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'Bush likes war, makes and creates war' - (Sentiment abroad)
Express India ^ | Reuters

Posted on 08/30/2004 1:28:47 PM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife

Bush bashing is more rare in Eastern Europe.

Pro-American feeling is traditionally stronger on that side of the continent due to Washington's role in the defeat of communism and heavy immigration to the United States.

London, August 30: President George W. Bush is ill and goes to hospital.

Doctor: "Open your mouth and say a-a-a-a-a."

Bush: "What, at the same time?"

It's a typically wry Russian joke, but it could have come from almost anywhere around Europe where the US leader's intellect is a favourite topic for satire.

Add to that the widely believed caricature of Bush as a trigger-happy global cowboy, and it's perhaps not hard to understand why he provokes so much enmity in the old world.

Indeed, among US Presidents, only Richard Nixon – of Watergate notoriety -- comes close to rivaling Bush for the unpopularity stakes in Europe.

"We Europeans are extremely negative about him," said Anders Mellbourn, director of the Swedish Institute of International Affairs. "There is overwhelming support for (Bush's Democratic party rival John) Kerry among people in general."

Bush's Republican party, meeting at a New York convention this week, is upbeat over a flurry of new polls showing him gaining ground and slightly leading Kerry, a senator from Massachusetts. But the mood in much of Europe is something else.

Anti-war countries France and Germany, in particular, are still smarting at their bitter spat with Bush over Iraq.

Bush is something of a national hate figure in Germany where a recent Allen Bach Institute poll found that 66 percent of people have a bad opinion of the White House incumbent.

In France, the Reseau Voltaire think-tank exercised its wit against Bush last year by issuing a spoof deck of cards in a riposte to the US pack of "most wanted" Iraqi leaders.

As King of Diamonds -- the suit chosen to represent economic power in the US administration -- Bush is described as "head of a baseball club ... designated President of the United States by friends of his father at the Supreme Court".

Bush LIKES WAR

On trips to Europe, Bush has been dogged by protest in contrast with often-warm receptions for predecessor Bill Clinton. Bush's tough-talking, folksy style may build the confidence of his countrymen post-9/11, but not in Europe.

In Rome, angry scribbles painted during his June visit still seem to capture the mood of many Italians rooting for a November election defeat for Bush. "Go home Bush," reads large, black graffiti under a downtown bridge, while pictures of Bush's face crossed out with an X stain walls elsewhere.

Bush likes war. He makes and creates war when there wouldn't be any need," student Silvia Brogi, 20, said.

There were also protests when Bush went to France for the D-Day anniversary in June and Ireland for a US-EU summit.

In Ireland, where past US leaders from John F. Kennedy to Clinton have been feted with almost religious fervor, Dublin council even raised white protest flags along the River Liffey.

"If there is a concern, it is not just the Iraq war, it is the notion that America has become an empire. It's a fear the Irish share with the western Europeans," said Professor Liam Kennedy of the Clinton Institute for American Studies.

While the war split Europeans, disgust at the prisoner abuse in Abu Ghraib jail was universal and further tainted Bush.

Widespread outrage at the Guantanamo Bay prison for terrorist suspects, perceptions of a pro-Israeli posture by Washington and the failure to support the Kyoto environmental treaty have fuelled anti-Bush feeling.

His verbal gaffes, Texas roots and heart-on-the-sleeve religious views also go down badly among many.

Even Bush's closest European friends are aware of the risk they run by association. Aides for Prime Minister Tony Blair, Bush's most stalwart ally, know media images of their boss side-by-side with Bush hurt his ratings.

Eastern Europeans

Bush bashing is more rare in Eastern Europe.

Pro-American feeling is traditionally stronger on that side of the continent due to Washington's role in the defeat of communism and heavy immigration to the United States.

In Poland, Bush's support has dropped from 61 percent last year to 38 per cent due to Iraq, according to one poll. But that is higher than the 36 per cent who oppose him and still makes him one of the most popular foreign politicians.

While Western Europe's elite may sneer at Bush, Russia’s elite take a different view, according to Masha Lipman, a political writer at Moscow's Carnegie Institute.

"The general assumption among elites is that Republicans are preferable to the Democrats as they didn't mess with Russia's internal affairs," she said.

Despite Europe's misgivings over Bush, most governmentsexpect to be able to manage if he wins in November.

Some even hope to turn past problems to their advantage.

"It's almost like America is courting us," one senior German government official said recently of US efforts to improve ties. "We will be able to work with this government just fine, if it stays in office."


