A telling insight into the one-sided relationship with Bush
By Rupert Cornwell
07/18/06 "The
Independent" -- -- They are not exactly diplomatically
explosive material such as the July 2002 "Downing Street memo",
which showed how Britain realised the US had decided to invade Iraq
months before the event, no matter what.
Even so, the live microphone exchanges captured yesterday between
George Bush and Tony Blair offer a snapshot between an articulate
but ultimately subordinate Prime Minister and the verbally stumbling
President.
"Yo, Blair," it begins, in that matey tone that Mr Bush is wont to
employ, knowing that his interlocutor would never try it on him.
Then the President gets down to business, instructing the Prime
Minister to "tell Angela" [German Chancellor Angela Merkel] to get a
deal on the stalled Doha trade round.
But in terms of startling opinions, this open-mike conversation was
not especially revealing, in comparison with some of its
predecessors. It mainly confirms that the private Bush is similar to
the public one - inelegantly spoken, impatient and accustomed to
having his own way. He may have used an expletive to denote his
opinions of Hizbollah's attacks on Israel - to "get Syria to get
Hizbollah to stop doing this shit". But that sums up Mr Bush's more
considered public reactions to the cross-border war between Israel
and the militant Islamic group.
And even the S-word expletive was pretty mild by the standard of
such things - certainly the "go fuck yourself" dished out by the
Vice-President, Dick Cheney, to the Democratic Senator Patrick Leahy
in an unguarded moment on Capitol Hill in 2004.
And Bush's words are a far cry from former president Ronald Reagan's
to a live mike at the height of the Cold War. "All right, my fellow
Americans, I am pleased to tell you today that I have signed
legislation that will outlaw Russia forever. We begin bombing in
five minutes."
Instead the world has had an informal glimpse of Bush and Blair at
work. As in their joint public performance, Mr Blair seems to have
the ideas and the words to express them. "I am perfectly happy to
try and see what the lie of the land is, but you need to get that
done quickly because otherwise it will spiral," he says at one
point, in an apparent offer to travel to the Middle East himself.
No need, Mr Bush responds. "I think Condi [Condoleezza Rice, the
Secretary of State] is going to go pretty soon." The Prime Minister
acquiesces, and the point is made. No one is going to upstage the US
in the handling of the crisis, and perhaps deviate from an
American-written script.
They are not exactly diplomatically explosive material such as the
July 2002 "Downing Street memo", which showed how Britain realised
the US had decided to invade Iraq months before the event, no matter
what.
Even so, the live microphone exchanges captured yesterday between
George Bush and Tony Blair offer a snapshot between an articulate
but ultimately subordinate Prime Minister and the verbally stumbling
President.
"Yo, Blair," it begins, in that matey tone that Mr Bush is wont to
employ, knowing that his interlocutor would never try it on him.
Then the President gets down to business, instructing the Prime
Minister to "tell Angela" [German Chancellor Angela Merkel] to get a
deal on the stalled Doha trade round.
But in terms of startling opinions, this open-mike conversation was
not especially revealing, in comparison with some of its
predecessors. It mainly confirms that the private Bush is similar to
the public one - inelegantly spoken, impatient and accustomed to
having his own way. He may have used an expletive to denote his
opinions of Hizbollah's attacks on Israel - to "get Syria to get
Hizbollah to stop doing this shit". But that sums up Mr Bush's more
considered public reactions to the cross-border war between Israel
and the militant Islamic group.
And even the S-word expletive was pretty mild by the standard of
such things - certainly the "go fuck yourself" dished out by the
Vice-President, Dick Cheney, to the Democratic Senator Patrick Leahy
in an unguarded moment on Capitol Hill in 2004.
And Bush's words are a far cry from former president Ronald Reagan's
to a live mike at the height of the Cold War. "All right, my fellow
Americans, I am pleased to tell you today that I have signed
legislation that will outlaw Russia forever. We begin bombing in
five minutes."
Instead the world has had an informal glimpse of Bush and Blair at
work. As in their joint public performance, Mr Blair seems to have
the ideas and the words to express them. "I am perfectly happy to
try and see what the lie of the land is, but you need to get that
done quickly because otherwise it will spiral," he says at one
point, in an apparent offer to travel to the Middle East himself.
No need, Mr Bush responds. "I think Condi [Condoleezza Rice, the
Secretary of State] is going to go pretty soon." The Prime Minister
acquiesces, and the point is made. No one is going to upstage the US
in the handling of the crisis, and perhaps deviate from an
American-written script.
© 2006 Independent News and Media Limited