BFF-16 Former US president George Bush, head of political dynasty, dead at 94

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Former US president George Bush, head of political dynasty, dead at 94

WASHINGTON, Dec 1, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – George H.W. Bush — the upper-crust war
hero-turned-oilman and diplomat who steered America through the end of the
Cold War as president and led a political dynasty that saw his son win the
White House — died Friday. He was 94.

George W. Bush called his father a “man of the highest character and the
best dad a son or daughter could ask for,” in a statement announcing his
death.

“The entire Bush family is deeply grateful for 41’s life and love, for the
compassion of those who have cared and prayed for Dad, and for the
condolences of our friends and fellow citizens.”

Bush’s passing comes just months after the death in April of his wife and
revered first lady Barbara Bush — his “most beloved woman in the world” —
to whom he was married for 73 years.

The 41st American president was a foreign policy realist who navigated the
turbulent but largely peaceful fall of the Soviet Union in 1989 and assembled
an unprecedented coalition to defeat Iraqi strongman Saddam Hussein two years
later.

But the decorated war pilot and former CIA chief suffered the ignominy of
being a one-term president, denied a second term over a weak economy when he
lost the 1992 election to upstart Democrat Bill Clinton.

His favoring of stability and international consensus stands in sharp
contrast to the provocative bluster of fellow Republican and current White
House occupant Donald Trump, a man whom Bush did not vote for in 2016.

Bush presided over economic malaise at home, and infuriated his fellow
Republicans during a budget battle with rival Democrats by famously breaking
his vow: “Read my Lips: No new taxes.”

But he was the respected patriarch of a blue-blood political dynasty — son
George spent eight years in the White House, and son Jeb served as governor
of Florida.

At the time of his death, Bush was the American president to have lived the
longest.

Jimmy Carter was born a few months later, so he could quickly reset the
record.

“America has lost a patriot and humble servant in George Herbert Walker
Bush. While our hearts are heavy today, they are also filled with gratitude,”
former president Barack Obama said in a statement.

– War, oil, politics –

George Herbert Walker Bush was born on June 12, 1924 in Milton,
Massachusetts into a wealthy New England political dynasty — the son of
Prescott Bush, a successful banker and US senator for Connecticut.

Bush had a pampered upbringing and attended the prestigious Phillips
Academy in Andover, but delayed his acceptance to Yale in order to enlist in
the US Navy on his 18th birthday and head off to war.

He flew 58 combat missions during World War II. Shot down over the Pacific
by Japanese anti-aircraft fire, he parachuted out and was rescued by a
submarine after huddling in a life raft for four hours while enemy forces
circled.

Bush married Barbara Pierce in January 1945, shortly before the war ended,
and the couple went on to have six children, including one, Robin, who died
as a child.

Instead of joining his father in banking upon graduation from Yale
University, Bush headed to bleak west Texas to break into the rough-and-
tumble oil business.

He surprised many with his success, and by 1958 had settled in Houston as
president of an offshore drilling company.

In the 1960s, Bush, now independently wealthy, turned to politics.

He was a local Republican Party chairman, and in 1966 won a seat in the US
House of Representatives. He served there until 1970, when he lost a bid for
the Senate.

Over the next decade, he held several high-level posts that took him and
Barbara around the world: head of the Republican National Committee, US
ambassador to the United Nations, envoy to China and director of the Central
Intelligence Agency, where he was praised for restoring morale after
revelations of widespread illegal activity.

He served as vice president to Ronald Reagan after losing to him in the
1980 Republican primary, an eight-year period of hands-on training for the
top post he would go on to win by a solid margin in 1988, as the Cold War was
coming to an end.

– ‘This will not stand’ –

In a major test of the post-Cold War order, Saddam’s million-man army
invaded Kuwait in 1990 and looked set to roll into Saudi Arabia, which would
have given the Iraqi strongman more than 40 percent of the world’s oil
reserves.

Bush famously vowed: “This will not stand, this aggression against Kuwait.”

He assembled a coalition of 32 nations to drive Iraqi forces out in a
matter of weeks with a lightning air and ground assault.

Some 425,000 US troops backed by 118,000 allied soldiers took part in
Operation Desert Storm, decimating Saddam’s military machine without ousting
him from power — a task that would be accomplished 12 years later by Bush’s
son.

Buoyed by his victory in the Gulf, Bush and his hard-nosed and widely
respected secretary of state James Baker cobbled together the 1991 Madrid
Conference to launch the Arab-Israeli peace process.

The conference was mainly symbolic, but it set the stage for the Oslo
Accords two years later.

In late 1989, Bush sent US troops to Panama to oust strongman Manuel
Noriega. He also set the groundwork for the North American Free Trade
Agreement.

Domestically, however, the economy stalled and Bush broke his pledge not to
raise taxes in order to reach a budget deal with Democrats — a cardinal sin
in the eyes of Republicans.

In 1992, Bush lost his re-election bid to Clinton — whose aide coined the
now famous slogan “It’s the economy, stupid” — as eccentric third-party
candidate Ross Perot syphoned off conservative votes.

The elder Bush’s cautious realpolitik would later be contrasted to his
son’s far more costly ambition to transform the Middle East, but “Bush 41”
refused to weigh in on the debate, insisting he was proud of the presidency
of “Bush 43.”

– Active post-presidency –

After retiring from public life, Bush fulfilled a wartime pledge to one day
jump out of a plane for fun and famously went skydiving on his 75th, 80th,
85th and 90th birthdays.

He joined Clinton to raise funds for victims of the 2004 Asian tsunami and
the 2010 Haiti earthquake. In 2011, Obama awarded Bush the highest US
civilian honor, the Medal of Freedom.

He worked with Carter, Clinton, Obama and son George to raise money for
hurricane victims in Texas in 2017.

In 2001, Bush became just the second US president after John Adams to see
his son become president.

Son Jeb made his own presidential run in 2016, but fell short in the
Republican primaries against Trump.

BSS/AFP/GMR/1153 hrs