The
tributes to former
President George H.W. Bush, who died on Friday, November
30, 2018,
aged 94, have been pouring in from all sides of the political
spectrum. He was a man “of the highest character,” said
his eldest son and fellow former president, George W. Bush. “He
loved America and served with character, class, and integrity,”
tweeted former U.S. Attorney and #Resistance icon Preet Bharara.
According to another former president, Barack
Obama,
Bush’s life was “a testament to the notion that public
service is a noble, joyous calling. And he did tremendous good along
the journey.” Apple boss Tim Cook said:
“We have lost a great American.”
In
the age of Donald Trump, it isn’t difficult for hagiographers
of the late Bush Sr. to paint a picture of him as a great patriot and
pragmatist; a president who governed with “class” and
“integrity.” It is true that the former president refused
to vote for Trump in 2016, calling him a “blowhard,”
and that he eschewed the white nationalist, “alt-right,”
conspiratorial politics that has come to define the modern Republican
Party. He helped end the Cold War without, as Obama said,
“firing a shot.” He spent his life serving his country —
from the military to Congress to the United Nations to the CIA to the
White House. And, by all accounts, he was also a beloved grandfather
and great-grandfather to his 17
grandkids and eight great-grandkids.
Nevertheless,
he was a public,
not a private, figure
— one of only 44 men to have ever served as president of the
United States. We cannot, therefore, allow his actual record in
office to be beautified in such a brazen way. “When a political
leader dies, it is irresponsible in the extreme to demand that only
praise be permitted but not criticisms,” as my colleague Glenn
Greenwald has argued,
because it leads to “false history and a propagandistic
whitewashing of bad acts.” The inconvenient truth is that the
presidency of George Herbert Walker Bush had far more in common with
the recognizably belligerent, corrupt, and right-wing Republican
figures who came after him — his son George W. and the current
orange-faced incumbent — than much of the political and media
classes might have you believe.
Consider:
He
ran a racist election campaign.
The name of Willie
Horton
should forever be associated with Bush’s 1988 presidential bid.
Horton, who was serving a life sentence for murder in Massachusetts —
where Bush’s Democratic opponent, Michael Dukakis, was governor
— had fled a weekend furlough program and raped a Maryland
woman. A notorious television ad called “Weekend
Passes,”
released by a political action committee with ties to the Bush
campaign, made clear to viewers that Horton was black and his victim
was white.
As
Bush campaign director Lee Atwater bragged,
“By the time we’re finished, they’re going to
wonder whether Willie Horton is Dukakis’s running mate.”
Bush himself was quick to dismiss
accusations of racism as “absolutely ridiculous,” yet it
was clear at the time — even to right-wing Republican
operatives such as Roger Stone, now a close ally of Trump —
that the ad had crossed a line. “You and George Bush will wear
that to your grave,” Stone complained
to Atwater. “It’s a racist ad. … You’re
going to regret it.”
Stone
was right about Atwater, who on his deathbed apologized
for using Horton against Dukakis. But Bush never did.
He
made a dishonest case for war.
Thirteen years before George W. Bush lied about
weapons of mass destruction to justify his invasion and occupation of
Iraq, his father made his own set of false claims to justify the
aerial bombardment of that same country. The first Gulf War, as an
investigation by journalist Joshua Holland concluded,
“was sold on a mountain of war propaganda.”
For
a start, Bush told the American public that Iraq had invaded Kuwait
“without
provocation or warning.”
What he omitted to mention was that the U.S. ambassador to Iraq,
April Glaspie, had given an effective
green light
to Saddam Hussein, telling
him in July 1990, a week before his invasion, “[W]e have no
opinion on the Arab-Arab conflicts, like your border disagreement
with Kuwait.”
Then
there is the fabrication of intelligence. Bush deployed U.S. troops
to the Gulf in August 1990 and claimed
that he was doing so in order “to assist the Saudi Arabian
Government in the defense of its homeland.” As Scott Peterson
wrote
in the Christian Science Monitor in 2002, “Citing top-secret
satellite images, Pentagon officials estimated … that up to
250,000 Iraqi troops and 1,500 tanks stood on the border, threatening
the key U.S. oil supplier.”
Yet
when reporter Jean Heller of the St. Petersburg Times acquired her
own commercial satellite images of the Saudi border, she found no
signs of Iraqi forces; only an empty desert. “It was a pretty
serious fib,” Heller told Peterson,
adding: “That [Iraqi buildup] was the whole justification for
Bush sending troops in there, and it just didn’t exist.”
He
committed war crimes.
Under Bush Sr., the U.S. dropped a whopping 88,500
tons of bombs
on Iraq and Iraqi-occupied Kuwait, many of which resulted in horrific
civilian casualties. In February 1991, for example, a U.S. airstrike
on an air-raid shelter in the Amiriyah neighborhood of Baghdad killed
at least 408
Iraqi civilians.
According to Human
Rights Watch,
the Pentagon knew the Amiriyah facility had been used as a civil
defense shelter during the Iran-Iraq war and yet had attacked without
warning. It was, concluded HRW, “a serious violation of the
laws of war.”
