too weak to extend their yoke over the world. The
military machine that attacked Iraq was in the process of shrinking by
more than 25% because of growing American economic weakness, so it was
important to act fast.

The Anglo-American system depended on squeezing enough wealth out of the
world economy to feed the insatiable demands of the debt and capital
structures in London and New York. During the 1980's, those capital
structures had swelled like malignant tumors, while the depleted world
economy was bled white. Now, crazed after their October 1987 and October
1989 brushes with bottomless financial and currency panic, the masters
of usury in London and New York demanded that the rate of primitive
accumulation be stepped up all over the world. The old Soviet sphere
would pass from the frying pan of the Comecon to the fires of the IMF.
By the spring of 1991 Bush would issue his calls for a free trade zone
from the north pole to Tierra del Fuego, and then for world wide free
trade. Bush's handling of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade and
the North American Free Trade Zone soon convinced the Europe '92 crowd
in Brussels that the Anglo-Americans were hell-bent on global trade war.


These were the impusles and perspectives which impinged on Bush from
what he later called "the Mother Country," and which were vigorously
imparted to him in his frequent consultations with British Prime
Minister Margaret Thatcher, who now loomed very large in the
configuration of Bush's personal network.

Bush had met Gorbachov in March, 1985, when his "you die, we fly"
services were required for the funeral of old Konstantin Chernenko, the
octogenarian symbol of the impasse of the post-Andropov Kremlin who had
ruled the USSR for just 390 days. Gorbachov had come highly recommended
by Margaret Thatcher, with whom he had become acquainted the previous
year. Thatcher had judged the new-look Gorbachov a man with whom she
could do business. Bush came to Moscow bearing an invitation from Reagan
for a parley at the summit; this would later become the choreographed
pirouette of Geneva that November. Bush gave Gorbachov a garbled and
oblique endorsement: "If ever there was a time that we can move forward
with progress in the last few years, then I would say this is a good
time for that," stammered Bush. [fn 3] After Geneva there would follow
summits in Iceland in 1986, Washington in 1987 to sign the INF treaty,
and then Reagan's swan song in Moscow in the summer of 1988, a valuable
auxiliary to George's own electioneering. But, as we have seen, the Bush
team was contemptuous of slobbering sentimental old Reagan, a soft touch
who let the Russians take him to the cleaners, especially in arms
control negotiations. Bush wanted to drive a hard bargain, and that
meant stalling until the Soviets became truly desperate for any deal. In
addition, when Reagan and Bush had met Gorbachov on Governor's Island in
New York harbor in the midst of the transition, Gorbachov had been
guilty of lese majeste towards the heir apparent and had piqued Bush's
ire.

According to one account of the Governor's Island meeting of December 7,
1988, after some small talk by Uncle Ron, Bush wanted to know from
Gorbachov, "What assurance can you give me that I can pass to American
businessmen who want to invest in the Soviet Union that perestroika and
glasnost will succeed?" Was this the official business of the United
States, or investment counselling for Kravis, Liedkte, Mossbacher, and
Pickens? Gorbachov's reply is recalled by participants as brusque to the
point of rudeness: "Not even Jesus Christ knows the answer to that
question," said he, amidst the gasps of Bush's staff. A minute later,
Gorbachov turned to Bush with a lecture: "Let me take this opportunity
to tell you something. Your staff may have told you that what I'm doing
is all a trick. It's not. I'm playing real politics. I have a revolution
going that I announced in 1986. Now, in 1988, the Soviet people don't
like it. Don't misread me, Mr. Vice President, I have to play real
politics." [fn 4] After that, the telegenic Gorbachov could look for his
photo opportunities somewhere else during most of 1989. There would ne
no early Most Favored Nation trade status for Moscow. In addition, the
signals from London were to go slow. The result was Bush's "prudent
review" of US-Soviet relations.

