Europe greets Bush with a yawn instead of a snarl this time
Though he's largely disliked on the
continent, his visit is met mostly with indifference. Call it
lame-canard syndrome.
By Geraldine Baum
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
June 14, 2008
PARIS —
President Bush this week swept across a Europe that has largely moved
beyond him.
An
American president who infuriated Europeans over issues such as
military intervention in Iraq and climate change and once provoked
massive street protests was greeted this time like a former boyfriend
who is no longer even worth fighting with.
The Olympic flame's passage through the streets of Europe brought out
more protesters than Bush did. By a lot.
"This
is an American president at the end of his mandate who awakens more
indifference than passion," the right-leaning French newspaper Le
Figaro said on the eve of Bush's arrival here.
Bush himself
captured the spirit at the start of his tour in Slovenia when he said,
"Lots of people like America. It's possible that they don't necessarily
like its president." The left-leaning French newspaper Liberation
congratulated him for his lucidity.
In fact, in speeches and
interviews, Bush expressed regret for the tone and Western-movie
"dead-or-alive"-type rhetoric he used during his presidency. At the
same time, he reaffirmed his fundamental belief that Western
democracies have a calling to stand up to the "enemies" of freedom.
Though
wildly unpopular across most of Western Europe, Bush was treated with
more indifference than animus. Still, he tried to convince Europeans
that he was right. During an address in Paris, in what was billed as
the centerpiece speech of his trip, he noted that after World War II
many people were skeptical that Europe could emerge free and
democratic. Comparing skeptics then and now, he said:
"Something
happened in Europe that defied the skeptics and the pattern of the
centuries, and that was the spread of human freedom. . . . We should be
confident that one day the same determination and desire that brought
freedom to Paris and Berlin and Riga will bring freedom to Gaza,
Damascus and Tehran," he said.
As though to counter his image as
a unilateralist, Bush used this farewell journey both to seek more
financial and military help from allies for Afghanistan and to stand
with European leaders saying that diplomacy was the first choice in the
confrontation with Iran. But he also said Iran would face further
isolation if it didn't halt its nuclear program.
Many European
leaders are pro-American and not unfriendly toward Bush, whose
presidency ends in January. Indeed, his speech Friday mentioned by name
Germany's Angela Merkel, Britain's Gordon Brown, Italy's Silvio
Berlusconi and France's Nicolas Sarkozy, who ran for president a year
ago as a pro-American, in contrast with his predecessor, Jacques
Chirac, who vehemently condemned the U.S. march to war in Iraq.
That
U.S.-French rift on Friday was officially deemed history. The tone was
all kiss and make up. Bush, in Paris for the first time in four years,
characterized the schism over Iraq as a spat among friends.
"Recent history has made clear that no disagreement can diminish the
deep ties between our nations," he said.
Sarkozy and his wife, Carla Bruni, greeted the Bushes at a dinner at
the presidential Elysee Palace.
Still,
from cardinals at the Vatican to intellectuals in Paris, the disdain
for Bush was never far beneath the surface during his visit.
In
Rome, a number of Vatican prelates were uncomfortable with the "warmth"
of Bush's reception by Pope Benedict XVI on Friday morning, according
to the Italian newspaper La Repubblica. Bush was the first head of
state to be accompanied by a pontiff on a friendly stroll through the
Vatican gardens.
"So much attention to a president who did not
take any account of the appeal that the Holy Father launched to avoid a
second war with Iraq," lamented a cardinal, according to the newspaper.
Francois
Heisbourg, a political thinker and chairman of the International
Institute for Strategic Studies, said the Bush presidency had been "the
worst period in transatlantic relations," and people in Paris couldn't
be bothered with following his visit.
The European soccer
championship was more interesting, Heisbourg said as he rushed to catch
a plane to Switzerland to watch France play the Netherlands. The firing
of a longtime male TV anchor to make way for a female friend of Sarkozy
was clearly more tantalizing in France, considering the attention it
has received.
Of Bush, Heisbourg concluded that there were "no expectations, no
interest, finally, no problem."
Copyright 2008 Los Angeles Times