Donald Trump May Be The Best Thing That Ever Happened To George W. Bush

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
George W Bush has released a book of portraits of men and women wounded in wars in Afghanistan, Iraq.Washignton: 
George W
Bush received three standing ovations last week, the first for the mere mention of his name.Bush was in town for the Atlantic Council's
annual fundraiser, where he received the Distinguished International Leadership Award from the influential think tank
More than 800 guests from 70 countries - including former presidents, prime ministers and military leaders - gave the 43rd president a warm,
enthusiastic welcome.He was introduced via video by former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, who said, "Ultimately, true leadership
requires being, deep down, a good person."Bush responded with vintage Dubya: self-deprecating jokes, references to his mom and dad, and
highlighting the importance of global diplomacy - specifically his administration's work on the AIDS crisis
"I'm honored to get this award," he told the audience
"I'd really like to dedicate it to the generosity of the American people and ask you to spread the word about what this great compassionate
nation has done."He did not mention Iraq, nor did anyone else on this night of celebration."Time has done the reputation of President Bush a
lot of good," said Fred Kempe, president of the bipartisan Atlantic Council.The organization has considered giving Bush the award for the
past few years, but the Iraq War was always the stumbling block
This year, the jury looked at his work fighting AIDS, his foreign policy in Africa and his leadership in the aftermath of the 9/11 attacks
"Our conclusion was that, the longer time goes on and his presidency is reassessed, the better he looks," Kempe said. George W
Bush (left) and impersonator Steve Bridges delivered a speech at White House dinner in 2006Washington, it seems, has developed Bush
nostalgia
Just nine years after he left the White House, many conservatives pine for their misunderestimated good old boy from Texas
Looking in the rearview mirror, the last Republican president suddenly appears measured, compassionate, principled - in short, presidential
Even liberals who could not wait for Barack Obama to move into the White House are grudgingly penitent, privately admitting that they didn't
appreciate Bush's good qualities.Fifteen years since the infamous "Mission Accomplished" banner was unfurled celebrating victory in Iraq,
the debate about the war rages on
Critics of the invasion believe it will always define Bush's presidency
Admirers think history will be kinder to him
We'll all be dead before there's a verdict one way or the other.When Bush left Washington, his popularity was in the tank, with just a 33
percent approval rating
Those numbers have doubled: 61 percent of Americans, including a number of Democrats and independents, say they have a favorable view of
him, according to a CNN poll released this January.But this newfound appreciation may have less to do with history and more to do with
political beer goggles: It's 2 a.m
in nation's capital, and suddenly every past president looks good.No one wants to say it out loud, but Donald Trump may be the best thing
that ever happened to George W
Bush.Friends say the 43rd president hates the "L" word - "legacy" - and he declines most interviews on the subject, including one for this
article.Bush "has always understood that history would have a different view of his presidency and of its consequences as the years passed,"
said presidential historian Jon Meacham
"He is a big reader of biography and history and knows that perspectives change as the passions of the moment cool; issues that loom large
in real time often fade over time."It takes 25 to 30 years to form an accurate assessment of any presidency
"Unless you're Lincoln or FDR," Meacham said, "you're going to have divided opinion in real time."The headlines that seem so important
inevitably fade: Harry Truman was very unpopular when he left office on 1953, only to see his historical stock rise as the Cold War
institutions he created are widely credited with preventing another world war
Dwight Eisenhower was criticized for the Korean War, which some now regard as vital to the balance of power in Asia
Lyndon Johnson remains divisive: pilloried for the Vietnam War, lauded for his groundbreaking work on civil rights
For his part, Meacham believes Bush will viewed as a more sophisticated and significant president than he is judged today.But presidential
character That's on display from Day 1, and to many, Bush - compared with Trump's tweets, tantrums and general disregard for truth - looks
like a scholar and a gentleman.Like most establishment Republicans, the Bush family was quietly dismissive of Trump - who repeatedly
insulted Jeb Bush and other primary opponents during the 2016 campaign
But in interviews with Mark Updegrove, author of "The Last Republicans: Inside the Extraordinary Relationship Between George H.W
Bush and George W
Bush," both men spoke candidly about the businessman turned politician."I don't like him," said George H.W
Bush in May 2016
"I don't know much about him, but I know he's a blowhard
And I'm not too excited about him being a leader." His son, surprised when Trump became the GOP nominee, focused on the new Republican
standard-bearer's moral fitness: "The question for the country to decide - on both candidates, by the way - is to what extent should we be
insisting upon integrity and solid character."Neither Bush, writes Updegrove, voted for Trump: George H.W
picked Hillary Clinton
George W
did not cast a ballot for president.The White House punched back when the book came out in November: "If one presidential candidate can
disassemble a political party, it speaks volumes about how strong a legacy its past two presidents really had," an unnamed White House
official told CNN
"And that begins with the Iraq War, one of the greatest foreign policy mistakes in American history."Bush's legacy has been saddled with
scorching critiques from a number of foreign policy experts who view him as a naive follower of neoconservatives who charged into the Iraq
War on the heels of bad intelligence about weapons of mass destruction; who took his eye off the ball in Afghanistan - allowing al-Qaida to
recover; who failed to adequately plan for the postwar societal disintegration and humanitarian crisis that followed the invasion.But the
current embrace of Bush has nothing to do with his politics or policies."It's nostalgia for the personal characteristics," said one
Republican fundraiser, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to speak frankly about his party's leaders
"Bush had a swaggering, wiseguy kind of personality, but he knew when to deploy it and when to behave like a president
He wasn't particularly articulate in his use of syntax
