George W. Bush

Opinion Brief

Bin Laden fallout: Is Obama slighting Bush?

As the president who finally killed bin Laden, Obama is facing accusations that he's not sharing adequate credit with his predecessor, George W. Bush

President Obama may be overshadowing George W. Bush as the president who finally nailed bin Laden, but some say the two statesmen should rightfully share the credit.

President Obama may be overshadowing George W. Bush as the president who finally nailed bin Laden, but some say the two statesmen should rightfully share the credit. Photo: Brendan Smialowski/ Getty Images SEE ALL 13 PHOTOS

Best Opinion:  National Review, Huff. Post, Wash. Times...

Theories abound on why George W. Bush, declined an invitation to join Obama at a solemn wreath-laying ceremony at Ground Zero on Thursday. Among them: The notion, put forth by a source close to Bush cited in the New York Daily News, that the former president feels Obama has taken too much credit for catching Osama bin Laden. "Obama gave no credit whatsoever to the intelligence infrastructure the Bush administration set up," the source said. "It rubbed Bush the wrong way." Valid point, or just sour grapes?

Obama is hogging all the glory: From the moment President Obama appeared on TV to announce that commandos had killed bin Laden, says Victor Davis Hanson at National Review, he has been saying, "I" did this, and "I" did that. He is completely ignoring the fact that "the protocols for taking out Osama bin Laden were all established by President Bush and all opposed by Senator and then candidate Obama." What hypocrisy.
"The first-person presidency"

The Right just wants to excuse Bush's mistakes: "The Right will stop at nothing to steal President Obama's thunder," says Jeff Schweitzer at The Huffington Post. They're just trying to inflate Bush's role and diminish Obama's to suggest that Bush's use of torture during terrorist interrogations worked. But the key information that led to the courier who led to bin Laden didn't emerge until long after we had given up on waterboarding. Conservatives should stop trying "to rewrite history to justify the unjustifiable."  
"The twisted logic of torture envy"

Sharing credit is not too much to ask: It takes "a truly small man to ignore the real visionaries" who paved the way for him, says Dr. Milton R. Wolf in The Washington Times. We reached the moon when Richard Nixon was president, but nobody would deny that Nixon was merely following John F. Kennedy's vision. And it's just as obvious that, while Obama was in office when we got bin Laden, it was George W. Bush who had the vision for the hunt. The least Obama could do is show Bush a little more gratitude.
"Obama got bin Laden just like Nixon reached the moon"

If Bush deserves credit, so do other past presidents: If we're going to lavish praise on Bush for Obama's accomplishment, says Al Kamen at The Washington Post, why stop there? Bill Clinton fired missiles at bin Laden in 1998 and started the early CIA operation tracking him. And it was JFK who, in 1962, established the SEAL teams that got Osama. And FDR gave us the precursor to the CIA. "We're pretty sure Millard Fillmore had a hand in all this, too, but we're still checking that out."
"The most important moment in American history involved ... Bush?"

 
Comment Print
opinion brief

Why Bush isn't joining Obama at Ground Zero: 5 theories

The former president declines an invitation from his successor to lay a wreath at the World Trade Center site on Thursday. Why?

George W. Bush takes in a baseball game in Texas: The former president has laid low after leaving the White House, and declined to join Obama at Ground Zero Thursday.

Soon after President Obama decided to to mark the death of Osama bin Laden with a Thursday visit to the World Trade Center site in New York City, he invited George W. Bush to join him. While the former president "appreciated the invite," says Bush spokesman David... More

opinion brief

George W. Bush: Plagiarist?

The former president's memoir is a "mash-up of worn-out anecdotes" from his staffers' books, claims The Huffington Post. Is Bush a copycat — or a victim of liberal bias?

Bush is facing criticism that his memoir, "Decision Points," borrows heavily from other writers' points-of-view.

While touring to promote his memoir, Decision Points, George W. Bush likes to scoff at critics who suspect he cannot read, let alone write. Be that as it may, says Ryan Grim at The Huffington Post, the former president certainly "knows how to Google." The liberal... More

opinion brief

Did Bush really consider endorsing Obama?

A British newspaper is reporting that George W. Bush was so "irked" by John McCain that he thought about backing Obama in '08. Is that plausible?

Bush welcomes then President-elect Barack Obama into the White House with a collegiate handshake.

George W. Bush and John McCain aren't known for their warm relationship, but Bush "dumbfounded" then–British Prime Minister Gordon Brown and his entourage in 2008 when, during the height of the presidential race, he said of McCain, "I probably won't even... More

opinion brief

Limbaugh's 'flattering' George W. Bush interview

The former president sat down for a chat with right-wing radio hero Rush Limbaugh. The sparks, some critics say, didn't fly

George Bush takes a break from his book tour to compliment Rush Limbaugh on his golf game.

The video: Former President George W. Bush interrupted his book tour for a 25-minute on-air chat with conservative radio king Rush Limbaugh. (Listen to the interview below.) After joking that he wouldn't be lobbing "softball questions," a not-exactly-confrontational... More

opinion brief

George W. Bush's 'confident' memoir

The former president's memoir, "Decision Points," is finally out. What do reviewers think?

Bush's peak approval ratting had hit 90 percent the week after 9/11, but had fallen to under 30 percent by the time he left office eight years later.

After weeks of leaks, George W. Bush's long-awaited memoir, Decision Points, finally went on sale Tuesday. As hundreds of fans lined up in Dallas to meet the former president and buy copies at his first book signing, reviewers rushed to offer their opinions on... More

Comment Print

Facebook

Twitter

Stumble

Tumblr

RSS

Newsletter

See our bad opinions
Only In America #1

A Wisconsin man jumps in front of his wife's car to stop her from voting for a Democrat — and more in our collection of strange revelations about the nation

Can you guess what's really going on in these bizarre photos?

Get The Week iPad app
Get The Week iPad app