Gorbachov was always hungry for summitry, and during an April visit to
Thatcher, the Soviet leader chided Bush for the US "hesitation" on new
arms control deals. Bush dismissed this remark with a huff: "We're
making a prudent review, and I will be ready to discuss that with the
Soviets when we are ready. We'll be ready to react when we feel like
reacting." [fn 5] Ministerial meeting between Baker and Shevardnadze
were proceeding. In May, the voice of Reagan was heard from his
California retirement, telling his friends that he was "increasingly
concerned at what he considers an excessively cautious approach to
nuclear arms reductions with the Soviets." Reagan thought that Bush was
indeed too hesitant, and that Gorbachov was seizing the initiative with
western Europe as a result. In the view attributed to Reagan by these
unnamed friends, "Bush opted for the delaying tactic of a policy review,
behaving the way new presidents do when replacing someone from the
opposing party with different views." According to journalist Lou
Cannon, "both in Bonn and in Beverly Hills they are wondering if Bush's
only strategy is to react to events as they unfold." [fn 6] There was
the wimp again.

In September, Bush was in Helena, Montana, sounding the same prudent
note while defending himself from Senate Majority Leader Mitchell, who
had been making some debater's points about Bush's "timidity" and
"status-quo" thinking. Bush repeated that he was in "no rush" for a
summit with Gorbachov. "I don't think there's any chance of a
disconnect" in Moscow's comprehension that "we want to see their
perestroika succeed," said Bush. [fn 7]

What changed Bush's mind was the collapse of the East German communist
regime, which had been gathering speed during the summer of 1989 with
the thousands of East Germans demanding admittance to West German
embassies, first in Hungary, and then in Czechoslovakia. Then, in one of
the most dramatic developments in recent decades of European history,
the Berlin Wall and the East German "shoot to kill" order along the line
of demarcation in the middle of Germany were tossed into the dustbin of
history. This was one of the most positive events that the generations
born after 1945 had ever witnessed. But for Bush and the
Anglo-Americans, it was the occasion for public tantrums.

For Bush individually, the breaching of the Berlin Wall of 1961 was the
detonator of one of his most severe episodes thus far of public
emotional disturbance. Bush had repeated Reagan's sure-fire formula of
"Mr. Gorbachov, tear this wall down," during a visit to Helmut Kohl in
Mainz in late May. "Let Berlin be next," Bush had said then. The wall
"must come down." But in the midst of Bush's throw away lines like "Let
Europe be whole and free," there was no mention whatsoever of German
reunification, which was nevertheless in the air.

Thus, when the wall came down, Bush could not avoid a group of reporters
in the Oval Office, where he sat in a swivel chair in the company of
James Baker. Bush told the reporters that he was "elated" by the news,
but his mood was at once funereal and testy. If he was so elated, why
was he so unhappy? Why the long face? "I'm just not an emotional kind of
guy." The main chord was one of caution. "It's way too early" to
speculate about German reunification, although Bush was forced to
concede, throuigh clenched teeth, that the Berlin Wall "will have very
little relevance" from now on. Everything Bush said tended to mute the
drama of what had happened: "I don't think any single event is the end
of what you might call the Iron Curtain. But clearly, this is a long way
from the harsh days of the --the harshest Iron Curtain days-- a long way
from that." "We are not trying to give anybody a hard time," Bush went
on. "We're saluting those who can move forward to democracy. We are
encouraging the concept of a Europe whole and free. And so we just
welcome it." The East German "aspirations for freedom seem to be a
little further down the road now." But Bush was not going to "dance on
the wall," that much was clear. [fn 8]

After this enraged and tongue-tied monologue with the reporters, Bush
privately asked his staff: "How about if I give them one of these?" Then
he jumped in the air, waved his hands, and yelled "Whoooopppeee!" at the
top of his lungs. [fn 9] Bush's spin doctors went into action,
explaining that the president had been "restrained" because of his
desire to avoid gloating or otherwise offending Gorbachov and the
Kremlin.

