• NOVEMBER 23, 2009
THE LIST PRINT  |   TEXT SIZE        |  EMAIL  |  SINGLE PAGE

5 Leaders Who Miss George W. Bush

Barack Obama might still be overwhelmingly popular around the world, but here are five heads of state who probably wish they could have the old guy back.

BY JOSHUA KEATING | JULY 8, 2009

HUGO CHAVEZ

AFP/Getty Images

Country: Venezuela

What he misses: Speech fodder. Whether he was comparing him to Satan or calling him a donkey, nothing livened up a Chávez speech or an episode of his TV show Alo Presidente like an extended tirade against George W. Bush. After a botched coup attempt against him in 2002, Chávez routinely accused domestic political opponents of being part of a U.S.-backed coup to overthrow him. His main foreign-policy project, the ALBA economic union, was marketed to other Latin American countries as a way to counteract U.S. influence. Chávez's bombastic anti-Bush statments earned him fans from Tegucigalpa to Tehran.

With the election of Obama -- who is overwhelmingly popular in Latin America -- the old zingers just don't pack the same punch. As the Obama administration loosens restrictions against Cuba, it's harder for Chávez to paint the United States as an all-purpose enemy of the Latin American left. The region's new generation of leftists, like El Salvador's recently elected president Mauricio Funes, are modeling themselves after Brazil's Lula rather than Chávez or Castro. After last week's coup in Honduras, Chávez tried to blame the United States for orchestrating the events, a claim that seemed a bit dubious after the Obama administration vocally supported ousted President Manuel Zelaya and invited him to Washington. With his foreign-policy influence declining along with the value of his oil reserves, Chávez might wish he had the old donkey to kick around again.

PREVIOUS 12345
Save over 50% when you subscribe to FP.

 

Joshua Keating is deputy Web editor at FP.

SHARE THIS ARTICLE: Facebook|Twitter|Digg
  • The Al Qaeda Diaries

  • Boring Summits Are Better for Everyone

  • D.C.'s New Game: Who's Paying Your Pundit?

  • Lowering the Bar: The ABA's Ties to Despots

 (2)

HIDE COMMENTS LOGIN OR REGISTER REPORT ABUSE

SINDARK

5:54 PM ET

July 9, 2009

Canada

Canada's Stephen Harper is probably another world leader who misses George Bush, both as an ideological ally and someone who would not press Canada too hard on reducing greenhouse gas emissions.

 

CHIARO

3:56 PM ET

July 13, 2009

Saakashvili

Georgia's president has to be among those most pining for the Bush era. With Obama actively seeking to mend relations with Russia, Saakashvili can no longer expect carte blanche treatment from Washington.

And I'm sure Ahmadinejad misses George W. for the same reasons that Chavez does.

 
TODAY | PAST WEEK

MOST
READ

MOST
COMMENTED

  1. Karzai's Cronies
  2. The Terrorists Among Us
  3. Planet Slum
  4. Falling Like It's 1989
  5. The Al Qaeda Diaries
TODAY | PAST WEEK

MOST
READ

MOST
COMMENTED

  1. Edward Burtynsky's Oil
  2. Think Again: God
  3. Bolivia's Lithium-Powered Future
  4. Planet Slum
  5. Plague: A New Thriller of the Coming Pandemic
TODAY | PAST WEEK

MOST
READ

MOST
COMMENTED

  1. Lowering the Bar
  2. Reality Check: The Hajj
  3. Is There a Palin Doctrine?
  4. Karzai's Cronies
  5. A Boatload of Trouble
TODAY | PAST WEEK

MOST
READ

MOST
COMMENTED

  1. The President, the Professor, and the Wide Receiver
  2. The Real Shock of Fort Hood
  3. Is There a Palin Doctrine?
  4. The Only Hope Left?
  5. The Terrorists Among Us
  • THE CABLE

    Is anyone in charge of India policy?

    BY JOSH ROGIN

  • NET EFFECT

    Why are people creating Facebook profiles for Holocaust victims?

    BY EVGENY MOROZOV

  • PASSPORT

    North Africa's escalating soccer war

    BY JOSHUA KEATING

  • ARGUMENT

    How the Chinese media covered Obama's visit

    BY WILLIAM MOSS

  • SMALL WARS

    The U.S. and Pakistan are heading for a bad breakup

    BY ROBERT HADDICK

  • DANIEL DREZNER

    Time's not-so-shocking Obamaland expose

  • BEST DEFENSE

    What would George Marshall think of today's generals?

    BY THOMAS E. RICKS

  • SHADOW GOVT.

    What does containing North Korea actually mean?

    BY JAMIE FLY



  • 1. Aligning on Afghanistan? President Obama and PM Brown Turn Focus on Exit Strategy
  • 2. R.I.P.: Russia to Continue Ban on the Death Penalty
  • 3. All for One: Jailed Fatah Leader Implores Palestinian Unity
  • 4. Global Warming Time Out: Stagnating Temperatures Baffle Climate Experts
 See All Photo Essays
  • Planet slum: From Nairobi to Caracas, Mumbai, and Jakarta

  • Falling Like It's 1989

November/December 2009
  • Feature

    Revolution in a Box

  • Feature

    Plague, by Robin Cook

  • Opening Gambit

    My Plan to Overthrow the Mullahs

  •  See Entire Issue

     Preview Digital Edition

  • How to amend, and not amend, the Senate health reform bill.
  • Judge David Hamilton and the fight over God's secular title.
  • Made in China—and sold there, too.
  • Murdoch's War on Google
  • Presented By:
  • Tweeting for Dollars
  • What Would the Pilgrims Say About Tofu?
  • What Would the Pilgrims Say About Tofu?
  • What Kobe, LeBron and Dwyane Owe Spencer Haywood

About FP: Meet the Staff | Foreign Editions | Reprint Permissions | Advertising | Corporate Programs | Writers’ Guidelines | Press Room | Work at FP

Services: Subscription Services | Academic Program | FP Archive | Reprint Permissions | FP Reports and Merchandise | Special Reports | Buy Back Issues

Subscribe to FP | Privacy Policy | Disclaimer | RSS Feeds | Contact Us

FP Logo


1899 L Street NW, Suite 550 | Washington, DC 20036 | Phone: 202-728-7300 | Fax: 202-728-7342
FOREIGN POLICY is published by the Slate Group, a division of Washingtonpost.Newsweek Interactive, LLC
All contents ©2009 Washingtonpost.Newsweek Interactive, LLC. All rights reserved.