Thursday, 18th November 2010
Sir Christopher Meyer, the former British Ambassador to the United States, has reviewed George Bush's biography for the latest issue of The Spectator. We've pasted his entire review below, for readers of our Book Blog.
Taking the long view, Christopher Meyer, The Spectator, 20 November 2010
While Tony Blair emerged from his memoirs as a chameleon of many colours, there is only one George W. Bush in Decision Points. The book reads like the man speaks. If it has been ghosted — and Bush gives thanks to a multitude of helpers — it has been done with consummate skill to preserve the authentic Bush voice. The result will be unexpected, even unwelcome, to many. This is an interesting and readable book, which clips along in short, spare sentences, with frequent flashes of humour. Don’t take my word for it. It has been praised by none other than Bill Clinton.
Bush, of course, sets out to put the record straight; and, as he sees it, there is a great deal to put straight — the ‘war on terror’, Afghanistan, Iraq, rescuing the banks and hurricane Katrina being some of the more notable areas where his critics have found him wanting. When he left office in 2008, his approval ratings were in the low 20s, a historic nadir for a departing president. Bush takes comfort from the example of President Harry Truman:
'The man from Missouri knew how to make a hard decision and stick by it. He did what he thought was right and didn’t care much what the critics said. When he left office in 1953, his approval ratings were in the 20s. Today he is viewed as one of America’s great presidents.'
This is the book’s key passage. Bush, like Blair, looks to history for his vindication, which, he confesses, will not come in his lifetime. If 50 years hence Iraq is a stable and prosperous democracy, the agony of its birth pangs will, he thinks, be seen as a price worth paying for the removal of Saddam Hussein. At which point, though he does not say this in so many words, George W. Bush will assume his rightful place in the pantheon of great American presidents.
Bush’s reputation began to be trashed early in the presidential campaign of 2000, both by Al Gore’s Democratic party and a large slice of European opinion, including in Britain. At the time it reminded me of the reaction to the coming of Ronald Reagan in 1981. Too many people then saw only a mediocre Hollywood actor and not the experienced politician who had shown his smarts as California governor and head of the Screen Actors’ Guild.
George W. Bush entered the presidential race with vast experience of politics at state and national levels. He had followed the campaigns of his father, President George H. W. Bush, from his first senate run in 1964 to his unsuccessful defence of the presidency against Bill Clinton in 1992. George W. himself first entered Texas politics in 1978 and, as he points out in his book, was the only Texas governor to win two consecutive terms. Yet he could be a wooden presidential campaigner, prone to verbal stumbles — the notorious ‘Bushisms’ — which made him sound plain stupid. The French newspaper Le Monde talked of the ‘cretinisation’ of American politics. I had met Bush a couple of times when he was Governor of Texas. He was anything but stupid; and his Texan provincialism would prove a political strength not a weakness in Middle America. When I warned London that Bush might beat Gore, it was greeted with disbelief and, among the New Labour zealots in Downing Street, with irritation (I was accused of pro-Republican bias).
As its title suggests, the memoir’s leitmotiv is Bush as decision-taker. Its 14 chapters rotate around the most important decisions of his life and presidency. This allows him, time and again, to present himself as he would like to be remembered: a leader unafraid to take tough decisions. However self-serving (allowing Bush, for instance, to rebut the charge that he was under the thumb of his Vice-President, Dick Cheney), the book offers real insights into the workings of the White House and the dilemmas of policy-making.
The early chapters, about his childhood and beginnings as a businessman and politician in Texas, are fascinating. They show a Bush for whom love of family and religion are central. The big decisions of this early period are to give up alcohol, with the help of the evangelist preacher, Billy Graham, and to marry his librarian sweetheart, Laura. I laughed out loud when Bush describes trying to lull his twin baby daughters to sleep by singing them the Yale fight song, ‘Bulldog, Bulldog, Bow, Wow, Wow’.
Along the way, he denies a number of charges: that he was in competition with his father; that he sought to dodge the draft; that he is incurious and does not read books. He professes a love for history and discloses that he and his political éminence grise, Karl Rove, used to compete over how many history books each could read. In one year Rove won by 110 to Bush’s 95.
The watershed in the story is the atrocity of 9/11. Everything changes. An administration which looked already to be running out of steam in its first year is revived by the threat of terrorism. ‘In a single morning the purpose of my presidency had become clear … it redefined my job.’ The war on terror is declared. Bush has his finest moment, when, standing on a mound of rubble at Ground Zero a few days after 9/11, he takes a bullhorn and rallies the rescue workers around him and the nation beyond. The passages describing those days, when fear of a second wave of attacks was all-pervasive, are gripping and often moving (his critics have never cut Bush any slack for the near intolerable stress and shock of that time).
The heroic moral certainty of that moment passes as fleetingly as it had come, to be replaced by the ambiguities and dilemmas of policy-making. To the disgust of many, Bush continues to justify ‘water-boarding’, while acknowledging the painful tension between protecting the country and preserving civil liberties. He invokes a higher ideological struggle between tyranny and freedom. He speaks of the ‘transformative power of liberty’; and, without batting an eyelid, slips from hostility to nation-building in the Balkans to being its greatest advocate in Afghanistan and Iraq.