U.S.
bombs also destroyed
essential Iraqi civilian infrastructure — from
electricity-generating and water-treatment facilities to
food-processing plants and flour mills. This was no accident. As
Barton Gellman of the Washington Post reported
in June 1991: “Some targets, especially late in the war, were
bombed primarily to create postwar leverage over Iraq, not to
influence the course of the conflict itself. Planners now say their
intent was to destroy or damage valuable facilities that Baghdad
could not repair without foreign assistance. … Because of
these goals, damage to civilian structures and interests, invariably
described by briefers during the war as ‘collateral’ and
unintended, was sometimes neither.”
Got
that? The Bush administration deliberately targeted civilian
infrastructure for “leverage” over Saddam Hussein. How is
this not terrorism? As a Harvard public health team concluded
in June 1991, less than four months after the end of the war, the
destruction of Iraqi infrastructure had resulted in acute
malnutrition and “epidemic” levels of cholera and
typhoid.
By
January 1992, Beth Osborne Daponte, a demographer with the U.S.
Census Bureau, was
estimating
that Bush’s Gulf War had caused the deaths of 158,000 Iraqis,
including 13,000 immediate civilian deaths and 70,000 deaths from the
damage done to electricity and sewage treatment plants. Daponte’s
numbers contradicted the Bush administration’s, and she was
threatened by her superiors with dismissal for releasing “false
information.”
(Sound familiar?)
He
refused to cooperate with a special counsel.
The Iran-Contra
affair,
in which the United States traded missiles for Americans hostages in
Iran, and used the proceeds of those arms sales to fund Contra rebels
in Nicaragua, did much to undermine the presidency of Ronald Reagan.
Yet his vice president’s involvement in that controversial
affair has garnered far less attention. “The criminal
investigation of Bush was regrettably incomplete,” wrote
Special Counsel Lawrence Walsh, a former deputy attorney general in
the Eisenhower administration, in his final
report on the Iran-Contra affair
in August 1993.
Why?
Because Bush, who was “fully aware of the Iran arms sale,”
according to the special counsel, failed to hand over a diary
“containing contemporaneous notes relevant to Iran/contra”
and refused to be interviewed in the later stages of the
investigation. In the final days of his presidency, Bush even issued
pardons
to six defendants in the Iran-Contra affair, including former Defense
Secretary Caspar
Weinberger
— on the eve of Weinberger’s trial for perjury and
obstruction of justice. “The Weinberger pardon,” Walsh
pointedly noted, “marked the first time a president ever
pardoned someone in whose trial he might have been called as a
witness, because the president was knowledgeable of factual events
underlying the case.” An angry Walsh accused
Bush
of “misconduct” and helping to complete “the
Iran-contra cover-up.”
Sounds
like a Trumpian case of obstruction of justice, doesn’t it?
He
escalated the racist war on drugs.
In September 1989, in a televised
addressto
the nation from the Oval Office, Bush held up a bag of crack cocaine,
which he said had been “seized a few days ago in a park across
the street from the White House . … It could easily have been
heroin or PCP.”
Yet
a Washington
Post investigation
later that month revealed that federal agents had “lured”
the drug dealer to Lafayette Park so that they could make an
“undercover crack buy in a park better known for its location
across Pennsylvania Avenue from the White House than for illegal drug
activity” (the dealer didn’t know where the White House
was and even asked the agents for directions). Bush cynically used
this prop — the bag of crack — to call for a $1.5 billion
increase in spending on the drug war, declaiming: “We need more
prisons, more jails, more courts, more prosecutors.”
The
result?
“Millions of Americans were incarcerated, hundreds of billions
of dollars wasted, and hundreds of thousands of human beings allowed
to die of AIDS — all in the name of a ‘war on drugs’
that did nothing to reduce drug abuse,” pointed out Ethan
Nadelmann,
founder of the Drug Policy Alliance, in 2014. Bush, he argued, “put
ideology and politics above science and health.” Today, even
leading Republicans, such as Chris
Christie
and Rand
Paul,
agree that the war on drugs, ramped up by Bush during his four years
in the White House, has been a dismal and racist failure.
He
groped women.
Since the start of the #MeToo movement, in late 2017, at least eight
different women
have come forward with claims that the former president groped them,
in most cases while they were posing for photos with him. One of
them, Roslyn Corrigan, told
Time magazine
that Bush had touched her inappropriately in 2003, when she was just
16. “I was a child,” she said. The former president was
79. Bush’s spokesperson offered this defense
of his boss in October 2017: “At age 93, President Bush has
been confined to a wheelchair for roughly five years, so his arm
falls on the lower waist of people with whom he takes pictures.”
Yet, as Time noted,
“Bush was standing upright in 2003 when he met Corrigan.”
Facts
matter. The 41st president of the United States was not the last
Republican moderate or a throwback to an imagined age of conservative
decency and civility; he engaged in race baiting, obstruction of
justice, and war crimes. He had much more in common with the two
Republican presidents who came after him than his current crop of
fans would like us to believe.
This commentary was originally published by The Intercept
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