By William Rivers Pitt
June 18, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" - I thought it was over in
September 2019, when Donald Trump and his third national
security adviser, the execrable John Bolton, got into a
“You’re Fired/I Quit!”
fight on the front page of all the papers. “Maybe
he’s really gone now,” I thought wistfully of Bolton,
the war-humping neoconservative ghoul who has haunted
U.S. foreign policy in one form or another since the
Reagan administration, lo these 40 long years.
No such luck. Now he has a book poised for release
that is allegedly filled with all the scurrilous details
on the Ukraine debacle that
he should have shared under oath before Rep. Adam
Schiff’s impeachment hearings. He didn’t, Trump was
acquitted, and now the president has filed suit to upend
Bolton’s publication party.
Of course, Trump is proceeding in perfect Trumpian
style. Block the book’s release outright? Nah, go for
the loot instead. “The lawsuit filed on Tuesday gestured
at blocking publication, but it seemed more squarely
focused on seizing Mr. Bolton’s profits,”
reports The New York Times. “Filed against
Mr. Bolton — not Simon & Schuster — it asked for the
court to take control of the money he made from the
book.”
As I said: Perfect.
Trump brought Bolton on in the first place for a
variety of reasons, not the least of which was
to show Fox News that he was a foreign
policy tough guy. Bolton has made a career out of
promoting the killing of people in wars and other
profitable enterprises — though he did avoid his own
opportunity to see war first-hand in Vietnam (a conflict
he of course supported)
because he “had no desire to die in a Southeast
Asian rice paddy.”
Are You Tired Of
The Lies And
Non-Stop Propaganda?
|
The friction began almost immediately, though for
a time it seemed
Bolton would get the war with Iran he has
yearned for since before the Iran-Contra scandal,
another lethal endeavor with his
fingerprints on it. Soon enough, however, it
became clear to Bolton that Trump was unwilling to
turn Tehran and Pyongyang into smoldering craters.
The falling out between them was as inevitable as
the tide, and Bolton took his notoriously copious
notes and retreated into (alas) temporary obscurity.
Bolton, like male pattern baldness, is incredibly
difficult to be rid of. He didn’t have an active hand in
the foreign policy of the Obama administration, but he
was there all the same. His
Project for a New American Century (PNAC) agenda,
fully adopted by
George W. Bush and Dick Cheney, turned the
smoldering kindling of the Middle East into a pillar of
fire that rained soot on Obama from the day he took
office to the day he left. Bolton wasn’t there, but
yeah, he was there, and the dead piled up like cordwood.
Before Obama, there was Bush and WMD in Iraq, and
Bolton’s tireless efforts to
manipulate and obfuscate the weapons data so he
could get the region-wide war he and his
PNAC buddies had always wanted. It was in this
context that perhaps the most notorious Bolton story,
until recently unreported in English, unfolded.
In his charge toward war in Iraq, Bolton sought to
clear the field of those who could credibly dispute his
baseless WMD claims. One such was José Bustani, a
Brazilian diplomat who was head of the Organization for
the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW), a 145-nation
body dedicated to thwarting the acquisition and spread
of such deadly weapons. Bustani was widely respected,
and had just been unanimously re-elected to his post
when Bolton came calling.
Bustani was not buying what the Bush administration
was peddling on Iraq, so Bolton arrived at OPCW
headquarters in the Hague in March 2002 with a pointed
message. According to a
detailed report by The Intercept, Bolton
told Bustani, “Cheney wants you out. We can’t accept
your management style. You have 24 hours to leave the
organization, and if you don’t comply with this decision
by Washington, we have ways to retaliate against you. We
know where your kids live. You have two sons in New
York.”
So, yeah, let’s all line up to buy a book written by
that guy. Few thought anyone would come along
to give the
rampant bloodlust of Henry Kissinger a run for its
money, but here we are. In the U.S., war criminals write
books, go on television and never see the inside of a
courtroom. Bolton continues the vicious tradition.
In April of 2005, former State Department
intelligence chief Carl Ford
told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee that
Bolton was “a quintessential kiss-up, kick-down kind of
guy. He’s got a bigger kick, and it gets bigger and
stronger the further down the bureaucracy he’s kicking.
And he stands out. I don’t have any other example to
give you of someone who acts this way.”
That about sums it up. Now, Bolton wants to kick
Trump while he’s down, and Trump is kicking back by
trying to grab Bolton’s money. Two of the worst people
ever to foul the skin of the Earth are at each other’s
throats, and all I want for Christmas is a meteor to
make it stop.
There is a line credited to Sun Tzu that reads, “If
you wait by the river long enough, the bodies of your
enemies will float by.”
I’m still waiting.
William Rivers Pitt is a senior
editor and lead columnist at Truthout.
He is also a New York Times and
internationally bestselling author of three books:
War on Iraq: What Team Bush Doesn’t Want You to Know,
The Greatest Sedition Is Silence and
House of Ill Repute: Reflections on War, Lies, and
America’s Ravaged Reputation. His fourth
book,
The Mass Destruction of Iraq: Why It Is Happening,
and Who Is Responsible, co-written with
Dahr Jamail, is available now on Amazon. He
lives and works in New Hampshire. - -
"Source"
-
Post your comment below