Tuesday, November 24, 2009

Nation & World

Now, it's Bush's war

A new world disorder challenges the president in word and deed

By Kenneth T. Walsh
Posted 9/16/01

Suddenly, George W. Bush has been thrust into the role he was least prepared for: wartime commander in chief. And even if he seems ill-suited for his new duties because of inexperience and lack of charisma, he has quickly grasped the challenges ahead and the stakes involved. "I think about the families, the children," President Bush haltingly told reporters in the Oval Office two days after the terrorist attacks, as his eyes welled with tears. "I'm a loving guy. And I am also someone, however, who's got a job to do and I intend to do it. And this is a terrible moment, but this country will not relent until we have saved ourselves, and others, from the terrible tragedy that came upon America."

In a flash, the world had been transformed, and with it Bush's presidency. The attacks forced him to set aside the original agenda that he has assiduously pursued since January, including education reform and overhauling Medicare, and to make the war against terrorism Job 1. Bush underscored his resolve last week in a number of ways, contacting scores of foreign leaders to build an antiterrorism coalition and setting in motion plans to call up thousands of military reserve troops. He also sent Vice President Dick Cheney to stake out a command post at Camp David. White House aides say the move was designed to prevent terrorists from attacking the two leaders at the same location. Still, it sent a discordant message at odds with the administration's goal of restoring a sense of normalcy.

By Friday, Bush had hit his stride. He delivered a moving address during a prayer service at the National Cathedral in Washington and visited the still-smoking site that had once been the World Trade Center. With tangled wreckage and tons of collapsed walls across the street from where he stood, the president chatted with firefighters, cops, and other rescue workers. At one point, hundreds of firefighters and police officers began chanting, "U.S.A., U.S.A.," as Bush climbed atop the back of a burned-out firetruck and thanked them for their heroism. He helped retired firefighter Bob Beckwith of Queens onto the truck with him and threw his arm around the 69-year-old volunteer. A group about 20 yards away shouted that they could not hear the president, even though he was using a bullhorn. "I can hear you!" Bush shouted to them. "The rest of the world hears you and the people who knocked these buildings down will hear all of us soon."

Shaky start. "This is clearly a defining moment not only for America and the world but for George W. Bush," says Ken Duberstein, former White House chief of staff for Ronald Reagan. Perhaps the best parallel was Harry Truman's sudden succession to the presidency after Franklin Roosevelt's death at the end of World War II. Like Truman, Bush also faces serious doubts about whether he is up to the job.

On that score, it was more than a little disheartening that he got off to such a shaky start in the hours after the terrorist attacks. White House Chief of Staff Andy Card pulled him aside at an elementary school in Sarasota, Fla., with news that a plane had crashed into the World Trade Center. A few minutes later, Card told him another plane had crashed at the same site. "We're at war," Bush told his traveling aides.

advertisement

advertisement

10 Things You Didn't Know About...

Why doesn't Barack Obama like ice cream? Find out.

Washington Whispers

Face it, you need to know the buzz in D.C., and that's where Whispers comes in.

advertisement

50 Ways to Improve Your Life

U.S. News offers tips for improving your life.

America's Best Leaders

What makes someone a great leader?

Thomas Jefferson Street

Daily insight on politics and culture from the Thomas Jefferson Street bloggers.

Use of this Web site constitutes acceptance of our Terms and Conditions of Use and Privacy Policy.