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- THE GULF, Page 21THE PRESIDENCYNetworking Pays Off
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- By Hugh Sidey
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- The scholars and connoisseurs of power have a task: to
- describe and label the new presidency that George Bush has
- wrought in the past few days. Princeton's political historian,
- Fred Greenstein, suggests that rarely, if ever, has there been
- a time in the past half-century when "so many elements of the
- world's mosaic" have been lined up in America's favor, made to
- order for a tradesman like George Bush. Says Greenstein, with
- an appreciative chuckle: "George Bush the networker, the
- hyperkinetic, the gadfly, the follower of specifics."
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- That will never boil down to a bumper sticker for the 1992
- campaign. And if Murphy's Law (Whatever can go wrong, will)
- holds in the hot sands around the Persian Gulf, Bush may want
- to forget it. Yet there seems to be something at work around
- the globe for the moment that is in favor of the U.S.
- Greenstein wonders if some good chickens are coming home to
- roost for this country after our decades of dispensing money,
- instruction and hope. "Saudi flyers were trained by us," he
- notes. Others observe that many government officials in many
- countries, both friendly and doubting, went to Harvard and
- listened to the lectures of Henry Kissinger.
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- Bush has devised his own leadership constellation. It has
- a core of aides who meet, travel, eat and drink with him. There
- are Cabinet officers and diplomats who come in and out of the
- circle, flung to distant points for crucial negotiations.
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- Familiarity with the byways of this planet pervades all
- levels of this operation. Most of the great warships in the
- Middle East or on their way have been there before, officers
- and crew knowledgeable to some extent about the region.
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- Back home, Bush keeps moving: White House to Camp David to
- Pentagon to Kennebunkport to wherever. He pops up to shake a
- fist, then pumps out a smoke screen of fuzzy gray words. The
- blockade is an "interdiction," the detained Americans are not
- called hostages, and what is happening is not war but a
- defensive operation. Bush's press conference last Tuesday
- sounded like a court deposition. He talked about advice from
- his lawyers and his rights under the U.N. Charter.
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- While the world was watching Bush, the often maligned
- military was conducting an operation that sent more men and
- materiel farther and faster than at any other time in history.
- This huge cavalcade was not exactly secret, but nearly a week
- went by before the vast size of the operation dawned on an
- astonished world. It was typical Bush style: quick, secret
- decisions; mobile command post to avoid becoming hostage to any
- place or group; voluble talk that builds confidence, sets a
- mood but reveals few specifics.
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- "If George Bush succeeds, he will become the dominant world
- leader," says former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger. The
- superstars of recent months, like Mikhail Gorbachev and Helmut
- Kohl, will be swept to the side of the board. "Only America
- could have put together the diplomacy, the military power and
- the economic measures to do this," says Kissinger. "So far,
- this is an action of enormous sophistication and skill."
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