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TIME: Almanac 1995
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<text id=90TT3222>
<title>
Dec. 03, 1990: Thanksgiving In The Desert
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
Dec. 03, 1990 The Lady Bows Out
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
NATION, Page 54
Thanksgiving in the Desert
</hdr>
<body>
<p>Setting out on a month of nonstop travel, Bush journeys to the
Persian Gulf to eat--and talk--turkey with the troops
</p>
<p>By HUGH SIDEY--With reporting by Michael Duffy with Bush
</p>
<p> Have 747, will travel...and travel...and travel.
</p>
<p> George Bush--after nearly 17,000 miles, six countries, a
sweeping accord to reduce conventional arms in Europe, a
34-nation peace charter, a dozen speeches, untold private
diplomatic understandings, a quart or two of ceremonial
champagne, at least 25 clean shirts, eye contact with nearly a
million people and G.I. turkey in the Saudi desert (twice)--came home to roost (certainly not rest) for the weekend. He sent
his laundry out, had Air Force One fueled again (53,611 gal.)
and got ready to head for Mexico this week.
</p>
<p> When he gets back from that jaunt, he plans to hang out at
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue for only four days, then to roar south
to Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Venezuela and Uruguay. In January
it must be Moscow, if Bush's pal Mikhail Gorbachev is still in
charge, followed by stops in Turkey and Greece. By the end of
February, Air Force One is expected to be riding the billowy
cumulus above Australia, headed for South Korea and Japan,
leading to the dark suspicion that Bush may be trying to emulate
Lyndon B. Magellan (a tag pasted on L.B.J. when he flew to
Australia in 1967 and just kept going in the same direction
until he was back where he started).
</p>
<p> The global President, the diplomatic road warrior (a
rattled rocket here, a helping hand there), Bush has raised
presidential motion beyond art to religion. He has always been
nervous sitting still. He is at his absolute best in some
wind-scoured distant city like Prague, raincoat crunched around
him, hair blowing, lifting the hopes of more than 100,000 Czechs--or in Paris, glad-handing his way through mirrored halls
while the First Lady is off in the Grand Palais viewing one of
Picasso's works, cocking her head this way and that, deciding
"it had about 18 different ideas."
</p>
<p> Almost everything Bush did on last week's eight-day junket
was good and even necessary, urgent business he had pushed back
during the U.S. budget struggle and the election. In Wenceslas
Square, Bush's evocative words raised a great roar: "There are
no leaves on the trees, and yet it is Prague spring. There are
no flowers in bloom, and yet it is Prague spring." In the huge
crowd, vendors sold copies of the U.S. Constitution for 8 Czech
crowns (30 cents) each.
</p>
<p> Bush spent hours in Paris patiently listening as the reborn
international consortium, the Conference on Security and
Cooperation in Europe, debated the structure and methods for
preserving peace in the years beyond the cold war. When he
talked, Bush emphasized the threat of war in the Persian Gulf, a
dose of reality for a city of countless dreams, many of them
shattered.
</p>
<p> Before he left Paris to spend Thanksgiving with the troops
in the gulf, the President vainly pleaded with Gorbachev to
support publicly a U.N. Security Council resolution authorizing
the U.S. to use force to drive Iraq from Kuwait if the economic
sanctions fail. But the Soviet President, while supporting Bush
in principle in private, wanted to be sure the Arab nations were
on board. "Everybody takes comfort from everybody else,"
explained a White House aide. Bush laid on an extra stop in
Geneva at the end of his trip to talk to Syria's President Hafez
Assad, in part to try to ease Gorbachev's doubts.
</p>
<p> Bush and his fellow travelers may be defining the way the
world will be run in these next decades: frequent gatherings of
heads of state; a plethora of councils and conferences linked
in the off-hours by phone, fax and video; an army of bureaucrats
below constantly moving around the network with plans and ideas.
But a number of people wonder if the leaders are traveling a bit
too much for their own good. British Prime Minister Margaret
Thatcher's tenuous hold on her job may have finally loosened
while she was in Paris. Gorbachev's junketing, while helping him
become the toast of the world, has not halted the erosion of his
position at home. Old hands at this game, like former Secretary
of State Dean Rusk, have warned the new crowd not to take over
too many duties of the diplomatic corps, lest heads of state be
confronted with the impossible task of responding to every
nation that has a complaint.
