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- NATION, Page 38The PresidencyA Game of One-on-One
-
-
- By Hugh Sidey
-
-
- "Actually, I really did put my feet up at one point,"
- George Bush said last week by telephone from the White House.
- "I did it thinking, `I'll show 'em I really meant it to be a
- feet-up meeting.' So I put my feet up on one of those round
- sofas that were bolted to the deck of the Gorky. Gorbachev and
- I were leaning over toward one another. There were no
- inhibitions."
-
- The President had been a little tentative going into such
- a highly charged superpower meeting, when the great Malta storm
- struck. But the outcome reassured the world and seemed to
- enhance Bush's presidential stature. His reflections on his
- eight hours with the Soviet boss came over the telephone line
- like pages out of a good reporter's notebook.
-
- "Yes, I think I can trust Gorbachev," Bush said. "I looked
- him in the eye, I appraised him. He was very determined. Yet
- there was a twinkle. He is a guy quite sure of what he is doing.
- He has got a political feel. I could tell by the way he was
- laughing with us. A little wink now and then. He has a wonderful
- way of communicating with Westerners. I had the feeling that I
- could bring up any subject at all.
-
- "We had quite an animated discussion about Western values
- vs. democratic values. I thought they were the same thing. But
- he interpreted our definition of Western values to mean that we
- were right and he was wrong. Whereas democratic values are what
- he has been working for.
-
- "I told him there was one question that always kept coming
- up. What would happen if trouble developed inside the Soviet
- Union and they had to use force to put it down? I said I always
- refused to answer such a hypothetical question, but Americans
- were asking it. He did not give a direct answer, but he strongly
- implied, `Look, I'm going to succeed.'"
-
- The drama of two men in the blustery Mediterranean closing
- the book on 40 years of animosity is one of the surprises that
- history deals up in this strange world. "The changes are so
- monumental. So different. But it did not seem overwhelming when
- we sat down. Two reasonable people sat down with their staffs.
- Even the contentious matters were brought up without rancor.
- When I first met him in Moscow when I was Vice President and
- brought up human rights, he grew very heated. This time he
- talked very rationally, not rancorously.
-
- "I had the feeling that the way we clicked off our list of
- things that we wanted to accomplish didn't exactly disarm him,
- but it did show him that we were ready to move forward on a lot
- of things he wanted. He may have been pleased it wasn't going
- to take hours to drag them out of us.
-
- "There are always invisible barriers that come from the
- enormous differences between our societies. I am not naive
- enough to believe that all the problems will be solved. But I
- told him that I thought the meeting made good sense. I told him
- that I never had favored this kind of meeting before but that
- I had changed my mind. I am going to keep the personal part of
- this going. I'll find ways to contact him in a quiet fashion.
- I can write. I can call now. I'm not going to become a pen pal,
- but we can communicate."
-
- To put down any lingering rumors of seasickness or distress
- on Malta's surging waves, Bush waxed eloquent about the night
- in the driving storm. "I loved it on the ship. We ate a
- wonderful dinner and had a good bottle of white wine. I went out
- on the fantail first, and for a couple of hours I watched those
- young boys working the anchor chains so skillfully in the high
- seas, and it was thrilling." That story undoubtedly will be
- enlarged and enriched as the years go on. Old sailors are just
- that way.
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