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Why Bush's Diplomatic Dance Card Is Full

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  • Why Bush's Diplomatic Dance Card Is Full

    WHY BUSH'S DIPLOMATIC DANCE CARD IS FULL
    By Massimo Calabresi/Washington

    http://www.time.com/time/nat ion/article/0,8599,1681715,00.html
    Wednesday, Nov. 07, 2007

    President George W. Bush is incredibly popular right now... with
    foreign leaders. At home, of course, he's a lame duck, and a record
    50% of Americans strongly disapprove of his presidency, according to
    a recent Gallup poll.

    Overseas, he has taken America to historic lows among poll respondents
    around the world. The war in Iraq, the rise of China and perceived
    American unilateralism have diminished U.S. global influence to its
    lowest level since the Cold War. But in all that bad news, smart
    foreigners see an opportunity -- and that explains why the President
    finds himself on the receiving end of so much attention from abroad
    this week.

    First came Turkey's Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, seeking
    U.S. assistance against Kurdish rebels in northern Iraq and help
    advancing Turkey's pursuit of entry into the European Union. Some might
    have thought it an odd moment for Anakara's premier to pay a courtesy
    call on Washington, what with the recent recall of the Turkey's
    ambassador to Washington in protest over moves in the U.S. Congress
    to label the massacre of Armenians in 1915 a genocide. And then
    there are the mounting fears of a Turkish incursion into Iraq to
    stop cross-border raids into southeastern Turkey by the Kurdistan
    Workers Party, or PKK, which is listed by the U.S. as a terrorist
    organization. But what better moment to enlist U.S. help against the
    PKK than when Washington's fears of a damaging rift with Ankara are
    at their height?

    And, certainly, Bush was as strong as he's been on the matter. On
    Monday he declared, "PKK is a terrorist organization. They're an
    enemy of Turkey, they're an enemy of Iraq, and they're an enemy of
    the United States. We have talked about how we can work together to
    protect ourselves from the PKK."

    Bush said he had shared intelligence on the PKK with Erdogan, and
    opened a direct channel between Turkey's number two military official
    and the top American commander in Iraq, Gen. David Petraeus. The
    President also spoke of cutting off the money flow to the PKK from
    within Iraq. Not bad for a country that supposedly has unsteady
    relations with the U.S.

    Then came new French president Nicolas Sarkozy, the crafty political
    operator known for exploiting his opponents weaknesses in ways they
    don't expect. A social dinner Tuesday night at the White House,
    followed by a trip Wednesday to Mount Vernon set the collegial
    tone. And Bush laid it on thick at a joint press conference at
    Washington's home Wednesday, saying Sarkozy had "impressed a lot of
    people here on your journey," and telling the French leader that he
    has "a strong set of universal values in your heart."

    As some keen observers had predicted, nothing tangible came out of
    the meetings. But Sarkozy still got what he came for: a burnishing
    of his image as the new pivot player in U.S.-European relations --
    a role left vacant by the departure of Tony Blair as prime minister
    of Britain. And it's a role whose value on the continent Sarkozy
    recognizes. "What he wants is a bilateral relationship with Bush so
    that he can do what Blair so often did, which is serve as a swing
    between the U.S. and its European partners," says Jeremy Shapiro,
    a fellow at the Brookings Institution.

    At this rate, the German Prime Minister, Angela Merkel should be
    showing up with a long wish list when she lands in Crawford, Texas,
    on Friday, for a two-day summit with Bush. The President embarrassed
    his German counterpart in her own back yard last June when he refused
    to sign up for her plan to reduce global warming at the G-8 summit
    in Heiligendamm. Signs of a U.S.

    effort to make nice could come with some new concession on the
    environment or on the treatment of prisoners at Guantanamo Bay and
    broader issues of human rights in the war on terrorism -- another
    issue of long-standing disagreement between Bush and Merkel.

    Certainly, this week's love-fest has been a two-way affair, and
    Bush has his own reasons for making nice with the auslanders. Nor is
    Bush lacking in tactical ability when he chooses to employ it: He is
    playing Merkel and Sarkozy off each other, for example, exploiting
    the tense relations between the two in the interest of pressuring
    for progress on Iranian nuclear negotiations and greater help from
    both in Afghanistan. But after this week's warm and fuzzy meetings,
    don't be surprised if more and more foreign leaders realize now's the
    time to get what they want from the U.S. and start beating a path to
    Bush's door.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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