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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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an incompetent charlatan who had presided over the ruin of Poland. On the last two days<br />

of July, <strong>Bush</strong> went to Moscow for a summit with Gorbachov that centered on the signing<br />

of a treaty on reducing strategic armaments. Erstwhile condominium partners Gorbachov<br />

and Primakov pressed for economic assistance and investments, but all that <strong>Bush</strong> was<br />

willing to offer was a vague committment to forward to Congress the trade treaty of<br />

1990, which would provide, if approved, for the extension of the Most Favored Nation<br />

treatment to Moscow. Soviet black beret special forces units deliberately massacred six<br />

Lithuanian border guards as <strong>Bush</strong> was arriving, but <strong>Bush</strong> maintained a pose of studied<br />

disinterest in the freedom of the Baltics. And not only of the Baltics: after the sessions<br />

with Gorbachov were over, <strong>Bush</strong> went to Kiev, the capital of the Ukraine, where he<br />

rejected a private meeting with Ivan Drach, the leader of the Rukh, the main opposition<br />

movement. In the Ukrainian capital on August 1, "Chicken Kiev" <strong>Bush</strong> made his<br />

infamous speech in which he warned about the dangers inherent in nationalism.<br />

<strong>Bush</strong>'s Kiev speech stands out in retrospect as compelling evidence of his relentless<br />

opposition to anticommunist and antisoviet movements in the moribund Soviet empire,<br />

and of his relentless desire to do evil. Typically, <strong>Bush</strong> quoted his idol, <strong>The</strong>odore<br />

Roosevelt: "To be patronized is as offensive as to be insulted. No one of us cares<br />

permanently to have someone else conscientiously striving to do him good. What- we<br />

want to work with that someone else for the good of both of us." <strong>The</strong>n <strong>Bush</strong> got to the<br />

heart of the matter, his diehard support for Gorbachov and the imperial edifice erected by<br />

Lenin and Stalin: " Some people have urged the United States to choose between<br />

supporting President Gorbachov and supporting independence-minded leaders throughout<br />

the USSR. I consider this a false choice." And then, the crowning insult to the<br />

Ukrainians, who had been denied their nationhood for centuries: "...freedom is not the<br />

same as independence. Americans will not support those who seek in order to replace a<br />

far-off tyranny with a local despotism. <strong>The</strong>y will not aid those who promote a suicidal<br />

nationalism based upon ethnic hatred." [fn 93] It was an insult the Ukrainians and other<br />

freedom fighters will not soon forget, and it had the benefit of opening the eyes of more<br />

than a few as to what kind of bird this <strong>Bush</strong> really was.<br />

Again <strong>Bush</strong>'s policy was a recipe for destabilization, starvation, and war: he encouraged<br />

the Kremlin to crack down, but offered no economic cooperation, insisting instead on<br />

IMF super-austerity. During the third week after <strong>Bush</strong> had left Moscow, the abortive<br />

putsch of the Group of 8 took place. In the wake of the failed putsch, <strong>Bush</strong> was one of the<br />

last world leaders to announce the restoration of diplomatic relations with the Baltic<br />

states through the sending of an ambassador; <strong>Bush</strong> had delayed for three additional days<br />

in response to an explicit request from Gorbachov. By the time <strong>Bush</strong> had accepted Baltic<br />

freedom, it was September 2. <strong>Bush</strong> clung to Gorbachov long after the latter had in fact<br />

ceased to exist. Gorbachov was gone by the end of 1991, and the alternative rejected by<br />

<strong>Bush</strong> in Kiev turned out to have been the real one.<br />

Soviet policy led the agenda when Major visited <strong>Bush</strong> at Kennebunkport at the end of<br />

August. <strong>The</strong> two Anglo-Saxon champions proposed to offer the former USSR republics<br />

"practical help in converting their economy into one that works," as Major put it. This<br />

translated into accelerating the "special association" of the Soviet Union (and/or its

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