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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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executive order that started the war also contained instructions for a land battle to follow<br />

extensive bombing. This meant that all peace feelers must be vigorously rebuffed, on the<br />

model of what Acheson and Stimson had done to Japan during July of 1945.<br />

In those days, anti-war protesters had camped out in Lafayette Park, across Pennsylvania<br />

Avenue from the White House. <strong>The</strong>y had been there since December 13. <strong>Bush</strong> had<br />

referred once to "those damned drums" and how they were keeping him awake at night.<br />

At his press conference of February 6, <strong>Bush</strong> told reporters that the drummers had been<br />

removed, not because he had ordered it, but because they were disturbing the guests at<br />

the posh Hay-Adams Hotel on the other side of the park. <strong>The</strong>re was a law on decibels, he<br />

explained:<br />

And lo, people went forth with decibel count auditors. And they found the man got up to<br />

- this drummer, incessant drummers, got over 60, and they were moved out of there, and I<br />

hope they stay out of there because I don't want the people in the hotel to not have a good<br />

night's sleep. <strong>The</strong> drums have ceased, oddly enough.<br />

But just as <strong>Bush</strong> was speaking, reporters could hear the thumping resume in the park<br />

outside. <strong>The</strong> drummers, much to <strong>Bush</strong>'s chagrin, were at it again. Soon Lafayette Park<br />

was fenced in by the <strong>Bush</strong>men.<br />

On February 15, Radio Baghdad offered negotiations leading to the withdrawl of Iraqi<br />

forces from Kuwait. <strong>Bush</strong>, in tandem with the new British prime Minister, John Major,<br />

rejected this overture with parellel rhetoric. For <strong>Bush</strong>, Saddam's peace bid was "a cruel<br />

hoax;" for Major, it was "a bogus sham." <strong>The</strong> Kremlin, seeking to save face, found the<br />

proposal "encouraging." Iraq was now pulling key military units out of Kuwait, and <strong>Bush</strong><br />

judged that the moment was ripe to call for an insurrection and military coup against<br />

Saddam Hussein and the Baath Party government. "<strong>The</strong>re's another way for the<br />

bloodshed to stop, and that is for the Iraqi military and the Iraqi people to take matters<br />

into their own hands, to force Saddam Hussein, the dictator, to step aside." [fn 86] With<br />

this call, <strong>Bush</strong> triggered the simultaneous uprisings of the pro-Iranian Shiites in Iraq's<br />

southern provinces, and of the Kurds in the north, many of whom now foolishly<br />

concluded that US military assistance would be forthcoming. It was a cynical ploy, since<br />

<strong>Bush</strong> can be seen in retrospect to have had no intention whatever of backing up these<br />

rebellions. During the month of March, tens of thousand of additional casualties and<br />

untold human misery would be the sole results of these insurrections, which led to the<br />

mass exodus of the hapless and wretched Kurds into Iran and Turkey.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Soviets were still seeking to save half a face from a massacre which they had aided<br />

and abetted; diplomacy would also help take the mind of the world off the Baltic<br />

bloodshed of the Soviet special forces. During the week after Saddam Hussein's trial<br />

balloon for a pullout from Kuwait, Yevgeny Primakov attempted to assemble a ceasefire.<br />

Primakov's efforts were brushed aside with single-empire arrogance by <strong>Bush</strong>, who<br />

spoke off the cuff at a photo opportunity: "Very candidly...while expressing appreciation<br />

for his sending it to us, it falls well short of what would be required. As far as I am<br />

concerned, there are no negotiations. <strong>The</strong> goals have been set out. <strong>The</strong>re will be no

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