Kuwait Times

Bush’s single White House term shaped US history for decades

Bush ousts Iraqi forces from Kuwait

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WASHINGTON: He was president for only four years, but George HW Bush shaped US history for decades, taking on tough jobs from Beijing to the CIA, ousting Iraqi forces from Kuwait, sealing a breakthrou­gh budget deal that cost him an election and fathering a future president. He died on Friday at the age of 94, his family said. His passing came seven months after the April 17, 2018, death of his wife, Barbara, to whom he was married for 73 years.

His presidency, which ran from 1989 to 1993, was defined by two events - his aggressive response to Iraqi President Saddam Hussein’s invasion of Kuwait in 1990, and the soon-to-be-broken “read my lips” pledge he made not to raise taxes while running for president in 1988. At a time when the Cold War was ending and the influence of Soviet-style communism was withering, Bush’s military and diplomatic actions firmly cast the United States as the world’s leading superpower.

After Bush emphatical­ly said Saddam’s aggression “will not stand,” US-led forces routed Iraq’s army in the Gulf War, driving it from Kuwait while stopping short of taking Baghdad, Iraq’s capital. Bush’s popularity rating among Americans soared to about 90 percent. Twenty months later, in 1992, the Republican Bush lost his bid for re-election to Democrat Bill Clinton, whose folksy manner and focus on the economy struck a chord with many Americans and made Bush seem disconnect­ed from voters for focusing on foreign policy over domestic issues.

Despite a broad coalition that included several Arab states, US involvemen­t in the Gulf War was seen as a violation of Arab sovereignt­y by some in the Middle East, and led a few militant groups namely Osama bin Laden’s recently formed Al-Qaeda - to turn their focus toward fighting US influence. A decade later, the presidency of Bush’s son, George W Bush, would be jolted by Al-Qaeda’s deadly hijacking attacks on the United States on Sept 11, 2001.

The Bushes were only the second father and son to serve as US presidents - the first being John Adams (1797-1801) and John Quincy Adams (18251829). The Bush political dynasty also included Bush’s father, who was a US senator, and son Jeb, a former governor of Florida who mounted his own run for the presidency in 2015 but dropped out in February 2016 after gaining little traction. Bush did not endorse Republican Donald Trump, the eventual winner in the 2016 presidenti­al election, who attacked both Jeb and George W Bush during his campaign. The elder Bush did not publicly say whom he voted for in the election, but a source told CNN he went for the Democratic nominee, Hillary Clinton.

‘No new taxes’

George Herbert Walker Bush was a moderate Republican known for his diplomacy and ability to compromise with Democrats. He was a symbol of a relatively collegial period in Washington that neverthele­ss set the stage for the divisive, partisan gridlock that now plagues the U.S. capital.

When he accepted the Republican nomination for president in 1988, Bush, then Ronald Reagan’s vice president, was trying to win over conservati­ves who had more enthusiasm for Reagan. He answered questions about his conservati­sm with an emphatic pledge. “Read my lips,” he told the Republican National Convention. “No new taxes.”

Later as president, Bush agreed to raise taxes to help reduce the government’s deficit. The reversal angered conservati­ves and led in 1992 to an unusual primary challenge of the incumbent president by another Republican, conservati­ve commentato­r Pat Buchanan. Bush easily defeated Buchanan for the Republican nomination, but his stance on taxes, the country’s debt and the lagging economy led Texas billionair­e Ross Perot to launch an independen­t presidenti­al campaign.

Clinton ended up winning the race with just 43 percent of the popular vote, ousting Bush from the White House after one term. Bush’s loss in the 1992 election made him a cautionary tale for a generation of Republican­s, a lesson that endures in today’s showdowns over the federal budget and spending. Years later, in 2014, Bush was honored with the Profile in Courage Award for his 1990 budget compromise by the John F. Kennedy Library Foundation, which praised the “decision to put country above party and political prospects.”

In issuing the award for his compromise with Democrats, the foundation wrote: “Although he recognized the 1990 budget deal might doom his prospects for reelection, he did what he thought was best for the country and has since been credited with helping to lay the foundation of the economic growth of the 1990s that followed.” A major accomplish­ment of Bush’s presidency can be seen every day across America - from the cut-away curbs on street intersecti­ons to the ramps outside buildings that allow access to those confined to wheelchair­s.

They were mandated by the 1990 Americans with Disabiliti­es Act, the law Bush signed that barred discrimina­tion against the disabled in the workplace and ensured them equal access to public accommodat­ions. Bush backed the law despite concerns from some conservati­ves in his party about the cost and potential litigation.

A privileged upbringing

Bush was born on June 12, 1924, in Milton, Massachuse­tts, into a patrician New England family, the son of financier Prescott Bush, who later would be elected to the US Senate from Connecticu­t, and Dorothy Bush. He grew up in the posh New York City suburb of Greenwich, Connecticu­t, and was educated at exclusive private schools and Yale University.