Bush's gagged emotional clutch attracted a great deal of attention in
the press and media. "Why did the leader of the western world look as
though he had lost his last friend the day they brought him the news of
the fall of the Berlin Wall?", asked Mary McGrory. "George Bush's
stricken expression and lame words about an event that had the rest of
mankind quickly singing hosannas were an awful letdown at a high moment
in history." [fn 10]

In reality, Bush's suppressed rage was another real epiphany of his
character, the sort of footage which a serious rival presidential
campaign would put on television over and over to show voters that
George has no use for human freedom. Bush's family tradition was to
support totalitarian rule in Germany, starting with daddy Prescott's
role in the Hitler project, and continuing with Averell Harriman's
machinations of 1945, which helped to solidify a communist dictatorship
for forty years in the eastern zone after the Nazis had fallen. But
Bush's reaction was also illustrative of the Anglo-American perception
that the resurgence of German industrialism in central Europe was a
deadly threat.

Over in London, Thatcher's brain truster Nicholas Ridley was forced to
quit the cabinet after he foamed at the mouth in observations about
German unity, which he equated with a Nazi resurgence seeking to enslave
Britain within the coils of the EEC. Conor Cruise O'Brien, Peregrine
Worthshorne and various Tory propagandists coined the phrase of an
emergent "Fourth Reich" which would now threaten Europe and the world.
The Anglo-Saxon oligarchs were truly dismayed, and it is in this
hysteria that we must seek the roots of the Gulf crisis and the war
against Iraq.

But in the meantime, the collapse of the old Pankow regime in East
Berlin meant that Bush had urgent issues to discuss with Gorbachov. The
two agreed to meet on ships in Malta during the first week of December.

Bush talked about his summit plans in a special televised address before
Thanksgiving, 1989. He tried to claim credit for the terminal crisis of
communism, citing his own inaugural address: "The day of the dictator is
over." But mainly he sought to reassure Gorbachov: "...we will give him
our assurance that America welcomes this reform not as an adversary
seeking advantage but as a people offering support." "...I will assure
him that there is no greater advocate of perestroika than the president
of the United States." Bush also had to protect his flank from criticism
from Europeans and domestic critics like Lyndon LaRouche who had warned
that the Malta meeting contained the threat of an attempted new Yalta of
the superpowers at the expense of Europe. "We are not meeting to
determine the future of Europe," Bush promised. [fn 11]

It is reported that, here again, Bush was so secretive about this summit
until it was announced that he did not consult with his staffs. If he
had, the nature of Mediterranean winter storms might have influenced a
decision to meet elsewhere. The result was the famous sea-sick summit,
during which Bush, whose self-image as a bold sea dog in the tradition
of Sir Francis Drake required that he spend the night on a heaving US
warship, required treatment for acute mal de mer. Bush's vomiting
syndrome, which was to become so dramatic in Japan, was beginning. He
had perhaps not been so tempest-tossed since his nautical outing with
Don Aronow back in 1983.

At the Malta-Yalta table, Bush and Gorbachov haggled over the
"architecture" of the new Europe. Gorbachov wanted NATO to be dissolved
as the Warsaw Pact ceased to exist, but this was something Bush and the
British refused to grant. Bush explained that Germany was best bound
within NATO in order to avoid the potential for independent initiatives
that neither Moscow nor Washington wanted. A free hand for each empire
within its respective sphere was reaffirmed, as suggested by the
symmetry of Bush's assault on Panama during the Romanian crisis that
liquidated Ceausescu, but left a neo-communist government of old
Comintern types like Iliescu and Roman in power. Bush would also support
the Kremlin against both Armenia and Azerbaijan when hostilities and
massacres broke out between these regions during the following month.
Bush's reciprocal services to Gorbachov included a monstrous diplomatic
first: just as the communist regime in East Germany was in its death
agony, Bush despatched James Baker to Potsdam to meet with the East
German "reform communist" leader, Modrow. No US Secretary of State had
ever set foot in the DDR during its entire history after 1949, but now,
in the last days of the Pankow communist regime, Baker would go there.
His visit was an insult to those East Germans who had marched for
freedom, always having to reckon with the danger that Honecker's tanks
would open fire. Baker's visit was designed to delay, sabotage and stall
German reunification in whatever ways were still possible, while shoring
up the communist regime. Baker gave it his best shot, but his sleazy
dealmaking skills were of no use in the face of an aroused populace.
Nevertheless, after Tien An Men and Potsdam, Bush was rapidly emerging
as one of the few world leaders who could be counted on to support world
communism.

