Scowcroft: Bush Acted
Contemptuously Toward NATO and Europe
USA Today
Posted 10/16/2004 2:53 PM
Updated 10/17/2004 2:55 PM
WASHINGTON (AP) — The national security adviser under
the first President Bush says the current president acted
contemptuously toward NATO and Europe after Sept. 11 and is
trying to cooperate now out of desperation to "rescue a failing
venture" in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Brent Scowcroft, a mentor to the current national security
adviser, Condoleezza Rice, also said in an interview published in
England that Bush is inordinately influenced by Israeli Prime
Minister Ariel Sharon.
"Sharon just has him wrapped around his little finger,"
Scowcroft told London's Financial Times. "I think the president
is mesmerized."
Scowcroft said the Bush administration's "unilateralist"
position was partly responsible for the post-Sept. 11, 2001,
decline of the trans-Atlantic relationship.
"It's in general bad," he said. "It's not really hostile, but
there's an edge to it."
Early on, he said, "We had gotten contemptuous of Europeans
and their weaknesses. We had really turned unilateral."
Although slightly diminished since then, the unilateralist
policies remain fundamentally little changed, Scowcroft said.
Recent overtures to cooperate in Afghanistan and Iraq with the
United Nations and NATO was "as much an act of desperation as
anything else ... to rescue a failing venture."
On Israel and Sharon, the former security adviser said Sharon
calls Bush after strongly retaliating for a Palestinian suicide
attack and says: '"I'm on the front line of terrorism,' and the
president says, 'Yes, you are.'"
Scowcroft said Sharon "has been nothing but trouble."
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