</p>
<p> "The President needs to be home now," argued one of Bush's
longtime advisers last week. "Sure, see the troops on
Thanksgiving. But the policy in the gulf is going to be
determined right here in the next three or four weeks. If he
doesn't do it, others will."
</p>
<p> Chimed in another friend, "Bush's got this jet-propulsion
problem. He's always moving, and everything becomes a tactical
decision, not a strategic decision. He is like Patton on the
battlefield, not Eisenhower at headquarters."
</p>
<p> While Bush was overseas, a handful of new polls were
published showing increasing doubts in the U.S. about gulf
policy and Bush's leadership. Members of Congress and other
self-acclaimed authorities on war and foreign policy tuned up
once the President's plane crossed the continental shelf.
Forty-five House Democrats filed a court suit challenging Bush's
authority to wage war against Iraq without congressional
approval. The Washington Post sought out the opinions of eight
presidential scholars, and all but one were worried about Bush's
softening hold on the American mind; their dour musings were
syndicated across the country. This week the Senate's Armed
Services and Foreign Relations committees start hearings on gulf
policy, the kind of forum that will be tilted toward doubters.
</p>
<p> Bush and his White House handlers were hoping that last
week's excursion carried its own antidote to pessimism. There
were 350 journalists accompanying the President, and most of
them seemed to approve of his performance. The network anchors
rushed for their desert tunics and created as much stir among
the troops as the President himself. At the end of the
Thanksgiving stage show, elaborate broadcasting facilities in
the middle of the desolate sand beamed back live reports from
the media superstars.
</p>
<p> Bush walked among the G.I.s more as a comrade-in-arms than
as a Commander in Chief, never short of a quip: "If push comes
to shove, we're going to get Roseanne Barr to go to Iraq and
sing the national anthem," he joked to troops. "Baghdad Betty,
take that." He signed T-shirts and caps, and posed for
snapshots. He had turkey ("pretty good") with the Army and
Marines on land and attended Thanksgiving services aboard the
Navy's U.S.S. Nassau, a helicopter-landing ship. Bush was
plainly heartened by the enthusiasm of the troops. As he
journeyed on, Bush began to speak of the looming specter of
nuclear weapons in Iraq's arsenal. "Every day that passes brings
Saddam one step closer to realizing his goal of a nuclear
weapons arsenal," Bush declared at one stop. "And that's another
reason, frankly, why more and more our mission is marked by a
real sense of urgency." The gung-ho military let loose with a
visceral cheer.
</p>
<p> Bush came within 70 miles of the Kuwaiti border, his
chopper escorted by menacing gunships, their sides punctured
with the ugly snouts of .50-cal. machine guns. Fighter planes
ranged high overhead. "Security good?" somebody asked Desert
Shield commander General Norman Schwarzkopf. "It had better be,
or I'm in trouble," he replied. Bush wore one of those
camouflaged barracks hats that have become the symbol of the
waiting game in the desert. The President also had a gas mask
handy; he had been shown how to use it aboard Air Force One.
</p>
<p> Bush left horseshoe-pitching gear with the land forces,
suggesting they practice up, then come by the White House when
the crisis is over to challenge him and one of his sons. When
the President asked about their needs, they most often requested
flyswatters, beer and the date when they would be going home.
Bush had no estimate for the last. Was the duty as boring as
reported, one young officer was asked by a journalist following
the President. The soldier looked incredulous, then answered,
"We're standing here watching the President eat. That's how
boring it is."
</p>
<p> Four other political luminaries were at Bush's side during
his Thanksgiving pilgrimage. The President had shrewdly asked
the top congressional leaders--Senators George Mitchell and
Robert Dole and Speaker Thomas Foley and House minority leader
Robert Michel--to come take turkey in the desert, an offer
that could not be refused. They looked like hired extras swept
unexpectedly into the Bush spectacle.
</p>
<p> Headed for Cairo and a little hands-on steadying of Egypt's
President Hosni Mubarak, Bush marveled at the harsh landscape
with its glaring horizons and fine, shifting sand, and at how
unquenchable the good spirits of the U.S. men and women there
remained. Yet the President seemed somewhat subdued by his
desert foray. That might be an unexpected dividend of his
journey. Though he did little to dispel the home-front doubts
about the possibility of war, he drew the alliance of other
nations closer to him, showed his own determination and
intensity in the course, and seemed to sense the immense
difficulties of waging and sustaining war so far away.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>