Looking Past the Veneer
A must-read article from, of all places, Newsweek tells how Bush is dealing with the personal pain of sending young men and women into harm’s way and how he interacts with those affected:
Privately, Bush has met with about 900 family members of some 270 soldiers killed in Iraq or Afghanistan. The conversations are closed to the press, and Bush does not like to talk about what goes on in these grieving sessions, though there have been hints. An hour after he met with the families at Fort Bragg in June, he gave a hard-line speech on national TV. When he mentioned the sacrifice of military families, his lips visibly quivered. …For George W. Bush, these private audiences with the families of dead soldiers and Marines seem to be an outlet of sorts. (They are perhaps harder for Laura, who sometimes accompanies Bush and looks devastated afterward.) Family members interviewed by NEWSWEEK say they have been taken aback by the president’s emotionalism and his sincerity. …
Bush routinely asks to see the families of the fallen when he visits military bases, which he does about 10 times a year. It does not appear that the White House or the military makes any effort to screen out dissenters or embittered families, though some families decline the invitation to meet with Bush. Most families encourage the president to stay the course in Iraq.
Read the whole thing.
HT to Advised by Wolves







my comments went amok… im sorry
Newsweek writes a story that claims Bush feels really, really, sorry for sending our kids off to Iraq. He’s seen a lot of grieving families, and many of them were satisfied with his display of compassion and with the progress of the war.
I’m wondering, Alphapatriot, how you’d feel if your son or daughter died while protecting the Iraq Survey Group, as Celeste Zappala’s son did. This caring, loving, grieving president of ours sent him on a billion dollar snipe hunt.
It is not only the compassion, which I feel is genuine. It is the vision that permeates his foreign policy. This president is changing the world dynamics and, unlike Carter and Clinton, in a good way.
If my son died in the effort to bring democracy and freedom to millions of oppressed people, in the effort to take the fight to the heart of the terrorists rather than the streets of our cities, to give hope to a billion Arabs living under corrupt regimes, then I would grieve every hour of every day. But I would never, ever think that he had died in vain.
BTW, I believe this fight will go on for a decade, perhaps two. The same goes for my grandchild.