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Hume lie: elder Bush never criticized
Clinton
Media Matters
September 20, 2005
On the September 19 edition of Fox News' Special Report, host Brit Hume
claimed that President Clinton, in a recent interview on ABC's This Week, did
something that President George H.W. Bush "did not do, and that is criticize
the sitting president and his administration." But contrary to Hume's
assertion, Bush repeatedly criticized Clinton administration policies while
Clinton was in office:
* In an appearance at a San Antonio grade school on October 13,
1993, Bush expressed concern that the humanitarian mission to Somalia that he
had launched nearly a year earlier was being "messed up" by the Clinton
administration. "If you're going to put somebody else's son or daughter into
harm's way, into battle, you've got to know the answer to three questions,"
Bush told the students. He said the president has to know what the mission is,
"how they are going to do it," and "how they're going to get out of there."
Several news reports noted that Bush's comments appeared to violate his earlier
pledge not to publicly criticize Clinton during his first year in office. [The
New York Times, 10/14/93; The Boston Globe, 10/23/93]
* In an interview published in the February 1994 issue of
Washingtonian magazine, Bush criticized the Clinton administration's purported
lack of a "general strategy" in the foreign policy arena and the
"start-and-stop" failures it had exhibited. Bush pointed to the Clinton
administration's handling of the situation in Haiti as an example and also
criticized Clinton for his policy toward Bosnia:
The specific point of difference I'd make with the current
administration, however, is that when you send a US ship loaded with military
personnel to go ashore, you don't say, "They're going ashore" unless you mean
it. And you don't get turned back by a group of thugs standing on the
dock.
What that does -- starting and stopping -- is weaken the image of
the United States as a strong, resolute leader. It was devastating, sent a
horrible signal, when that troop ship was turned back -- a signal not just to
Latin America, but to Europe and elsewhere. Where I find most fault in the
Clinton foreign policy, the area where I find room for criticism, is this
pattern of start-and-stop, start-and-stop.
[...]
The Clinton administration, you'll remember, began by attacking my
administration and the Europeans for being weak and rewarding aggression, and
they vowed to get tough. But a few months later, they were essentially where we
were. They backed away from their bluster, but not without sending the
unfortunate impression of a weak and inconsistent US leadership to the
world.
* In a March 8, 1994, speech in Indian Wells, California, Bush
repeated his criticism of Clinton's actions toward Haiti. According to a
Riverside Press Enterprise article published the next day, Bush claimed "he did
not want to be a carping critic, but said President Clinton must be more
consistent in carrying out foreign policy. Bush criticized the president in
particular for sending a shipload of troops to Haiti last year and then
ordering them home when 'thugs' threatened them from the shore."
* On April 8, 1994, Bush gave a lecture at Carl Albert State
College in Poteau, Oklahoma, during which he criticized Clinton's proposed
health care reform legislation. "This may sound partisan," he told the
audience, "but I don't believe it will pass and I don't believe it should
pass." [Associated Press, 4/8/94]
* During a July 26, 1996, news conference with Bob Dole, then the
Republican nominee for president, Bush "criticized Clinton for boasting of
current economic stability," according to a Kansas City Star article published
the following day. Bush argued that "he handed Clinton an economy that grew at
about 5 percent in 1993." "That was not recession," he told
reporters.
* While campaigning with Dole days before the 1996 presidential
election, Bush suggested that Clinton had compromised the "integrity of the
White House. "What matters to me now is the integrity of the White House," he
said. "I believe in duty, honor, country," he continued. "I believe in service.
I believe in keeping the White House above partisan politics, away from these
puny, terrible disputes we're seeing." [Chicago Tribune, 11/1/96]
* In a letter released on April 23, 1998, Bush "criticized the
White House and its allies for their continuing public campaign to criticize
[independent counsel Kenneth] Starr and undermine his investigation," according
to a New York Times article published that day. In the letter, Bush professed
to hold Starr -- who at the time was investigating the Monica Lewinsky affair
-- "in high regard."
From the September 19 edition of Fox News' Special Report with Brit
Hume:
HUME: Former President Bill Clinton has now done something his
predecessor, the first President George Bush, did not do, and that is criticize
the sitting president and his administration. As Fox News correspondent Major
Garrett reports, political observers have a sense for Clinton: He's
back.
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