During the early months of 1990, certain forces in Moscow, Bonn, and
other capitals gravitated towards a new Rapallo arrangement in a
positive key: there was the potential that the inmates of the
prison-house of nations might attain freedom and self-determination,
while German capital investments in infrastructure and economic
modernization could guarantee that the emerging states would be
economically viable, a process from which the entire world could
benefit.

A rational policy for the United States under these circumstances would
have entailed a large-scale committment to taking part in rebuilding the
infrastructure of the former Soviet sphere in transportation,
communications, energy, education, and health services, combined with
capital investments in industrial modernization. Such investment might
also have served as a means to re-start the depressed US economy. The
pre-condition for economic cooperation would have been a recognition by
the Soviet authorities that the aspirations of their subject
nationalities for self-determination had to be honored, including
through the independence of the former Soviet republics in the Baltic,
the Trans-caucasus, central Asia, the Ukraine, and elsewhere. As long as
long as the Soviet military potential remained formidable, adequate
military preparedness in the west was indispensable, and should have
featured a significant committment to the "new physical principles"
anti-missle defenses that had inspired the original Strategic Defense
Initiative of the 1983. Obviously, none of these measures would have
been possible without a decisive break with the economic policy of the
Reagan-Bush years, in favor of an economic recovery program focussed on
fostering high-technology growth in capital-intensive industrial
employment producing tangible, physical commodities. The single US
political figure who had proposed such a program for war-avoidance and
stability was Lyndon LaRouche, who had put forward such a package during
a press conference in West Berlin in October, 1988, in the context of a
prophetic forecast that German re-unification was very much on the
agenda for the immediate future.

Bush was responsible for the jailing of LaRouche, and his policy in
these matters was diametrically opposite to this approach. Bush never
made a serious proposal for the economic reconstruction of the areas
included within the old USSR, and was niggardly even in loans to let the
Russians buy agricultural commodities. In November, 1990, Gorbachov
addressed a desperate plea to world governments to alleviate the USSR
food shortage, and sent Foreign Minister Shevardnadze to Washington in
the following month in hopes of obtaining a significant infusion of
outright cash grants for food purchases from US stocks. After photo
opportunities with Baker in Texas and with Bush at the White House, all
Shevardnadze had to take back to Moscow was a paltry $1 billion and
change. Within a week of Shevardnadze's return, he resigned his post
under fire from critics, referring to sinister plans for a coup against
Gorabchov. The coup, of course, came the following August. It should
have been obvious that Bush's policy was maximizing the probability of
ugly surprises further down the road.

Bush did not demand self-determination for the subject nationalities,
but sided with the Kremlin against the republics again and again,
ignoring the January, 1991 bloodbath in Lithuania, or winning himself
the title of "chicken Kiev" during a July, 1991 trip to the Ukraine in
which he told that republic's Supreme Soviet to avoid the pitfalls of
"suicidal" nationalism. Even though the Soviet missle park was largely
intact, Bush was compelled by his budget penury to take down significant
areas of US military capacities. And finally, his stubborn refusal to
throw the bankrupt policies of the Reagan-Bush years overboard
guaranteed further US economic collapse.

