Bush Delivers A Turkey

by The Berkshire Eagle Monday, Dec. 01, 2003 at 4:12 AM

To President Bush, America's soldiers are nothing more than props for his never-ending campaign. They were props on May 1 and they were props on Thanksgiving Day. An appearance at the funeral of one of the soldiers who has died in a war that has increased the terrorist threat against America, not diminished it, would be far more meaningful. So would an appearance to greet the coffins coming back from Iraq, ending an unprecedented policy forbidding the media from filming the arrival of America's war dead. Of course, footage like that would not make for jolly White House political propaganda.

Bush Delivers A Turkey

The Berkshire Eagle

11-29-3

"To President Bush, America's soldiers are nothing more than props for his never-ending campaign."

 

In what could be generously interpreted as a tribute to the late, great Bob Hope, President Bush visited the troops in Baghdad on Thanksgiving Day. The president was not accompanied by Playboy bunnies, nor did he make Bing Crosby jokes, but the trip did lend itself to photo opportunities, as did Mr. Hope's appearances abroad. For President Bush, who is most happy in campaign mode, it always comes down to photo opportunities.

 

On May 1, the president donned a flyboy costume and appeared aboard an aircraft carrier with a "Mission Accomplished" banner, producing video footage the Republican Party hoped to use in the 2004 election campaign. Unhappily, the exposure of the administration's ill-conceived invasion plan and the mounting death toll of American soldiers meant that the carrier footage ended up in a John Kerry campaign ad long before it could be used by the president. The president's cameo appearance in Baghdad, with the president costumed this time in an Army jacket, may generate more successful campaign footage, or at least White House political director Karl Rove hopes it will.

 

To President Bush, America's soldiers are nothing more than props for his never-ending campaign. They were props on May 1 and they were props on Thanksgiving Day. An appearance at the funeral of one of the soldiers who has died in a war that has increased the terrorist threat against America, not diminished it, would be far more meaningful. So would an appearance to greet the coffins coming back from Iraq, ending an unprecedented policy forbidding the media from filming the arrival of America's war dead. Of course, footage like that would not make for jolly White House political propaganda.

 

It is worth remembering that while the president enjoys being photographed with soldiers he passed on an opportunity to become a soldier himself, ducking out to the National Guard -- and then going AWOL from the guard. If he is now truly concerned about the welfare of America's soldiers he will devote his time to persuading foreign nations to join the cause in Iraq while Iraqis labors to set up their own government. That would be of more help than a brief campaign appearance.

 

The May 1 campaign appearance produced the Flight-jacket George doll, and perhaps the Thanksgiving photo op will give us Army-jacketed George delivering a plate of turkey. The turkey can symbolize his Iraq policy.

 

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