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ogukuo72
03-09-2006, 10:07 PM
Bush damaged by political iceberg
By Matthew Davis
BBC News, Washington
President Bush had sailed full steam ahead into a political iceberg in the shape of the bitter row over the management of US ports by a Dubai-owned company.


Yet at the last minute he found an unexpected seat on a lifeboat.
On Thursday, Dubai Ports World bowed to the ferocious Congressional opposition to its deal to take over the running of six major ports, announcing it would transfer the planned operations to a US entity.
The news came hours after key Republicans broke with the president and voted to block the deal.


For Mr Bush - who had threatened to veto such legislation - DPW's decision means he avoided having to make one of the toughest political choices of his time in office, at a time when his approval ratings are plumbing new lows.


Would he have fought on against prominent members of his own party and public opinion, or would he have given in and accepted defeat with all the loss of authority that would entail?


While he has been handed an exit strategy, he has not dodged the fallout from the row.


'Passion hid facts'

Throughout his five years in office, Mr Bush's strength has been anchored by his standing on matters of national security.




Yet in the space of a few weeks he has found himself cast adrift from his own party and the country on this signature issue.
The whole argument over the ports deal has been highly charged - emotionally and politically.


Some say passions in the debate overwhelmed the facts, and that the facts supported going forward with a deal that some of the most senior defence officials in the US said represented no threat.




But it is a row that has fed on broader concerns among Americans about terrorism, the war in Iraq, illegal immigration and foreign encroachment.
Or as one lawmaker put it: "All things Middle Eastern."


Constituents are said to have inundated Congressional phone lines and mail boxes objecting to the deal. Polls suggested more than two-thirds of Americans thought the president's position was wrong.


Some, especially on the left of the political spectrum, raised uncomfortable questions over the Bush family's ties to the United Arab Emirates.

Blunt accusation

On Capitol Hill, many Republican critics said the administration was "tone deaf" to the politics of the deal.




Just months away from the mid-term elections there was anger that the president's position was allowing Democrats to gain ground on a national security issue - where Republicans are traditionally politically strong.

In a memo distributed to Democratic senators, leading pollster Mark Mellman wrote: "With huge majorities opposing the president's proposal to sell control of US ports to Dubai and the failure of the president's Iraq policy, the Republicans' once-yawning advantage on security issues has been largely neutralised."


The row also came at a time when the president is at odds with Congress on other issues.

On Wednesday Mr Bush bluntly accused lawmakers of "short-changing" New Orleans, saying they had been slow to provide funding for housing and levee repairs.

Republicans in the Senate are also wrestling with how hard to press the White House for more authority over the president's warrantless eavesdropping programme.

'Sophomore mistake'

Politicians opposed to the DPW deal said they wanted more time to study the announcement before deciding whether they were satisfied.

Congressman Pete King, one of the Republicans who have split with the White House to oppose the Dubai company, said only a full break would be acceptable.

"It would have to be an American company with no links to DP World and that would be a tremendous victory", he said.

Whether it is a victory with serious long-term consequences for the authority of President Bush remains to be seen.

Dr James Carafano, a leading defence analyst at the Heritage Foundation, told the BBC: "You take your licks and you fight another day.

"This is not the last hit the administration will take. The last time I checked there were three years left in the term.

"But many people are disappointed that a second term administration has made a sophomore political mistake.

"They really dropped the ball on this, and it is more frustrating because in security terms it is a non-issue."



Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/americas/4791248.stm

Published: 2006/03/09 23:40:59 GMT

© BBC MMVI

I'm not going to comment about this report per se, or the BBC. My views on the BBC is well known.

But I would just like to comment on the fact that despite his unpopularity (approval rating hovering around 40%), George W Bush is hardly acting like a lame-duck president, quite unlike Jimmy Carter in his last year of office. In fact, if you look back over the past few months, it is remarkable how despite all the "crises" that happened to his office, almost one after the other, he had been remarkably successful in getting his way in Congress and around the world.

He got two justices appointed to the Supreme Court, making one of them a chief justice. He wrangled a deal on the Patriot Act. He pushed through diplomatic break throughs with India. He effectively sunk the Kyoto Protocol (a lame and badly thought out idea that deserved an early death) and launched his own carbon reduction initiative that had brought all the major industrial powers in Asia on board. He had stemmed several bipartisan panics over Iraq and continued US military presence there. And so on. Bush continued to act as if he has 70% approval ratings, and continued to push his agenda, and defend his decisions.

This is a remarkable performance.

Mastermind
03-10-2006, 12:18 AM
I have been one of the strongest supporters of President Bush. I have been seriously in heated debates with his detractors since he first ran for office. I donated heavily to his campaigns. I was extroadinarily proud he was my President for almost five years. BUT! He has failed to take charge of our borders in a time of unprecidented national danger. He has dumped almost half a trillion dollars into Iraq and Afghanistan with no apparent hope of ending the terrorist enclaves within...I doubt very seriously his "strategery" there has any goal what-so-ever other than to keep the terrorists busy "not in America". His wobbly response to Iran has been laughable. His handling of the Palestinian Hammas episode is simply ludicrous. Yes, he managed to get two SCOTUS judges named and installed...that was going to happen anyway...but, his completely lame nomination of Myers stunned me it was so out of left field. The utter lack of any kind of energy policy at this time when Arabs are making trillions off of us and weakening our econmy by the gallon makes me shudder. The inept handling of the Chinese seems to resemble a bird's nest of a diplomacy and don't even mention North Korea. I can take Katrina and NO in stride...that place was a disaster before the hurrican ever hit. But, the devotion he made to sending so much military and economic aid to the Tsunami victims really irked me...most of the wet ones were MUSLIMS! And now they threaten us if we stop sending aid.

No...This DPW deal really took the icing off the cake for me. And, really that deal does not matter if it is "considered by militray people as not harmful to security" or not. DPW is ARAB...ARAB means Muslim and Muslim means terrorist and our ports are about as weak a point as we have... It would be like selling the Port of NY to the Todt organization in 1944..."Well, afterall, they really are well organized...and they have so many Polish workers." Bull S417! I no longer think Bush is the "Man" I once thought he was. If Rove really is Bush's Brain, then he is Bush's brain on drugs.

I'm haulin' now for the next Republican President and hoping we can do better with him. Thank God Bush is not Gore or Kerry...that's about all the good I can say about Bush at this time.