But Bush was mindful neither of war avoidance nor economic recovery. In
the months after Panama, he basked in the afterglow of a dramatic
increase in his poularity, as reflected by the public opinion polls. A
full-scale state visit by Gorbachov was scheduled for late May.
Rumblings were being heard in the Middle East. But, in early April,
Bush's mind was focussed on other matters. It was now that he made his
famous remarks on the subject of broccoli. The issue surfaced when the
White House decreed that henceforth, by order of the president himself,
broccoli would no longer be served to Bush. Reporters determined to use
the next available photo opportunity to ask what this was all about.

Bush's infantile anti-broccoli outburst came in the context of a White
House State Dinner held in honor of the visiting Polish Prime Minister,
Tadeusz Mazowiecki. Although Bush was obsessed with broccoli, he did
make some attempt to relate his new obsession to the social context in
which he found himself:

Just as Poland had a rebellion against totalitarianism, I am rebelling
against broccoli, and I refuse to give ground. I do not like broccoli,
and I haven't liked it since I was a little kid and my mother made me
eat it. And I'm President of the United States, and I'm not going to eat
any more broccoli.

Out in California, where broccoli is big business as a cash crop,
producers were aroused sufficiently to despatch 10 tons of broccoli,
equivalent to about 80,000 servings, to the White House. Bush was still
adamant:

Barbara loves broccoli. She's tried to make me eat it. She eats it all
the time herself. So she can go out and meet the caravan. [fn 12]

These statements were an illumination in themselves, since the internal
evidence pointed conclusively to a choleric infantile tantrum being
experienced by the president. But what could have occasioned an outburst
on broccoli, of all things? Slightly more than a year later, when it
became known that Bush was suffering from Basedow's disease, some
observers recalled the broccoli outburst. For it turns out that
broccoli, along with cabbage and some other vegetables, belongs to a
category of foods called goitrogens. Some schools of medicine recommend
frequent servings of broccoli in order to help cool off an overactive
thyroid. [fn 13] There was much speculation that Bush's hyperthyroid
syndrome had been diagnosed by March-April, or perhaps earlier, and that
broccoli had been appearing more often on the White House menu as part
of a therapy to return Bush's thyroid and metabolism to more normal
functioning. Was the celebrated thyroid outburst a case of an irascible
president, in the grip of psychopathological symptoms his physicians
were attempting to treat, rebelling against his doctors' orders?

At their spring summit, Bush and Gorbachov continued to disagree about
whether united Germany would be a member of NATO. Much time was spent on
strategic arms, the Vienna conventional arms reduction talks, and the
other aspects of the emerging European architecture, where their mutual
counter-revolutionary committments went very deep. Both stressed that
they had taken their Malta consultations as their point of departure.
Bush's hostility to the cause of Lithuania and the other Baltic
republics, now subject to crippling economic blockade by Moscow, was
writ large. The central exchanges of this summit were doubtless those
which occurred in the bucolic isolation of Camp David among a small
shirtsleeve group that comprehended Bush, Gorbachov, Shevardnadze,
Baker, and Scowcroft. Bush was unusually closed-mouthed, but the very
loquacious Gorbachov volunteered that they had come to talk about the
"planet and its flash-points" and the "regional issues." There was the
distinct impression that these talks were sweeping and futurological in
their scope. In his press conference the next day, Gorbachov had glowing
praise for these restricted secret talks: "I would like, in particular,
to emphasize the importance of our dialogue at Camp David, where we
talked during the day yesterday. And this is a new phase in
strengthening mutual understanding and trust between us. We really
discussed all world problems. We compared our political perspectives,
and we did that in an atmosphere of frankness, constructive atmosphere,
an atmosphere of growing trust. We discussed specifically such urgent
international issues as the situation in the Middle East, Afghanistan,
southern Africa, Cambodia, central America. That is just some of what we
discussed. I would not want to go into detail right now. I think you
will probably seek to get clarification on this, but anyway I think the
Camp David dialogue was very important." [fn 14]

Gorbachov also had lengthy answers about the discontent in the Arab
world over the Soviet policy of mass emigrations of Russian Jews who
were obliged to settle in Israel. For the Middle East was indeed
approaching crisis. In the words of one observer, "Bush and Gorbachov
stirred the boiling pot of Middle East tensions with their press
conference remarks, forgetting the damage that seemingly remote forces
can do to the grandest of East-West designs." [fn 15] Did Bush and
Gorbachov use their Camp David afternoon to coordinate their respective
roles in the Gulf crisis, which the Anglo-Americans were now about to
provoke? It is very likely that they did.

