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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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featuring a stopover in Japan, was later re-scheduled to start on December 30 and to<br />

extend through the first week of the New Year. It was during this trip that <strong>Bush</strong> vomited<br />

and collapsed to the floor during a state dinner with Japanese Prime Minister Miyazawa.<br />

November 6: On the morning after the election, <strong>Bush</strong> had announced a 6:40 AM press<br />

conference in order to put on a demagogic show of concern for the plight of those born<br />

on the wrong side of the tracks before jetting off to a NATO summit in Rome. He<br />

admitted that he was "depressed" over the defeat of Thornburgh because the latter was<br />

such a good man. He lamely tried to explain his decision to remain in Washington at the<br />

end of the month as based on his experience that "all kinds of crazy things can happen<br />

with this crowd that controls the Senate and House." But <strong>Bush</strong> had another big flip-flop<br />

to offer: although he still denied the existence of a "recession," he was now concerned<br />

about "people that are hurting," and for these he was willing to "go the extra mile." He<br />

was now seeking a compromise bill to extend unemployment benefits. Within a week, a<br />

compromise had been reached with most of the concessions coming from <strong>Bush</strong>, on the<br />

model of the civil rights bill. Was it another impuslive, hyperthyroid moment? [fn 70]<br />

November 7: During his address to the NATO summit of 16 heads of state and heads of<br />

government, <strong>Bush</strong> departed from his prepared text and inserted the following sentence off<br />

the cuff into his remarks:<br />

If, my friends, your ultimate aim is to provide independently for your own defense, the<br />

time to tell us is today.<br />

This was in many respects the most astounding threat ever made by an American<br />

president to the leaders of the North Atlantic Alliance, which had always been<br />

considered, since 1949, as the cornerstone of US foreign policy. <strong>Bush</strong> now called the<br />

Atlantic Pact into question, apparently in a fit of rage. Press reports spoke of "clouds of<br />

suspicion" separating <strong>Bush</strong> from France and Germany; the State Department and the<br />

British were known to be hysterical about plans to expand the exisiting Franco-German<br />

brigade into a larger unit. US officials told one reporter that <strong>Bush</strong> had become<br />

"exasperated" by the Byzantine tactics of Tonton Mitterrand, known in Paris as "Le<br />

Florentin" in a misguided tribute to Machiavelli. <strong>The</strong>se frictions apparently had<br />

contributed to <strong>Bush</strong>'s outburst. James Baker and other spin doctors tried to play down the<br />

importance of this shocking episode. [fn 71]<br />

November 8: At a press conference in Rome, <strong>Bush</strong> turned in yet another furious tantrum.<br />

<strong>The</strong> basic issues were that his travel obsession had been denied, and that he did not want<br />

to brook increasing criticism. <strong>Bush</strong> "complained bitterly" that he had been forced to<br />

abandon his prized trip to Asia owing to "some carping by people that don't understand"<br />

his awesome responsibilities as world leader. <strong>Bush</strong> angrily maintained that to be "driven<br />

away" from an Asia trip "by people holding up silly T-shirts is ridiculous." As one<br />

journalist saw the scene, "<strong>Bush</strong>, his voice rising and eyelids narrowing, talked at length<br />

about a president's responsibilities in foreign policy and the importance of Japan to<br />

American jobs. His passionate response contained an undercurrent of regret that he<br />

approved the cancellation that some Republicans said this week was precipitous and too

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