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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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Some might argue that the public rage fits that became increasingly frequent during<br />

1989-90 were calculated and scripted performances, calibrated and staged according to<br />

the methods of mind war for the express purpose of intimidating foreign adversaries and,<br />

not least of all, the American population itself. <strong>Bush</strong>'s apprenticeship with Kissinger<br />

would have taught him the techniques we have seen Kissinger employ in his secret<br />

communications with Moscow during the Indo-Pakistani war of 1970: Kissinger makes<br />

clear that an integral part of his crisis management style is the studied attempt to<br />

convince his adversary that the latter is dealing with a madman who will not shun any<br />

expedient, no matter how irrational, in order to prevail. But with the <strong>Bush</strong> of 1990 we are<br />

far beyond such calculating histrionics. <strong>The</strong>re were still traces of method in <strong>George</strong><br />

<strong>Bush</strong>'s madness, but the central factor was now the madness itself.<br />

<strong>The</strong> thesis of this chapter is that while it is clear that the Gulf war was a deliberate and<br />

calculated provocation by the Anglo-American oligarchical and financier elite, the mental<br />

instability and psychological disintegration of <strong>George</strong> <strong>Bush</strong> was an indispensable<br />

ingredient in implementing the actions which the oligarchs and bankers desired. Without<br />

a <strong>George</strong> <strong>Bush</strong> who was increasingly non compos mentis, the imperialist grand design for<br />

the destruction of the leading Arab state and the intimidation of the third world might<br />

have remained on the shelf. Especially since the Bay of Pigs and the Vietnam debacle,<br />

American presidents have seen excellent reasons to mistrust their advisers when the latter<br />

came bearing plans for military adventures overseas. <strong>The</strong> destruction of the once<br />

powerful Lyndon B. Johnson, in particular, has stood as an eloquent warning to his<br />

successors that a president who wants to have a political future must be very reticent<br />

before he attempts to write a new page in the martial exploits of imperialism.<br />

Eisenhower's repudiation of the Anglo-French Suez invasion of 1956 can serve to remind<br />

us that even a relatively weak US president may find reasons not to leap into the<br />

vanguard of the latest hare-brained scheme to come out of the London clubs. <strong>The</strong><br />

difficulty of orchestrating a "splendid little war" is all the more evident when the various<br />

bureaucratic, military, and financier factions of the US establishment are not at all<br />

convinced that the project is a winner or even worthwhile, as the pro-sanctions, wait and<br />

see stance of many Democratic members of the House and Senate indicates. <strong>The</strong><br />

subjectivity of <strong>George</strong> <strong>Bush</strong> is therefore a vital link in the chain of any explanation of<br />

why the war happened, and that subjectivity centers an increasingly desperate,<br />

aggravated, infantile id, tormented by the fires of a raging thyroid storm.<br />

<strong>Bush</strong>'s new desire to strut and posture as a madman on the world stage, as contrasted with<br />

his earlier devotion to secret, behind-the-scenes iniquity has certain parallels in<br />

Suetonius's portrait of the Emperor Nero. Before Nero had fully consolidated his hold on<br />

power, he cultivated outward and public displays of filial piety, and strove to manifest<br />

"good intentions." <strong>The</strong>se were the veneer for monstrous crimes that were at first carried<br />

out covertly: "...at first his acts of wantonness, lust, extravagance, avarice, and cruelty<br />

were gradual and secret...." But once Nero had firmly established his own regime, the<br />

monster became more and more overt: "little by little, however, as his vices grew<br />

stronger, he dropped jesting and secrecy and with no attempt at disguise openly broke out<br />

into worse crime." [fn 1] Something similar can be observed in the case of Caligula, who<br />

had a wimp problem of sorts during the time that he lived on the island of Capri in the

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