Bush's political stock was declining during the summer of 1990. One
indication was provided by the astoundingly frank remarks of Justice
Thurgood Marshall of the US Supreme Court in an interview with Sam
Donaldson on the ABC News television program "Prime Time Live." Justice
Marshall, the sole black justice on the Supreme Court, was asked for his
reaction to Bush's nomination of the "stealth candidate" David Souter to
fill the place of the retiring Justice William Brennan, a friend of
Marshall's. Souter was a man without qualities who appeared to have no
documentable opinions on any subject, although he had a sinister look.
"I just don't understand what he's doing. I just don't understand it. I
mean this last appointment is... the epitome of what he's been doing."
said Marshall of Bush. Marshall didn't have "the slightest idea" of
Bush's motives in the Souter nomination. Would Marshall comment on
Bush's civil rights record, asked correspondent Sam Donaldson. "Let me
put it this way. It's said that if you can't say something good about a
dead person, don't say it. Well, I consider him dead." Who was dead,
asked Donaldson. "Bush!" was Marshall's reply. "He's dead from the neck
up."

Marshall added that he regarded Bush's chief of staff, John Sununu of
New Hampshire, the state Souter was from, as the one "calling the
shots." "If he came up for election," said Marshall of Bush, "I'd vote
against him. No question about it. I don't think he's ever stopped"
running for re-election since he took office. Marshall and Donaldson had
the following exchange about Souter:

Donaldson: Do you know Judge David Souter?

Marshall: No, never heard of him.

Donaldson: He may be the man to replace Brennan.

Marshall: I still never heard of him. When his name came down I listened
to television. And the first thing, I called my wife. Have I ever heard
of this man? She said, "No, I haven't either. So I promptly called
Brennan, because it's his circuit [the First Circuit in Boston]. And his
wife answered the phone, and I told her. She said: "He's never heard of
him either."

Marshall and Brennan had often been at odds with the Bush's
administration's promotion of the death penalty. In this connection,
Marshall commented: "My argument is that if you make a mistake in a
trial and it's corrected later on --you find out it was an error-- you
correct it. But if you kill a man, what do you say? "Oops?" "I'm sorry?"
"Wait a minute?" That's the trouble with death. Death is so lasting."

On this occasion, Marshall renewed his pledge that he would never
resign, but would die in office: "I said before, and I repeat that, I'm
serving out my life term. I have a deal with my wife that when I begin
to show signs of senility, she'll tell me. And she will." [fn 16] Yet,
less than one year later, Marshall announced his retirement from the
bench, giving Bush the chance to split the organizations of black
America with the Clarence Thomas appointment. Those who saw Marshall's
farewell press conference would have to agree that he still possessed
one of the most lucid and trenchant minds anywhere in the government.
Had Bush's vindictiveness expressed itself once again through its
inevitable instruments of secret blackmail and threats?

During June and July, domestic economic issues edged their way back to
center stage of US politics. As always, that was bad news for Bush.

