President Bush's
'Appropriate' Response
December 31 2004
Counterbias.com
Walter Brasch
On Sunday,
Dec. 26, an earthquake-triggered tsunami with an effect of 1,000
miles from its epicenter in the Indian Ocean near Sumatra devastated
12 countries. Within hours, numerous countries and private social
service agencies had begun massive relief operations. President
George W. Bush, vacationing on his ranch in Crawford, Texas, made no
public statements. His press office, however, released a 121-word
press expressing the President’s “condolences,” and that the Bush
Administration would provide all “appropriate assistance” to the
affected nations. The statement did not directly quote the
President. In contrast, German chancellor Gerhard Schröder cut short
his vacation to return to Berlin.
On Monday, Bush’s deputy press secretary indicated that Bush
“received a special briefing” about the tragedy,” that the
administration’s “thoughts and prayers are with all those who are
suffering,” and that the U.S. “will be a leading partner” in relief
operations.
On Tuesday, the President bicycled and continued to clear brush from
his ranch. He said nothing to the American public, to the media, or
to the international community. However, the deputy press secretary
did say that the President was “saddened and has extended his
condolences for this terrible tragedy.” When challenged as to why
the public silence, a White House official bluntly stated, “The
President wanted to be fully briefed on our efforts. He didn’t want
to make a symbolic statement about, ‘We feel your pain.’” It was an
excuse for why the man who believes he is a “compassionate
conservative” once again failed to speak out during yet another
extended vacation. More important, it was a disgusting attack upon
Bill Clinton who did speak out shortly after the devastation and,
when president, was quick to let world leaders know that the United
States would provide understanding, sympathy, and supplies for
humanitarian relief—not unlike world leaders who were quick to
express their outrage and assistance following 9/11, a year into
Bush’s first term.
That second day after the 9.0 underwater earthquake unleashed more
than 30-foot waves of destruction, Jan Egeland, United Nations
emergency relief coordinator, bluntly stated that the world’s rich
nations were normally “stingy” in their response to humanitarian
aid. Of the world’s 30 richest countries, the United States ranks
near the bottom with contributions of 0.14 percent of its gross
national product, according to the Organization for Economic
Cooperation and Development. (Norway, with 0.92 percent, is the
highest.)
“The United States is not stingy,” pouted Colin Powell, the outgoing
secretary of state. There was no mention that the Bush
Administration a week earlier proposed cutting back its contribution
to the World Food Bank. Nevertheless, following Egeland’s challenge,
the United States announced it would donate another $20 million in
aid, for a total of $35 million.
By then, Canada, with a population of about 11 percent that of the
U.S. and a Gross Domestic Product (GDP) about 6 percent that of the
U.S., pledged $33 million. Spain, with a population of about
one-seventh that of the U.S. and a GDP about 6 percent that of the
U.S., quickly pledged more than $68 million in relief, twice that
initially committed by the U.S. Australia, with a population about 7
percent and a GDP about 4 percent of that of the United States,
pledged $20 million. Japan, with a population about two-fifths and a
GDP about half that of the U.S., pledged at least $40 million; the
United Kingdom, with a population of one-fifth and a GDP of about 13
percent of that of the U.S. also pledged at least $40 million.
France, with a population about one-fifth that of the U.S. and a GDP
about one-tenth that of the U.S., quickly pledged $27 million. Also
responding quickly, with statements by their leaders coupled with
financial and humanitarian assistance, were dozens of other
countries. Israel contributed millions and pledged a 150-member
medical team; other countries had already been shipping thousands of
tons of relief supplies. International aid organizations believe
more than $14 billion will be needed for humanitarian assistance,
much of it donated by individuals and corporations.
On Wednesday, the third day after the earthquake and resulting
tsunami, with the death toll approaching 70,000, and expected to
rise to more than 100,000, with more than two million expected to be
homeless, with substantial health and sanitation problems for those
who lived, and with millions now questioning why America’s president
hadn’t spoken out or committed more resources, George W. Bush
finally held a news conference on his ranch.
“Laura and I, and the American people, are shocked and we are
saddened,” said the President at the beginning of a 327-word
statement that took only about three minutes to deliver. He said
that earlier that morning he spoke with the leaders of India, Sri
Lanka, Thailand, and Indonesia, four of the countries hit hardest by
the disaster. He then announced American disaster experts were in
the affected areas, that he had ordered an aircraft carrier group to
divert to the Indian Ocean, a hospital ship, seven water-producing
ships, a Marine expeditionary unit and several aircraft to assist
relief operations.
With more than 125,000 uniformed military personnel in Iraq, perhaps
another 15,000 in Afghanistan, and the Reserves and National Guard
stretched so thin that tours of duty in Iraq have been irrevocably
extended, the possibility of a massive American presence in the
affected countries by anyone other than civilians working for social
service agencies is minimal. “We will prevail over this
destruction,” announced the commander-in-chief who believes he is a
wartime president.
The previous year, the U.S. Agency for International Development
provided about $2.4 billion for humanitarian relief, much of it for
work in Afghanistan and Iraq, the largest contribution of any
country in the world. President Bush believes the United States
might provide as much as $ 1 billion in cash and in-kind donations
(the cost of maintaining the U.S.S. Abraham Lincoln in the Indian
Ocean is figured into the totals) to assist the nations hit by the
worst natural disaster in more than four decades. That $1 billion,
if all of it is sent to the affected nations, would be about
one-half of one percent of what is planned for the war in Iraq. It
was what the President decided would be “appropriate.”
Walter Brasch is professor of journalism at Bloomsburg
University. His latest book is America’s Patriotic Acts; The
Federal Government’s Violation of Constitutional and Civil Rights
(Peter Lang Publishing.) You may contact Dr. Brasch at brasch@bloomu.edu
or through his website at www.walterbrasch.com.