In all of this, he gratefully acknowledges the support of the ‘Churchillian’ Tony Blair, who was equally seduced by this Manichean vision of the world. It is a vision which, for all its good intentions, has been at the root of what has gone wrong in those two benighted countries.
Like Blair, Bush is unrepentant about removing Saddam Hussein, but a good deal franker about things that went wrong. It was a ‘big mistake’ to declare ‘Mission Accomplished’ after the taking of Baghdad; the US was not adequately prepared for the disorder that followed; it was a mistake to disband the Iraqi army; above all, the intelligence on weapons of mass destruction was false, ‘a massive blow to our credibility — my credibility.’
Yet, when all is said and done, in the seven and a half years that remained to Bush’s presidency after 9/11, America never again suffered a successful terrorist attack, and this, he says, was ‘my most meaningful accomplishment as president’. Even Bush’s most implacable critics cannot deny him that. As for his book, like the author himself, it is far better than his reputation.
Blog Tags: America , Biography , George W. Bush , Iran , Iraq , Memoir , Non-fiction , Policy , Politics , Terrorism
Post this entry to: del.icio.us | Digg | Newsvine | NowPublic | Reddit
Classic Crews: A Harry Crews Reader
To find out more about Jeremy Clarke's singular reading habits, click here.
1,700 Unusual Christmas Presents Request Catalogue 01935 815 195 Quote SPEC10 for 10% discount www.presentfinder.co.uk
Pimilco based Florist with online ordering Web: www.olivebranch.net Tel: 020 7630 1868 Fax: 020 7233 8844
62 Shore Road, Warsash, Southampton, SO31 9FT Telephone: 01489 578867 Web site: www.ruffs.co.uk
Spectator Business | Apollo Magazine
Corporate | Advertising | Privacy | Terms
Spectator, 22 Old Queen Street, London, SW1H 9HP
All Articles and Content Copyright ©2012 by The Spectator | All Rights Reserved
Peter
November 18th, 2010 1:35pm Report this commentI've ordered a signed copy of Decision Points and can't wait for it to arrive. George Bush has been much maligned by our treacherous left wing media.
anthony b
November 18th, 2010 2:26pm Report this commentSay what you like, Meyer, a cretin he was.
Holly ......
November 18th, 2010 3:24pm Report this commentIgnoring critics is one thing,ignoring the will of the people is quite another.
The same mistake was made by Blair.
Being on the left or the right had nothing to do with the people's view on these two's stupid,self rightous mistakes.
Yet once again it is others who pay the price.
For you,it is the price of a book.
For others it is a much heavier price.
Yam Yam
November 18th, 2010 3:46pm Report this commentI'd like to know how a president of the most powerful nation on Earth could find the time to read 95 history books in a year. That's an average of one book almost every four days!
Assuming an average length of 300 pages, one can only wonder how much of the content of each book (and the lessons therein) Bush actually absorbed.
DanielH
November 18th, 2010 4:07pm Report this commentI'm surprised the UK's ambassador to the US would mention "Bushisms". I thought they were all false:
http://www.snopes.com/quotes/candidate.asp
Maybe I'm wrong?
Edward McLaughlin
November 18th, 2010 4:30pm Report this commentWe don't need 50 years to recognise him as a good man who did his job well. Not without mistake, but well nevertheless.
Meyer does himself credit also, in not joining the swim of left-wing ridicule that has been purveyed in the (guess what, left-wing) media and its amoebic following.
Telling though, that he describes his having 'warned London' of the likelihood of Bush's initial Presidential victory. London seethed it seems, that the world was to be robbed of Al Gore's Presidency.
Moriarty
November 18th, 2010 4:34pm Report this comment@yamYam
Maybe he didn't waste his time posting tripe on an online forum.
Old Slaughter
November 18th, 2010 4:46pm Report this comment"Ignoring critics is one thing,ignoring the will of the people is quite another."
Which 'will' did he ignore? Are you another revisionist that wants to claim everyone was against the war?
Besides, its a representative democracy, you vote for people to make decisions according to their judgement, not the polls.
Dimoto
November 18th, 2010 10:14pm Report this commentChristopher Mayer's observations are interesting.
The love-in from the same old NeoCon groupies is just boring.
Stewart
November 19th, 2010 1:48am Report this commentYam Yam: As President George W Bush was an early to bed early to rise man. From what I've read he liked to keep to a schedule in contrast to the relative chaos of the Clinton years. He wasn't occupied by the personal scandals of previous administrations which would suggest that he had more time to read. I agree that the 110-95 figure seems high and perhaps there's a little embellishment there from two men involved in a friendly wager but I think the general point that he was a keen reader is true. Not that the likes of Paul McCartney would believe that, it would deny them a cheap joke.
Robert Eve
November 19th, 2010 9:38am Report this commentBush was far better than the idiot Obama.
Back to top