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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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eginning to function, and the man controls no forces, and he's out. But, yes, I won't be satisfied<br />

until we see him come to justice.<br />

Noriega was irrelevant, <strong>Bush</strong> tried to suggest, since his government and army had both<br />

ceased to exist, but <strong>Bush</strong> lacked conviction. He feared a long Christmas day spent by at<br />

home by 80 million families, with no news except the football scores and the mortified<br />

consternation of the US regime Noriega had managed to elude. <strong>The</strong>n, on the evening of<br />

December 24, it was reported that Noriega, armed with an Uzi machine gun, had made<br />

his way unchallenged and undetected to the Papal Nunciatura in Panama City where he<br />

had asked for and obtained political asylum. <strong>The</strong>re are no reports of how far <strong>George</strong> <strong>Bush</strong><br />

gnawed into the White House Bigelows upon hearing that news, but it is clear that there<br />

was important damage to the deep pile in the Oval Office.<br />

<strong>The</strong> standoff that then developed encapsulated the hereditary war of the <strong>Bush</strong> family with<br />

the Holy See and the Roman Catholic Church. For eight days, US troops surrounded the<br />

Nunciatura, which they proceeded to bombard with deafening decibels of explicitly<br />

satanic heavy metal and other hard rock music, which according to some reports had been<br />

personally chosen by mad Max Thurman in order to "unnerve Noriega and the Nuncio,"<br />

Monsignor LaBoa. Noriega was reputed to be an opera lover.<br />

At the same time, <strong>Bush</strong> ordered the State Department to carry out real acts of thuggery in<br />

making threatening representations to the Holy See. It became clear that Roman Catholic<br />

priests, nuns, monks and prelates would soon be in danger in many countries of Ibero-<br />

America. Nevertheless, the Vatican declined to expel Noriega from the Nunciatura in<br />

accordance with US demands. <strong>Bush</strong>'s forces in Panama had shown they were ready to<br />

play fast and loose with diplomatic immunity. A number of foreign embassies were<br />

broken into by US troops while they were frantically searching for Noriega, and the<br />

Cuban and Nicaraguan Embassies were ringed with tanks and troops in a ham-handed<br />

gesture of intimidation. It is clear that in this context, <strong>Bush</strong> contemplated the storming of<br />

the Nunciatura by US forces. Perhaps he was deterred by the worldwide political<br />

consequences he would have faced. When the German Wehrmacht occupied Rome<br />

during the war years of 1943-44, Hitler had never dared to order an incursion into the<br />

sovereign territory of the Vatican. Could <strong>Bush</strong> face the opprobrium of having ordered<br />

what Hitler himself had ruled out? At this point, <strong>Bush</strong>'s criminal energy failed him, and<br />

he had to look for other options.<br />

<strong>The</strong>se were difficult days for <strong>Bush</strong>. On December 27, he gave another press conference<br />

during which he was asked:<br />

Q: Do you fear that Mr. Noriega might disclose any CIA information that could embarrass you or<br />

the government?<br />

<strong>Bush</strong>: No.<br />

Q: Nothing whatsoever?<br />

<strong>Bush</strong>: I don't think so. I think that's history and I think that the main thing is that he should be tried<br />

and brought to justice and we are pursuing that course with no fear of that. You know, we may get

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