George W. Bush Bashes Obama on Middle East
In
a closed-door meeting with Jewish donors on Saturday night, former
President George W. Bush delivered his harshest public criticisms to
date against his successor on foreign policy, saying
that President Barack Obama is being naïve about Iran and the pending
nuclear deal and losing the war against the Islamic State.
One
attendee at the Republican Jewish Coalition session, held at the
Venetian Hotel in Las Vegas with owner Sheldon Adelson in attendance,
transcribed large portions of Bush’s remarks. The former president, who
rarely ever criticizes Obama in public, at first remarked that the idea
of re-entering the political arena was something he didn’t want to do.
He then proceeded to explain why Obama, in his view, was placing the
U.S. in “retreat” around the world. He also said Obama was misreading Iran’s intentions while relaxing sanctions on Tehran too easily.
According
to the attendee’s transcription, Bush noted that Iran has a new
president, Hassan Rouhani. “He’s smooth,” Bush said. “And you’ve got to
ask yourself, is there a new policy or did they just change the
spokesman?”
Bush
said that Obama’s plan to lift sanctions on Iran with a promise that
they could snap back in place at any time was not plausible. He also
said the deal would be bad for American national security in the long
term: “You think the Middle East is chaotic now? Imagine what it looks
like for our grandchildren. That’s how Americans should view the deal.”
Bush
then went into a detailed criticism of Obama’s policies in fighting the
Islamic State and dealing with the chaos in Iraq. On Obama’s decision
to withdraw all U.S. troops in Iraq at the end of 2011, he quoted
Senator Lindsey Graham calling it a “strategic blunder.” Bush signed an
agreement with the Iraqi government to withdraw those troops, but the
idea had been to negotiate a new status of forces agreement to keep U.S.
forces there past 2011. The Obama administration tried and failed to
negotiate such an agreement.
Bush
said he views the rise of the Islamic State as al-Qaeda’s “second act”
and that they may have changed the name but that murdering innocents is
still the favored tactic. He defended his own administration’s handling
of terrorism, noting that the terrorist Khalid Sheikh Mohammed,
who confessed to killing Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl, was
captured on his watch: “Just remember the guy who slit Danny Pearl’s
throat is in Gitmo, and now they’re doing it on TV.”
Obama
promised to degrade and destroy Islamic State’s forces but then didn’t
develop a strategy to complete the mission, Bush said. He said that if
you have a military goal and you mean it, “you call in your military and
say ‘What’s your plan?’ ” He indirectly touted his own decision to
surge troops to Iraq in 2007, by saying, “When the plan wasn’t working
in Iraq, we changed.”
Bush
told several anecdotes about his old friend and rival Russian President
Vladimir Putin. Bush recalled that Putin met his dog Barney at the
White House and then later, when Bush went to Moscow, Putin showed him
his dog and remarked that he was “bigger stronger and faster than
Barney.” For Bush, that behavior showed him that Putin didn’t think in
“win-win” terms.
Bush
also remarked that Putin was rich, divorced his wife and loves power.
Putin’s domestic popularity comes from his control of Russian media,
according to Bush. “Hell, I’d be popular, too, if I owned NBC news,” he
said.
Regarding his brother Jeb’s potential run for the presidency, Bush acknowledged that he was a political liability for Jeb, that
the Bush name can be used against him, and that Americans don’t like
dynasties. He also said that foreign policy is going to be especially
important in the presidential campaign and that the test for Republicans
running will be who has got the “courage” to resist isolationist
tendencies.
Regarding
Hillary Clinton, Bush said it will be crucial how she plays her
relationship with the president. She will eventually have to choose
between running on the Obama administration’s policies or running
against them. If she defends them, she’s admitting failure, he said, but
if she doesn’t she’s blaming the president.
For George W. Bush, the remarks in Vegas showed he has little respect for how the current president is running the world. He
also revealed that he takes little responsibility for the policies that
he put in place that contributed to the current state of affairs.
To contact the author on this story:
Josh Rogin at joshrogin@bloomberg.net
Josh Rogin at joshrogin@bloomberg.net
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