Andrew Bacevich: “He Told Us to Go Shopping. Now the Bill Is Due.”
Last week I linked to an interview with Andrew Bacevich, the author of The Limits of Power: The End of American Exceptionalism. He has a great article in Sunday’s edition of the Washington Post:
It’s widely thought that the biggest gamble President Bush ever took was deciding to invade Iraq in 2003. It wasn’t. His riskiest move was actually one made right after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks when he chose not to mobilize the country or summon his fellow citizens to any wartime economic sacrifice. Bush tried to remake the world on the cheap, and as the bill grew larger, he still refused to ask Americans to pay up. During this past week, that gamble collapsed, leaving the rest of us to sort through the wreckage.
To understand this link between today’s financial crisis and Bush’s wider national security decisions, we need to go back to 9/11 itself. From the very outset, the president described the “war on terror” as a vast undertaking of paramount importance. But he simultaneously urged Americans to carry on as if there were no war. “Get down to Disney World in Florida,” he urged just over two weeks after 9/11. “Take your families and enjoy life, the way we want it to be enjoyed.” Bush certainly wanted citizens to support his war — he just wasn’t going to require them actually to do anything. The support he sought was not active but passive. It entailed not popular engagement but popular deference. Bush simply wanted citizens (and Congress) to go along without asking too many questions.
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I’m gonna have to call partial bullshit on this one.
Although I’m no fan of bush, this whole subprime mortgage crisis is the economic love child of clinton.
Check the date before you read the article.
http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9C0DE7DB153EF933A0575AC0A96F958260
I remember, in the aftermath of 9/11, thinking that Bush held a golden opportunity to unify the country and get us all moving together in one direction by asking for our active involvement in what everyone knew would have to be a military response. I remember waiting for the request with anticipation. I also recall the huge letdown I felt when he did not ask the people of the United States to do anything meaningful in response.
While I do not believe that the current economic mess is the result of that failure on Bush’s part, I do think that he sowed the seeds of his own downfall right then and there.