Bush came to know war firsthand, leaving school at 18 to become the Navy’s youngest pilot in World War Two. He flew 58 missions off carriers in the Pacific, was shot down at sea and rescued by a US submarine. As the war neared an end in January 1945, Bush married his sweetheart, Barbara Pierce. They had six children. After the war, Bush rejected a Wall Street job and, aided by his father’s business connection­s, moved to West Texas to start an oil drilling firm. He made a fortune and began a rise to national prominence by winning elections to the US House of Representa­tives from Texas in 1966 and 1968.

He lost two races for a US Senate seat, but Bush’s star continued to rise within the Republican Party. President Richard Nixon appointed him ambassador to the United Nations in 1971, and two years later, Bush became chairman of the Republican National Committee. Another Republican president, Gerald Ford, appointed him as an envoy to China in 1974 and then director of the CIA. Bush was credited with helping to restore morale after the CIA had undergone investigat­ions into illegal and unauthoriz­ed activities. In 1998, the agency’s headquarte­rs in Langley, Virginia, was named the George Bush Center for Intelligen­ce.

‘Voodoo economics’

Bush ran for president in 1980 and squared off in the primaries against Reagan, a former actor and California governor who cast himself as a tough-talking conservati­ve in contrast with Democratic President Jimmy Carter. Bush defeated Reagan in several primaries and ridiculed Reagan’s devotion to supply-side economics, which holds that the best way to spur growth is through lower taxes on income and capital gains. Bush called Reagan’s plan “voodoo economics.” Reagan eventually swept aside Bush to win the Republican nomination and then asked Bush to be his vice presidenti­al running mate, in part to help ease concerns among independen­t voters about Reagan’s conservati­ve views.

After Reagan’s two terms, Bush was able to campaign for the presidency as the anointed heir to Reagan’s conservati­ve mantle. Even so, Bush sought to distinguis­h himself from the incumbent, and reach out to those who thought Reagan’s policies had been too harsh on the poor and other vulnerable people. He famously called for a “kinder, gentler nation” in his 1988 speech accepting his party’s nomination. He breezed into office, thrashing the Democratic nominee, Massachuse­tts Governor Michael Dukakis, in 40 of the 50 US states. Bush had been derided by political detractors as a “wimp” when he was vice president, but he did not hesitate to use force as a foreign policy tool during his presidency.

He sent paratroope­rs to overthrow Panamanian strongman Manuel Noriega in December 1989 and provided air cover to help Philippine President Corazon Aquino survive a coup attempt the same year. Then came Iraq’s invasion of Kuwait on Aug 2, 1990. Bush’s strong response and the overwhelmi­ng allied victory in forcing out Iraqi troops led for a time to a national euphoria. The war against Saddam pushed Bush to a level of unpreceden­ted popularity that was equaled only by his son after the 9/11 attacks on America. A decade later, the younger Bush would invade Iraq and drive Saddam from power.

‘The vision thing’

Beyond the flap over his raising taxes and the impact of Perot’s candidacy, Bush’s 1992 loss was tied to a stagnant economy that sent the US jobless rate to 7.5 percent and left Bush open to charges that Republican policies had failed. Critics cited Bush’s lack of a clear vision of what he wanted to do on domestic issues - what he called the “vision thing” in his oft-fractured phrasing. Some political analysts said Bush’s re-election effort was undermined by his decision not to take advantage of his popularity after the Gulf War to propose bold domestic initiative­s. “There was a period of about two weeks when we could have done anything. But it slipped away,” said a mid-level aide who had argued in favor of bold, postwar programs. His lone postwar initiative was an internatio­nal one.

 ?? —AFP ?? KENNEBUNKP­ORT: In this file photo, US President George W Bush (right front) waves as he fishes with his father, former US President George HW Bush (left), and his brother, Marvin Bush (right back) in Kennebunkp­ort, ME.
—AFP KENNEBUNKP­ORT: In this file photo, US President George W Bush (right front) waves as he fishes with his father, former US President George HW Bush (left), and his brother, Marvin Bush (right back) in Kennebunkp­ort, ME.
 ?? —AFP ?? WASHINGTON: In this file photo taken on November 05, 1988, US President Ronald Reagan (second left) raises his arms in the air with George HW Bush (second right) while First Lady Nancy Reagan (left) and Barbara Bush (right) smile, after President Reagan announced endorsemen­t for Bush as the next president of the United States.
—AFP WASHINGTON: In this file photo taken on November 05, 1988, US President Ronald Reagan (second left) raises his arms in the air with George HW Bush (second right) while First Lady Nancy Reagan (left) and Barbara Bush (right) smile, after President Reagan announced endorsemen­t for Bush as the next president of the United States.
 ??  ?? Popularity rating hits 90percent
Popularity rating hits 90percent

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