19.12.2012 Views

George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

Create successful ePaper yourself

Turn your PDF publications into a flip-book with our unique Google optimized e-Paper software.

Chapter -XX- <strong>The</strong> Phony War on Drugs<br />

Tout le monde me prend pour un homme de bien; Mais la verite pure est que je ne vaux<br />

rien.<br />

Moliere, Le Tartuffe<br />

An indispensable component of the mythical media profile which <strong>George</strong> <strong>Bush</strong> has built<br />

up over the years to buttress his electoral aspirations has been his role as an anti-drug<br />

fighter. His first formally scheduled prime time presidential television address to the<br />

nation in September, 1989 was devoted to announcing his plans for measures to combat<br />

the illegal narcotics that continued to inundate the sreets of the United States. During his<br />

1988 election campaign, <strong>Bush</strong> pointed with astounding complacency to his record as<br />

President Reagan's designated point man in the administration's war on drugs.<br />

In his acceptance speech to the Republican National Convention in 1988, <strong>Bush</strong> stated: "I<br />

want a drug-free America. Tonight, I challenge the young people of our country to shut<br />

down the drug dealers around the world....My Administration will be telling the dealers,<br />

"Whatever we have to do, we'll do, but your day is over. You're history.'"<br />

Indeed, <strong>Bush</strong> has an impressive resume of bureaucratic titles to back up his claim to be<br />

America's top anti-drug fighter. On January 28, 1982, Reagan created the South Florida<br />

Task Force under <strong>Bush</strong>'s high-profile leadership to coordinate the efforts of the various<br />

federal agencies to stem the tide of narcotics into <strong>Bush</strong>'s old family bailiwick. On March<br />

23, 1983, <strong>Bush</strong> was placed in charge of the National Narcotics Border Interdiction<br />

System, which was supposed to staunch the drug flow over all US borders. In August,<br />

1986 US officials presented to their Mexican counterparts a scheme called Operation<br />

Alliance, a new border enforcement initiative that was allegedly to do for the US-<br />

Mexican border area what the South Florida Task Force had allegedly already done for<br />

the southeastern states. <strong>George</strong> <strong>Bush</strong> was appointed chief of Operation Alliance, which<br />

involved 20 federal agencies, 500 additional federal officers, and a budget of $266<br />

million.<br />

To crown all these efforts, <strong>Bush</strong> sought to obtain a cameo role for a brief appearance on<br />

the television series Miami Vice. He was perhaps inspired by his mentor, Kissinger, who<br />

had walked through a cameo of his own on Dynasty. But <strong>Bush</strong> was unable to accomplish<br />

his dream.<br />

<strong>The</strong> drug plague is an area in which the national interest requires results. Illegal narcotics<br />

are one of the most important causes of the dissolution of American society at the present<br />

time. To interdict the drug flows and to prosecute the drug money launderers at the top of<br />

the banking community would have represented a real public service. But <strong>Bush</strong> had no<br />

intention of seriously pursuing such goals. For him, the war on drugs was a cruel hoax, a<br />

cynical exercise in demagogic self-promotion, designed in large part to camouflage<br />

activities by himself and his networks that promoted drug trafficking. A further shocking<br />

episode that has come to light in this regard involves <strong>Bush</strong>'s 14-year friendship with a

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!