Saturday, February 16, 2008

Breaking News: Bush Has A Feeling For Africa

I've got a feeling
A feeling deep inside, oh yeah
I've got a feeling
A feeling I can't hide, oh no
Oh no, I've got a feeling
--- The Beatles, I've Got A Feeling


George Bush, apparently, is doing policy-making based upon his feelings. The idea of Western Civilization is that it is a culture based upon rationality and the Judeo-Christian paradigm. But, George Bush, it seems, has a different idea. He is going to make policy based upon his feelings.

How sweet.

Only a commitment to policy-making by feeling could come up with such a stupid idea as power-sharing in Kenya. Would Bush want to have spent the last eight years sharing power with Al Gore?

And, of course, Raila Odinga (who Bush wants to be in on the power-sharing deal in Kenya) has an agreement with a powerful Muslim organization to impose Sharia law after he is in power.

From the BBC:


Bush urges Kenya power-sharing


I've got a firm, heartfelt commitment to the continent of Africa

President George W Bush

Full interview transcript


President Bush says Africa has been a foreign policy priority Bush interview

US President George W Bush has backed calls for a power-sharing agreement to end weeks of strife in Kenya following disputed presidential elections.

He said he was sending his secretary of state to Kenya to convey the message.

Mr Bush was speaking in Benin, at the start of his first presidential tour of Africa since 2003.
He said he would highlight African success stories during his six-day, five-nation visit, even though he remained committed to ending turmoil.


Democratic reform, economic and military assistance, and the fight against HIV/Aids are expected to be raised.

The US president also wants to allay concerns about a new military command he wants to base in Africa to work with African militaries to deal with trafficking or terror.

PRESIDENT BUSH'S ITINERARY

Benin - Cotonou: arrival ceremony, meets president

Tanzania - Dar-es-Salaam: meets president, tours hospital; Arusha: tours hospital, textile mill and girls' school

Rwanda - Kigali: meets president, visits genocide memorial

Ghana - Accra: meets president, state dinner. ["Bush-meat" will not be served]
Liberia - Monrovia: meets president, visits university


So far, Liberia is the only nation to have offered to host the US base. There are already some 1,700 US troops in Djibouti.

Speaking after talks with Benin's President Thomas Boni Yayi, Mr Bush said Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice was going to Kenya to help efforts to resolve the impasse - led by former UN Secretary General Kofi Annan.

"The key is that the leaders hear from her first hand that the United States desires to see that there be no violence and that there be a power-sharing agreement that will help this nation resolve its difficulties," Mr Bush told reporters.

Kenya's rival political parties have agreed to set up an independent panel to review last year's disputed elections.

But a possible power-sharing agreement has not been reached.

The opposition has accused President Mwai Kibaki of rigging the poll.

The dispute has led to protests, in which at least 1,000 people have died and 600,000 have fled their homes.

Malaria pledge

Speaking at a news conference with President Yayi, Mr Bush renewed his pledge to help Benin, with which the US plans to provide mosquito nets to every child under five, to help tackle malaria.

"I stand here by your side as a friend, a believer in your vision and a partner in your willingness to confront the disease and poverty that affect mankind," he said as he was receiving the Grand Cross of the Order of Benin earlier.

Mr Bush said he had skipped conflict areas to highlight success stories during his Africa trip.
"When you herald success, it helps others realize what it possible," said the US president, who is now heading to Tanzania.


He called for urgent action over the "genocide" in Sudan's region of Darfur, where at least 200,000 people have died and two million been displaced in a five-year conflict.

[Please note; The Sudan genocide of the Christian population has resulted in the deaths of at least 2 million non-Muslim Sudanese within the last 20 years., and not "200,000" as the State Dept. hand-out has stated]

In a BBC interview prior to his tour, the US president defended his Darfur stance, saying he had not wanted to send US troops into another Muslim country.

Compassionate

For a president whose foreign policy has been defined by Iraq this visit is an opportunity to show the more compassionate side of his legacy, says the BBC's Laura Trevelyan who is traveling with Mr Bush.

America has spent $15bn (£7.5bn) fighting Aids overseas since 2003, and Mr Bush has recently asked Congress to double that amount.

I've got a firm, heartfelt commitment to the continent of Africa President George W Bush
More than one million people in sub-Saharan Africa have life-saving anti-retroviral drugs thanks to the policy.


However the policy has been criticised by some for focusing on encouraging people not to have sex in order to stop the spread of Aids - unrealistic critics say.

However, international aid agencies have said US trade policy in Africa may undermine struggling African economies.

Benin relies on cotton production, for instance - but cannot compete with US cotton because of the large subsidies paid to US farmers.

Analysts say Mr Bush may also be concerned with countering the influence of China - which has been doing billions of dollars worth of trade deals in Africa.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Never could I have anticipated the depth of hypocracy to which Bush would descend. After all the blood and treasure he had our nation invest to bring democracy to Afghanistan and Iraq, he has the audacity to undermine the freely elected presidency of a Christian majority nation to appease a vicious and violent muslim (is there any other kind) minority is outrageous. F*ck what he's feeling. WTF is he thinking?! Bush's feigned or intentional ignorance about Islam and sharia can no longer be tolerated as his feelings drip with the blood of our finest. F'n ENOUGH!

Pastorius said...

If there is any rationality behind it, it probably has to do with

1) not wanting to see people die

and

2) wanting to negotiate with Kenya to allow us to have a base against terrorism in their country.

He has to realize that Islamism is the enemy. Our enemy is not just "terrorists." It is the ideology behind the terrorists.

He needs to work on stamping out that ideology.

The sharing of power in Kenya will only increase the power of the Islamism. Additionally, it will put the lives of the Christian majority at risk.