As Democracy Push Falters, Bush Feels Like a 'Dissident'

By Peter Baker
Washington Post Staff Writer
Monday, August 20, 2007; A01

By the time he arrived in Prague in June for a democracy conference, 
President Bush was frustrated. He had committed his presidency to 
working toward the goal of "ending tyranny in our world," yet the 
march of freedom seemed stalled. Just as aggravating was the sense 
that his own government was not committed to his vision.

As he sat down with opposition leaders from authoritarian societies 
around the world, he gave voice to his exasperation. "You're not the 
only dissident," Bush told Saad Eddin Ibrahim, a leader in the 
resistance to Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak. "I too am a dissident 
in Washington. Bureaucracy in the United States does not help change. 
It seems that Mubarak succeeded in brainwashing them."

If he needed more evidence, he would soon get it. In his speech that 
day, Bush vowed to order U.S. ambassadors in unfree nations to meet 
with dissidents and boasted that he had created a fund to help 
embattled human rights defenders. But the State Department did not 
send out the cable directing ambassadors to sit down with dissidents 
until two months later. And to this day, not a nickel has been 
transferred to the fund he touted.

Two and a half years after Bush pledged in his second inaugural 
address to spread democracy around the world, the grand project has 
bogged down in a bureaucratic and geopolitical morass, in the view of 
many activists, officials and even White House aides. Many in his 
administration never bought into the idea, and some undermined it, 
including his own vice president. The Iraq war has distracted Bush 
and, in some quarters, discredited his aspirations. And while he 
focuses his ire on bureaucracy, Bush at times has compromised the 
idealism of that speech in the muddy reality of guarding other U.S. 
interests.

The story of how a president's vision is translated into thorny 
policy is a classic Washington tale of politics, inertia, rivalries 
and funding battles -- and a case study in the frustrated ambition of 
a besieged presidency. Bush says his goal of "ending tyranny" will 
take many generations, and he aims to institutionalize it as U.S. 
policy no matter who follows him in the White House. And for all the 
difficulties of the moment, it may yet, as he hopes, see fruition 
down the road.

At this point, though, democracy promotion has become so identified 
with an unpopular president that candidates running to succeed him 
are running away from it. At a recent debate, they rushed to disavow 
it. "I'm not a carbon copy of President Bush," one said. Another 
ventured that "maybe going to elections so quickly is a mistake." A 
third, asked if he agreed with Bush's vision, replied, "Absolutely 
not, because I don't think we can force people to accept our way of 
life, our way of government."

And those were the Republicans.

...

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/08/19/AR2007081901720.html

Reply via email to