But he was someone who had real fidelity to the Constitution, to the norms of presidential behavior, to his wife
He seemed to be a good man."Bush's longtime friend Sen
Roy Blunt, R-Mo., believes people are responding to Bush's "genuineness."He is "a person who doesn't have to be critical of everybody else,
a person who understands how big these problems are, a person who just has a sense of the right way to conduct yourself as a former
president."How a president behaves after leaving office is a bigger factor in the legacy question than one might guess
As a general rule, Americans want dignity and statesmanship from their past presidents
Bush has kept a low profile: painting, promoting philanthropic causes, hanging out with Bono and Bill Clinton
He's made millions giving corporate speeches, while avoiding the appearance of cashing in on his White House years.And he's been careful not
to publicly weigh in on Trump since the election
In a widely reported speech last October, Bush gave an address on leadership without once mentioning the current president by name - but
pointing a finger nonetheless
"We know that when we lose sight of our ideals, it is not democracy that has failed," he said
"It is the failure of those charged with preserving and protecting democracy."Even those who believe Bush was wrong to invade Iraq rarely
question his patriotism or his respect for the office
Madeleine Albright, who also spoke that day at the George W
Bush Institute event in New York City, writes in her new book: "We disagreed often about matter of policy
However, I have always admired the man's easygoing optimism and his personal decency, qualities that have become far less common in public
life than they should be."In other words, Trump - named or unnamed - has become the prism from which every president's character is judged,
especially Bush, his Republican predecessor."The current rising fondness for him has a lot to do, obviously, with the temperamental contrast
he offers to the incumbent," said Meacham
"Disagree with him as you will, he inarguably upheld the dignity of the office and represented a center-right sensibility that's facing an
existential crisis right now.""Trump is a uniquely dangerous and unfit president in many ways, but he tempts liberals to paint the
Republican leaders who preceded him in an afterglow of decency and high-mindedness that is hard to detect if you go searching for it in the
recent past," Brian Beutler, editor in chief of the progressive Crooked Media, wrote last October
"The unremitting awfulness of the George W
Bush presidency - particularly its early years - has been rewritten in a faction of the liberal imagination as a kind of golden age when
political debate was more honest and fact-driven
Things are in some ways worse now, but if that era ever existed, it predated (Bush) by many years."The arguments for and against Bush - his
policies, his priorities, his performance - fall roughly into two camps.One believes that the decision to invade Iraq overshadows anything
else Bush did during his eight years, a choice that plunged this country into a crippling war that continues to this day, a war with an
incalculable price in terms of money, foreign policy, lives lost and global terrorism."The Bush-Cheney administration paved the way to a war
with false statements, from misrepresentations, and what I think you can justifiably call lies," said David Corn, a liberal critic and
co-author of "Hubris: The Inside Story of Spin, Scandal, and the Selling of the Iraq War." "That war was poorly planned, poorly implemented,
and resulted in the deaths of hundreds of thousands of Iraqi civilians
It also gave rise to ISIS and created far more problems than it might have solved." There is no way, Corn said, to look at the 43rd
presidency without seeing it defined by "the disaster in the Middle East."The other camp allows that the Iraq invasion was controversial and
flawed
"I think there's a recognition that, whether based on bad intelligence or just a bad policy decision, that the Iraq invasion wasn't the
finest moment in his presidency," Kempe acknowledged
"Where people start to differ is the surge, a really courageous corrective
A lot of people feel that he doesn't get enough credit."The surge put things on a better path - which Obama did not build on, said Kempe,
who argues that Bush left Iraq on a positive trajectory.As the years have passed "people have been able to put Iraq in perspective in a way
that they were not before," said Steven Hadley, who advised Bush on national security affairs
"And people were then able to look at some of the other things that were going on in the administration that were pretty positive."He ticks
off Bush's work on education, immigration, the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR), malaria in Africa, international
development and, especially, keeping the country free from a major terrorist attack after 9/11
"I think there is both a sense that it was a more of bipartisan era and also a sense that the Congress and the White House were able to work
together to do some things that really mattered."Inevitably, Americans compare past presidents with the current officeholder
For the past few years, Bush has routinely appeared on snarky lists of America's worst presidents, joining James Buchanan, Warren Harding,
Millard Fillmore, Ulysses Grant and Richard Nixon
Where he ends up a century from now is anyone's guess.Team Bush, of course, wants the president to be judged on his own merits: As a leader
they see as a principled politician, as a man of character
"He had a reverence for the office of the presidency and wanted to make sure that he did nothing to discredit that office," Hadley said."I
hope you don't make this 'Bush is a contrast to Trump' or 'Bush as a critique of Trump,' " he added
The reassessment is happening "as a result of the passage of time
And I think it would have happened even if somebody else other than President Trump had been elected."Probably not
But historians, for good or ill, will have the final word."I believe that the Greeks had it right when they said, 'Character is destiny,'"
said Meacham
"When we talk about George Washington we don't talk about the Jay Treaty
We talk about his virtues and the tone that he lent the early years of the American experiment."The reason history had been kind to Truman,
Eisenhower and will be so to Bush, he believes, is that "they understood that the national interest was more important than their personal
one - and that's not a sentimental point
They knew that it was important to do things that were right, and that history was a lot longer than that given news cycle
And that's something that Trump does not understand."Bush understands
As he left the stage, the audience gave him one last sustained ovation
One guest turned to her companion and sighed, "I hardly recognize the Republican Party these days."(This story has not been edited by
TheIndianSubcontinent staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)