Bush's biggest problem during 1990 was the collision between his
favorite bit of campaign demagogy, his "read my lips, no new taxes"
mantra of 1990, and the looming national bankruptcy of the United
States. Bush had sent his budget to the Hill on January 29 where the
Democrats, despite the afterglow of Panama, had promptly pronounced it
Dead on Arrival. During March and April, there were rounds of haggling
between the Congress and Bush's budget pointman, Richard Darman of OMB.
Then, on the sunny spring Sunday afternoon of May 6, Bush used the
occasion of a White House lecture on his ego ideal, Theodore Roosevelt,
to hold a discreet meeting with Democratric Congressional leaders for
the purpose of quietly deep-sixing the no new taxes litany. Bush was
extremely surreptitious in the jettisoning of his favorite throw-away
line, but the word leaked out in Monday's newspapers that the White
House, in the person of hatchet-man Sununu, was willing to go to a
budget summit with "no preconditions." Responding to questions on
Monday, Bush's publicity man Fitzwater explained that Bush wanted budget
negotiations "unfettered with conclusions about positions taken in the
past." That sounded like new taxes.

Bush had been compelled to act by a rising chorus of panicked screaming
from the City of London and Wall Street, who had been demanding a
serious austerity campaign ever since Bush had arrived at the White
House. After the failure of the $13 billion Bank of New England in
January, Wall Street corporatist financier Felix Rohaytn had commented:
"I have never been so uneasy about the outlook in 40 years. Everywhere
you look, you see red lights blinking. I see something beyond recession,
but short of depression." [fn 17] At the point that Bush became a tax
apostate, estimates were that the budget defecit for fiscal 1990 would
top $200 billion and after that disappear into the wild blue yonder. The
IMF-BIS bankers wanted Bush to extract more of that wealth from the
blood and bones of the American people, and George would now go through
the motions of compliance.

The political blowback was severe. Ed Rollins, the co-chairman of the
National Republican Congressional Committee, was a Reagan Democrat who
had decided to stick with the GOP, and he had developed a plan, which
turned out to be a chimera, about how the Republicans could gain some
ground in the Congress. As a professional political operative, Rollins
was acutely sensitive to the fact that Bush's betrayal of his "no new
taxes pledge" would remove the one thing that George and his party
supposedly stood for. "The biggest difference between Republicans and
Democrats in the public perception is that Republicans don't want to
raise taxes," complained Rollins. "Obviously, this makes that go right
out the door. Politically, I think it's a disaster." [fn 18] With that,
Rollins was locked in a feud with Bush that would play out all the way
to the end of the year.

But Democrats were also unhappy, since "no preconditions" was an evasive
euphemism, and they wanted Bush to take the full opprobrium of calling
for "new taxes." The White House remained duplicitious and evasive. In
mid-May, pourparlers were held in the White House on a comprehensive
defecit-reduction agreement. The Democrats demanded that Bush go on
national television to motivate drastic, merciless austerity all along
the line, with tax increases to be combined with the gouging of domestic
and social programs. Bush demurred. All during June, the haggling about
who would take the public rap went forward. On June 26, during a White
House breakfast meeting with Bush, Sununu, Darman, and Congressional
leaders, Congressman Foley threatened to walk out of the talks unless
Bush went public with a call for tax hikes. For a moment, the dollar,
the Treasury bill market, and the entire insane house of cards of
Anglo-American finance hung suspended by a thread. If the talks blew up,
a worldwide financial panic might ensue, and the voters would hold
George responsible for the consequences. Bush's Byzantine response was
to issue a low-profile White House press statement.

It is clear to me that both the size of the defecit problem and the need
for a package that can be enacted require all of the following:
entitlement and mandatory program reform; tax revenue increases; growth
incentives; discretionary spending reductions; orderly reductions in
defense expenditures; and budget process reform.

"Tax revenue increases" was the big one. June 26 is remembered by the
GOP right wing as a Day of Infamy; Bush cannot forget it either, since
it was on that day that his poll ratings began to fall, and kept falling
until late November, when war hysteria bailed him out. Many
Congressional Republicans who for years had had no other talking point
than taxes were on a collision course with the nominal head of their
party; a back-benchers' revolt was in full swing. Fitzwater and a few
others still argued that "tax revenue increases" did not mean "new
taxes", but this sophistry was received with scorn. Fitzwater argued in
doublethink:

We feel [Bush] said the right thing then and he's saying the right thing
now.....Everything we said was true then and it's true now. No regrets,
no backing off.

