'Yesterday's Man' Leaves Europe
President Bush concluded
his farewell journey through Europe in Belfast, Northern Ireland
yesterday with attempts at rapprochement with leaders throughout the
continent. "[L]ots
has changed"
since 2003, London School of Economics international relations
professor Michael Cox noted. While Bush enjoyed warmer
relations with Germany, Italy, and France -- mainly due to leadership
changes in those countries -- most Europeans, like many Americans, are
suffering from "Bush
fatigue," as they are looking
forward to the next president
and "will be glad
to see the back" of Bush.
Anti-American sentiment in
Europe runs high as a result of Bush's leadership. A
recent poll
by London's Daily Telegraph newspaper found that "[m]ore people in
France, Germany and Britain view the United States as a 'force
for evil' than good in the
world." And despite Bush's seeming
friendly relationship with conservative German Chancellor Angela
Merkel, Germany's leading news source Der Spiegel reported last week
that "senior politicians from Merkel's ruling grand coalition as well
as from opposition parties have done away with diplomatic
niceties, seizing on Bush's
farewell visit to express their
aversion to the president who remains vilified in Germany for launching
the Iraq war."
CAN'T
BE BOTHERED TO BOO: Because
of his rejection of the
Kyoto Protocol and other multilateral measures, Bush was a "popular
villain" to many Europeans even
before the Iraq war, which
ultimately caused his popularity there to bottom out. Though Bush was
met with "boisterous
demonstrations" when he first
visited Slovenia in 2001, "only a few
small, loosely organized protests were planned" when he arrived there
last week for the European Union summit, a reflection of the
"deep-seated apathy for a president increasingly viewed as yesterday's
man." Many Slovenes "expressed a
growing disinterest in Bush,
coupled with a keen interest in who will replace him at the White
House." In Germany, no one "bothered to keep a six-year tradition alive
by organizing" to protest Bush. "Bush is not
even popular in the role of the
enemy anymore," wrote Der
Tagesspiegel newspaper. Rome "braced
for violent protests against
Bush, with 10,000 police mobilized and
hundreds of prisoners being moved out of the Regina Coeli prison to
make room for arrested demonstrators." Yet as Bush's arrival in Italy
came and went, Rome's prison cells "remained
empty" as the protests "numbered
no more
than 2,000 people, most of whom went home when it began to rain." A
respectable but relatively
small crowed turned out in Paris
for demonstrations and across the
English Channel, about 2,500 demonstrators gathered in London to
greet Bush, a far cry from the "hundreds
of thousands who marched down
Whitehall during his state visit in
2003."
REBUILDING
THE ALLIANCE: Before
Bush left for Europe, National Security Adviser Stephen Hadley played
down any expectations that Bush would produce any "breakthroughs"
with his European counterparts: "I don't think you're going to see dramatic
announcements on this trip,"
Hadley noted. While reality played out
much of Hadley's prediction, some European leaders appeared agreeable
on some major issues, indicating the possibility of a stronger and more
effective post-Bush trans-Atlantic partnership. Merkel,
Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, and French President Nicolas
Sarkozy pledged unity in confronting Iran's nuclear program, while
British Prime Minister Gordon Brown went a step further agreeing to
tighten sanctions on Iran and urging his EU partners to do the
same. However, the Iranian government preempted any increased
sanctions by
moving $75 billion in assets "from Western financial institutions to
banks in Iran and Asia." But
Brown also pledged to increase
Britain's troop level in Afghanistan
with "about 230 engineers, logistical
staff and military trainers"
and said the U.K. would
keep most of the its 4,500 troops in southern Iraq "until the situation
is stable
enough to withdraw them." While
Brown appears to have acquiesced to
Bush's recent demand that "there should be no
definitive timetable" for
withdrawal from Iraq, the U.K. was expected
to cut its troop levels there to just a few hundred by this time next
year.
A
'SPECIAL RELATIONSHIP' DAMAGED: In
an interview with the Times of London at the outset of his trip, Bush
admitted "that his gun-slinging rhetoric made the world believe that he
was a 'guy
really anxious for war' in
Iraq," expressing "regret at the bitter
divisions over the war." The Times reported that Bush now aims
"to
leave his successor a legacy of international diplomacy for tackling
Iran." Yet Bush's attempt to heal old wounds seemed to fall on deaf
ears. The London Independent issued a scathing
editorial today reflecting on
Bush's visit and his presidency:
"[P]erhaps Mr. Bush's most significant legacy, as far as Britain is
concerned, will be the destruction of the instinctive trust of America
and its leaders that once prevailed here. It is no exaggeration to say
that Mr. Bush has done more damage to relations between our two nations
than any president in living memory. This rupture is not an accident of
circumstance; there are no impersonal forces of history to blame. This
sorry state of affairs is the consequence of the actions of a single
leader and his small coterie of advisers. ... And whatever the future
holds for transatlantic relations, there will be very few in this
country who watched President Bush's plane depart yesterday without a
feeling of profound relief that the end of this disastrous presidency
is finally in sight."
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After last month's landmark decision striking down a ban on gay marriage in California, county clerks around the state "began issuing marriage licenses to same-sex couples Monday at 5:01 p.m."
VIRGINIA: "Civic and social organizations are teaming with Virginia Gov. Timothy M. Kaine to try to add thousands of nonviolent offenders to the voting rolls in time for the November election."
NEW JERSEY: "Gov. Jon Corzine and legislative leaders Monday agreed on a $32.8 billion state budget that the governor said will include 'unprecedented' spending cuts."
LOUISIANA: A "storm surge could pour over levees in New Orleans if a strong Category 2 or higher hurricane strikes the city, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration said Monday."
THINK
PROGRESS: Fox anchor falsely
claims Iranian missile could possibly
"hit some military installations" in the United States.
WONK
ROOM: Afghanistan jailbreak
partially the result of an
under-resourced international effort.
DAILY
DISH: Anti-gay marriage ad from
the Family Research Council reads,
"Enjoy your Father's Day. It might be your last."
GLENN
GREENWALD: John Yoo's ongoing
falsehoods in service of limitless
government power.
"We took an extremely strongly pro-Geneva Convention position in the
Pentagon."
-- Iraq war architect Doug Feith, 4/24/08
VERSUS
"[O]fficials in the office of then-Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld
started to research the use of waterboarding, stress positions, sensory
deprivation and other practices in July 2002."
-- Washington Post, 6/17/08








