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.

successor states) with the IMF, "with a view to full membership in due course for those<br />

who qualify" by virtue of their adoption of the disastrous Polish model. <strong>Bush</strong> urged<br />

Americans to wait "until the dust settles" and until "there are more cards on the table." "I<br />

got incidentally turned in for being testy," complained <strong>Bush</strong> about comment on his<br />

previous remarks stressing indifference to personnel changes in Moscow. "And I'm<br />

wondering what we're going to do for an encore next August, John," added <strong>Bush</strong>,<br />

"because last year, as you know, it was the Gulf." [fn 94]<br />

But for <strong>George</strong> <strong>Bush</strong>, the essence of the postwar months of 1991 was a succession of<br />

personal triumphs, a succession which he hoped to extend all the way to the 1992<br />

election. In mid-May, Queen Elizabeth II visited Washington in the context of a tour of<br />

several American cities. In an event which marked a new step in the moral degeneracy of<br />

the United States, Elizabeth Mountbatten-Windsor, lineal descendant of the hated <strong>George</strong><br />

III of Hannover, became the first monarch of the United Kingdom ever to address a joint<br />

session of the Congress. Elizabeth spoke with the cynical hypocrisy which is the hallmark<br />

of Anglo-American propaganda. She portrayed Britain and the United States as united by<br />

the rejection of Mao's old dictum that political power "grows out of the barrel of a gun."<br />

She alleged that the spontaneous reaction of both Britain and the United States to the<br />

Kuwait crisis was the same, that it represented "an outrage to be reversed, both for the<br />

people of Kuwait and for the sake of the principle that naked aggression should not<br />

prevail." "Our views were identical and so were our responses," said Elizabeth, paying<br />

tribute to <strong>Bush</strong>. She also seemed to hint at open-ended committments in the Gulf with her<br />

line that "unfortunately, experience shows that great enterprises seldom end with a tidy<br />

and satisfactory flourish." One who preserved his honor by boycotting this session was<br />

Congressman Gus Savage, who called Elizabeth "the Queen of colonialism," presiding<br />

over an exploited empire in the third world. <strong>Bush</strong> basked in the praise directed to the<br />

leader of the free world, and for his part raised a few eyebrows by calling Britain "the<br />

mother country." <strong>Bush</strong>'s enjoyment was marred by the exhaustion brought on by his<br />

thyroid problems. And not everyone appreciated Elizabeth: one Washington Post writer<br />

stirred up the Anglophiles by describing her as "this fusty cartoon, this upholstered relic<br />

in white gloves, this corgi-button defender of an ill-kept faith." [fn 95]<br />

In early June, there was the triumph accorded to General Schwarzkopf for the Gulf war.<br />

<strong>Bush</strong> viewed the parade and aircraft flyover from a reviewing stand set up in front of the<br />

White House, and met Schwarzkopf personally when he arrived. In the wake of the war,<br />

said <strong>Bush</strong>, "there is a new and wonderful feeling in America." In the Roman triumphs,<br />

the victorious general was crowned with bay leaves, and dressed in a purple toga<br />

embossed with golden stars. He also received the services of a slave who persistently<br />

reminded him that he was mortal, and that all glory was fleeting. <strong>Bush</strong> would have<br />

benefitted from the services of such a slave on that June 8. [fn 96]<br />

<strong>The</strong> high tide of <strong>Bush</strong>'s megalomania as the emperor of the new world order was perhaps<br />

reached at the United Nations in September. It was an elaboration of the previous year's<br />

oration on the New World Order. First, <strong>Bush</strong> made clear what the developing sector<br />

could expect in the postwar world: "<strong>The</strong> world has learned that free markets provide<br />

levels of prosperity, growth, and happiness that centrally planned economies can never

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

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!