Nixon's spokesman Ron Nessen had been more candid when he once
announced, "All previous statements are inoperative." When Fitzwater was
asked if he would agree that Bush had now formally broken his no tax
pledge, Fitzwater replied: "No. Are you crazy?" On July 11,
Congressional Democrats blocked Bush's favorite economic panacea, the
reduction of the capital gains tax rate, by demanding that any such cut
be combined with an overall increase of income tax rates on the wealthy.
This yielded a deadlock which lasted until the last days of September.

Bush hid out in the White House for a few days, but then he had to face
the press. There would be only one topic: his tax pledge. Bush affected
a breezy and cavalier manner that could not disguise his seething
internal rage at the thought of being nailed as a liar. The internal
turmoil was expressed in the frequent incoherence of verbal expression.
Bush started off with an evasive and rambling introduction in which he
portrayed himself as fighting to prevent the suffering that an automatic
sequester under the Gramm-Rudman-Hollings law would entail. The first
question: "I'd like to ask you about your reversal on 'no new taxes.'"
occasioned more evasive verbiage. Other questions were all on the same
point. Bush attempted to pull himself together:

I'll say I take a look at a new situation. I see an enormous defecit. I
see a savings and loan problem out there that has to be resolved. And
like Abraham Lincoln said, "I'll think anew." I'm not -- but I'm not
violating or getting away from my fundamental conviction on taxes or
anything of that nature. Not in the least. But what I have said is on
the table, and let's see where we go. But we've got a different-- we've
got a very important national problem, and I think the president owes
the people his --his judgment at the moment he has to address the
problem. And that's exactly what I'm trying to do.

And look, I knew I'd catch some flak on this decision....But I've got to
do what I think is right, and then I'll ask the people for support. But
more important than posturing now, or even negotiating, is the
result....

It was a landmark of impudence and dissembling. One of Bush's main
objectives as he zig-zagged through the press conference was to avoid
any television sound bites that would show him endorsing new taxes. So
all his formulations were as diffuse as possible. Were tax revenue
increases the same as taxes?

Bush: And I say budget reforms are required, and I say spending cuts are
required, and so let's see where we come out on that.

Q: But is it taxes?

Bush: Is what taxes?

Q:What you're saying. Are you saying taxes are --higher taxes are--

Bush: I've told you what I've said, and I can't help you any more. Nice
try.

Q:You said we needed--

Bush:You got it. You got it, and you've got a--you've seen the arrows
coming my way. And that's fine, but-- let people interpret it any way--

Q: Well, I have--

Bush: Well, I want to leave it the way I said I would, so the
negotiators are free to discuss a wide array of options, including tax
increases. Does that help?

A questioner cited a tabloid headline: "Read My Lips: I Lied." Bush had
been prepped by an historical review of how other presidents had
allegedly changed their minds or lied, which had convinced Bush that he,
although a liar, was actually in the same class with Lincoln. "I've been
more relaxed about it than I thought I'd be," quipped Bush. "I feel
comfortable about that because I've gone back and done a little research
and seen these firestorms come and go, people who feel just as strongly
on one side or another of an issue as I do and haven't gotten their way
exactly." Why had he said no new taxes during the campaign? "Well, I
don't think anybody did such a penetrating job of questioning...."
Bush's basic idea was that he could get away with it, in the way that
Reagan had gotten away with the 1982 recession. But for many voters, and
even for many Republican loyalists, this had been yet another epiphany
of a scoundrel. Many were convinced that Bush believed in absolutely
nothing except hanging on to power.
--[cont]--
Aloha, He'Ping,
Om, Shalom, Salaam.
Em Hotep, Peace Be,
Omnia Bona Bonis,
All My Relations.
Adieu, Adios, Aloha.
Amen.
Roads End
Kris

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