WASHINGTON, May 14 (UPI) -- Two of Washington's best-informed men confirmed it so it must be true. President Bush and his consigliere Karl Rove bet on who had read the most books in a year. Mike McConnell, the director of national intelligence, told friends Rove won with 117 books and Bush was a close second with 104 books.
Unhappy over his loss to his close confidant, Bush asked for a recount -- in words. And the president won by 1.7 percent. The story is not apocryphal. In fact, none other than McConnell's predecessor as the nation's top spymaster, John Negroponte, now deputy secretary of state, confirmed it. The president, he explained, reads two to three books a week and does not watch television. Most of them are history and biographies of famous statesmen (and three stateswomen who took their countries to war, namely Britain's Margaret Thatcher, Israel's Golda Meir and India's Indira Gandhi).
Bush identifies with George Washington, Lincoln, Roosevelt, Truman and on the other side of the pond, Winston Churchill, all men of courage who did what was right when it was most difficult. From the order to obliterate Hiroshima and Nagasaki that killed instantly 150,000 Japanese to avoid the loss of an estimated 1 million American lives in an invasion of Japan; to the recognition of the state of Israel against the advice of World War II's most prestigious military leader, Secretary of State George C. Marshall; to the decision to repel North Korea's invasion of South Korea; to the firing of the immensely popular Gen. Douglas MacArthur for disobeying the president; to Ronald Reagan's defeat of the evil Soviet Empire, Mr. Bush sees his decision to invade Iraq in the same historical league.
President Bush showed a recent visitor a portrait of
Bush's model for resisting and defeating Islamist extremism's global campaign to restore the caliphate and destroy Christendom is Churchill. Isolated in the 1930s on the back benches of parliament, his clarion calls for backbone against Hitler's Europewide ambitions went unheeded until World War II broke out Sept. 1, 1939 -- and then still didn't get the draft to lead until the Nazi blitzkrieg in May 1940.
President Bush, sans
U.S. News & World Report, a national magazine with a circulation of 2 million, asked on its cover a week ago whether Mr. Bush was "Resolute or Delusional?"
The frequent comparisons to history's greats are anything but delusional, his aides and confidants say off line. He is, of course, stubborn and unyielding. And all are confident history will vindicate his bulldoggish tenacity. The self-described "Decider" is the antithesis of self-doubt. Like an old seadog, he relishes the idea of plowing into rough seas.
When a recent visitor asked him what assurance he could give about his successor in 2009, President Bush replied, "we'll fix it so he'll be locked in." The visitor left perplexed and wondered whether that might mean the
A Texan friend of long standing called on him recently and confided to his
Moderate Republicans, led by Sen. Chuck Hagel; former national security adviser (under Bush 41) Brent Scowcroft, who weekends in Kennebunkport, Maine, with President Bush's father; Susan Eisenhower (the president's granddaughter); former Deputy Secretary of State John Whitehead and other prominent names are deeply concerned about 2008. Those who identified with the Republican Party in 2002 numbered 30 percent (versus 31 percent with Democrats). This year, Republicans are down to 25 percent (33 percent Democrats), and still dropping.
Discouraged Republicans have taken their concerns to the president. When they talked to their friends later that same week, they couldn't find anything encouraging to say. To those who accuse him of not keeping his ear close enough to the ground in grass-roots
In Bush's reading of history, for the
In the case of a
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