BFF-33, 34 Air Force One collects Bush casket at start of days-long farewell

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Air Force One collects Bush casket at start of days-long farewell

HOUSTON, Dec 3, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – America’s national farewell to George
H.W. Bush begins Monday with the transfer of his casket aboard the
presidential plane from Texas to Washington, where he will lie in state in
the rotunda of the US Capitol.

The 41st US president died Friday at age 94, at his home in Houston — “a
very gentle and peaceful passing,” his lifelong friend and advisor James
Baker said Sunday on ABC’s “This Week.”

Bush — only the second president to see his son follow him to the Oval
Office — will be honored with four days of services and tributes in
Washington and in Texas, where he will be buried on Thursday.

The high point of the commemorations, planned with military precision by a
Pentagon task force, will come Wednesday with a state funeral at Washington
National Cathedral — the first presidential funeral since Gerald Ford died
in 2006.

Bush was a decorated World War II fighter pilot, former head of the Central
Intelligence Agency, and vice president to Ronald Reagan before winning the
White House.

President Donald Trump — who has often clashed with the Bush family — has
declared Wednesday a national day of mourning, and said he will attend the
funeral.

– Lying in state –

The week’s events begin at 1630 GMT Monday, when Bush’s remains are to be
flown aboard the presidential Boeing 747 — made available at Trump’s
direction — from Houston to Joint Base Andrews, Maryland.

By tradition, the plane is only known as Air Force One when the sitting
president is on board. Family spokesman Jim McGrath said the flights to carry
Bush are being dubbed “Special Air Mission 41.”

“A beautiful day In Texas — ‘ceiling and visibility unlimited,’ Mr.
President,” he wrote — using a phrase that Bush held dear from his time in
the Navy, and one used by his family and friends to discreetly spread the
news of his death.

Bush’s son George — the 43rd president of the United States — and other
loved ones are expected to travel on the presidential jet.

Also reportedly expected to make the trip is his service dog Sully —
McGrath posted a touching photo of the yellow Labrador near Bush’s casket on
Sunday with the phrase “Mission Complete.”

After a speech from Vice President Mike Pence, Bush will lie in state in
the US Capitol from Monday evening until Wednesday morning, under the
watchful gaze of an around-the-clock honor guard.

Thousands are expected to pay their respects.

MORE/AFP/ARS/1809 hrs

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The casket will then be transported to the cathedral for Wednesday’s
funeral service — the fourth held there for a former president.

Dozens of foreign leaders and US luminaries are expected.

Former Canadian prime minister Brian Mulroney told Politico he will deliver
one of several eulogies, at Bush’s request.

The casket will then be flown back to Houston, where the former head of
state will lie in repose at St Martin’s Episcopal Church — where the Bushes
worshipped for decades — until Thursday’s funeral service.

The remains will then be transported by train for interment at the George
Bush Presidential Library in College Station, Texas.

Bush will be buried next to his wife Barbara, who died in April, and their
daughter Robin, who died of leukemia at age three.

– Tributes from friends –

Baker, who served Bush as secretary of state, joined others in paying warm
tribute on Sunday television talk shows.

Baker called him “far and away the best one-term president we have ever
had,” alluding to Bush’s single biggest political failure — his loss in the
1992 election to Bill Clinton.

Baker instead emphasized his friend’s foreign policy successes: navigating
the end of the Cold War, negotiating two nuclear arms reduction treaties, and
summoning a global coalition to eject Iraqi troops from Kuwait in the first
Gulf War.

Colin Powell, who was chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff during that
war, said he was confident in Bush’s leadership because “he knew what combat
was all about. He knew it meant the death of people… He wanted to avoid a
war.”

The former president had struggled for years with Parkinson’s disease,
which left him wheelchair-bound and often hospitalized — including after
Barbara’s death.

Last week, things took a decided turn for the worse, Baker said on ABC.

When an aide told Bush that Baker was visiting Friday, “he perked up. He
opened his eyes. He looked at me, he says, ‘Hey, Bake. Where we going?'”

“We’re going to heaven,” Baker said.

Bush replied: “Good, that’s where I want to go.”

Baker said Bush’s last words, in a phone conversation with son George,
were: “I love you, too.”

BSS/AFP/ARS/1810 hrs