Family Feud
by Chris Floyd
by Chris Floyd
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Bush
Initiates Iraq Policy Review Separate From Baker Group's (Washington
Post)
Excerpt:
President Bush formally launched a sweeping internal review of
Iraq policy yesterday, pulling together studies underway by various
government agencies, according to U.S. officials. The initiative
parallels the effort by the bipartisan Iraq Study Group to salvage
U.S. policy in Iraq, develop an exit strategy and protect long-term
U.S. interests in the region
The White House's decision changes
the dynamics of what happens next to U.S. policy deliberations.
The administration will have its own working document as well
as recommendations from an independent bipartisan commission to
consider as it struggles to prevent further deterioration in Iraq.
When I saw
the Newsweek cover featuring Big Daddy Bush muscling toward
the front with a diminished little Dubya skulking in the background,
my first thought was: How is Junior going to react to this? Bush
II's resentment toward his father is well-known a resentment
no doubt compounded by his lifelong, abject dependence on Daddy's
financial and political pull and I knew that Little Bush
would not simply accept this media humiliation and move on.
Because for
all his vaunted (and totally mendacious) "unconcern" with
opinion polls and popularity ("Ah just do whut muh gut tells
me is right"), Little Bush is actually one of the most vain
and insecure men ever to sit in the White House; only Nixon can
match him in this regard. Why else would he need to have his authority
bolstered in such ludicrous ways such as all those little
"Commander-in-Chief" and "President of the United
States" tags embossed onto his fancy quasi-military jackets
and his running gear and belt-buckles and boots and probably
his toilet paper as well? At every turn, he feels the anxious need
to remind others, and himself, that he really is the president,
he's the decider, he's the commander: "See, it says so right
here on muh jacket!" (Meanwhile, the exaggerated swagger he
affects a labored caricature of stereotypical masculinity
bespeaks other sorts of insecurities prowling in the presidential
psyche, but we won't go into that here.)
Bush has also
taken every opportunity during his tenure to diminish, downplay
or even belittle his father's personal influence and political record.
He evinces far more personal animosity toward his father than, say,
Bill Clinton, his supposed political bête noire. Thus the
Newsweek cover was probably a greater humiliation for Bush
than the election results themselves. Indeed, the latter only confirmed
his contempt for the American people, as he made clear in his post-election
press conference with his casual put-down of voters: "I thought
when it was all said and done, the American people would understand
the importance of taxes and the importance of security." The
not-so-subtle implication here is that the American people were
too stupid to understand how good they've got it under his glorious
reign.
Bush's reaction
to the Newsweek cover and the whole gamut of high-profile
media stories pushing the line that Daddy's men are moving in to
take over the government and rescue Junior from the mess he's made
was not long in coming: just a week after the election. The
Washington Post nailed it then very curiously buried it on
page 16, perhaps because it contradicts the new conventional wisdom
about the return of Bush I (the ditheringly incompetent, deeply
corrupt, sinister covert operator suddenly transformed into a wise,
moderate, accomplished elder statesman) and the Baker-Gates salvage
operation.
What we are
seeing today with Bush II's petulant pushback against the Baker
Commission is part of what was earlier described here as a "war
in Heaven" an ongoing move by parts of the American
Establishment to rein in the worst excesses of the Bush Faction
before they kill the golden goose that keeps the elite ensconced
in power and privilege. As I noted here in September (in a look
at Bob Woodward's latest book):
His new book,
State
of Denial, is a stinging attack on the Bush-Cheney Faction
and the presence of "Bandar Bush," the Saudi royal,
and Scowcroft, the Bush Senior courtier, among Woodward's main
sources tells us that Daddy Bush has reverted back to the old-line,
white-bread, "Eastern Establishment" in a move against
the Sunbelt oil men, crank pseudo-Christians and Nixonian diehards
like Cheney and Rumsfeld that Junior Bush has thrown in with
.
Bush Junior
is a true scion of the predatory elite that has served as
America's aristocracy for generations...And that's why it will
never come to impeachment or resignation [as it did with the lowborn
bagman, Richard Nixon]; such things would reflect too badly on
the elite itself, not least on Daddy Bush, one of its leading
lights. But some strong shots across the bow, some public humiliation,
something to get Bush and Cheney to alter the disastrous course
in Iraq that's fair game, and that's what we're seeing
today from some of the old-line Establishment factions.
(Note: is
not the destruction of constitutional liberties that concerns
these factions and brings them out against Bush, of course. They
could care less about that in fact, it's yet another good
argument to them for keeping the Bush Faction in power, albeit
chastened somewhat on the military aggression front. Not that
these elite players don't hold the same ideal of American domination
of global affairs that drives the Bush Faction; they do, in spades.
But they recognize that after a certain point you get more buck
for less bang. As the Emperor Tiberius used to tell his satraps
when he sent them out to govern the conquered lands: "I want
my sheep shorn, not shaved.")
For
make no mistake: what we are seeing is a "war in heaven,"
an intramural struggle between elites, a falling out among thieves,
and, literally, a family quarrel in the imperial house. It has
nothing to do with the welfare of the American people, or the
restoration of democracy. The "consent of the governed"
will play no part in how the affairs of the state are finally
ordered by the exalted ones.
Little Bush's
suddenly conceived internal Iraq policy review is just another salvo
in this ongoing struggle. The Cheney militarists will certainly
not give up without a fight, even after the "Gray Hawk Down"
disaster of Rumsfeld's resignation. Bush Junior will certainly not
keep swallowing Daddy's cod liver oil without throwing a fit now
and then. American policy will continue to drift back and forth
between Junior's hyper-aggressive corporatist militarism and Daddy's
slightly less aggressive corporatist militarism (which is pretty
much the default "bipartisan" foreign policy of the past
60 years).
The comforting
storyline that the "grownups" are stepping in to set things
to right is the usual dangerous, reductive nonsense of the corporate
media worldview. Daddy's men and Junior's men are all part of the
same political network (or crime family, if you prefer). There may
be power struggles between them over certain issues, personality
conflicts, policy disagreements, but they are all ultimately working
for the same mutual interest: their own aggrandizement (in various
forms power, honors, riches, ideological triumph, etc.).
The "war
in heaven" is real, but there will be no actual losers amongst
the combatants. Loss of face is the worst punishment the vanquished
will endure; even if they're booted from public office, like Donald
Rumsfeld, they simply return to their private world of vast personal
fortunes, corporate directorships, and backroom sway. Until the
political winds shift again, and they're back in the saddle once
more like Robert Gates, returning to office 14 years after
his shadowy service for Reagan and Bush; or indeed, like Rumsfeld
himself, who went a quarter of a century without official title
between his Nixon-Ford tenure and his restoration by Junior Bush.
The profitable, bloodsoaked game goes on, regardless of elections
and internal squabbles.
Where does
that leave the rest of us? Not as citizens in control of our political
fate, but more like Kremlinologists, trying to discern through opaque
and oblique signs what is really going on with our masters. Or like
the "birds i' the cage" of King Lear's vision, prisoners
who:
hear
poor rogues
Talk of court news; and we'll talk with them too,
Who loses and who wins; who's in, who's out;
And take upon us the mystery of things,
As if we were God's spies: and we'll wear out,
In a wall'd prison, packs and sects of great ones,
That ebb and flow by the moon. ***
November
16, 2006
Chris
Floyd [send him mail]
is the author of Empire
Burlesque: The Secret History of the Bush Regime.
Copyright
© 2006 Chris Floyd
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