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Front Page News; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: bush; election; europe
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To: -=[_Super_Secret_Agent_]=-

Strange, I hear a lot of the same crap coming our of Ottawa. I do believe it has something to do with the socialist government of Canada as well.


21 posted on 08/30/2004 2:12:57 PM PDT by CWOJackson
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To: Cincinatus' Wife
Cincy, I am so tired of these idiots I could scream...

[ Rant on! ]

We forget so easily- in days gone by, there were other Weapons of Mass Destruction besides the ones we talk about today.
They were called machine guns, and in the first World War, they scythed down row after row of soldiers whose commanders were mired in the tactics of yesterday. Men died by the multiple thousands nad rotted where they fell.

Fast-forward a few years, to the days when totalitarians walked the world, right before World War Two.

Their men and minions carried submachineguns, and their citizens cowered before them- no peasant with a shotgun for hunting stood a chance of resisting them.

Now go forward a little more, to when the armies of Liberation, spearheaded by Americans shoved back the Axis powers.

Our men carried those little handheld WMDs too, but you know what?

They were welcomed and embraced, because the men holding them were good.

America has her faults, but we have been a force for good more often than not.

When disasters strike around the Globe, who is the first there?

America...

[ /rant ]
...and the wife returns- domestic duties call...

22 posted on 08/30/2004 2:21:42 PM PDT by backhoe (Just an old Keyboard Cowboy, ridin' the TrackBall into the Sunset...)
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To: Cincinatus' Wife
In Rome, angry scribbles painted during his June visit still seem to capture the mood of many Italians rooting for a November election defeat for Bush. "Go home Bush," reads large, black graffiti under a downtown bridge, while pictures of Bush's face crossed out with an X stain walls elsewhere.

So vandals and criminals don't like President Bush? That's no different than in the US.

23 posted on 08/30/2004 2:30:53 PM PDT by <1/1,000,000th%
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To: Cincinatus' Wife
"We Europeans are extremely negative about him," said Anders Mellbourn, director of the Swedish Institute of International Affairs. "There is overwhelming support for (Bush's Democratic party rival John) Kerry among people in general."

I've noticed that losers like Kerry.

"If there is a concern, it is not just the Iraq war, it is the notion that America has become an empire. It's a fear the Irish share with the western Europeans," said Professor Liam Kennedy of the Clinton Institute for American Studies.

What? They just noticed the empire? Idiots. Why do they think we protected their territory all through the Cold War? They don't like what that means though.

"It's almost like America is courting us," one senior German government official said recently of US efforts to improve ties.

He sounds like W. just asked him to the prom or something. People this giddy should not have access to taxpayer funds. One really must suspect some French ancestry is behind a remark this dumb.
24 posted on 08/30/2004 2:49:29 PM PDT by George W. Bush
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To: Cincinatus' Wife
I strongly believe that this is the Democrats' and the liberal media's fault. Can you blame the rest of the world for what they think when that is how Bush is strongly portrayed by the Democrats and their main -- and sometimes only -- source of US news is CNN, Time, Newsweek, AP?

I was chatting with a friend in the Philippines a couple of weeks ago and she told me that she has seen Fahrenheit 9/11 (pirated DVD, I think) and that there is a connection between Bush and the Saudis and the war in Iraq therefore war in Iraq is immoral. She has also sent a copy of that to her husband who is currently in Papua New Guinea and to another relative in Singapore. (Hey, it's big news!!!) When I told her I haven't and and don't intend to esp since several lies have already been identified in the movie, she said: I must be very gullible. But really, can we blame the rest of the world for believing what is being fed to them by the media?

Democrats are so hypocritical in proclaiming so loudly that Americans are hated by the rest of the world when their own anti-Bush propaganda is causing it.

25 posted on 08/30/2004 3:06:25 PM PDT by mewper
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To: Cincinatus' Wife
European votes in the electoral college - 0.

Thank you James Madison. Now EU, stew in it and watch.

26 posted on 08/30/2004 4:00:03 PM PDT by JasonC
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To: dfwgator

Let's make a few things clear: (1) The Euros will never like us, they will only hate us a little less if they get someone like Clinton who sucks up to them (2) It appears the leftist influence has had a real deleterious effect on the rational thinking ability of many Euros and (3) ask me if I give a good g--d--- about what a bunch of ungrateful quasi-Marxist dopes, who by the way owe their freedom to us, think about a president who is determined to protect us. If these idiots hate Bush, then they hate one half of all Americans also.


27 posted on 08/30/2004 5:17:29 PM PDT by driftless ( For life-long happiness, learn how to play the accordion.)
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