Winging It: European Summit, Russia Trip Take Unexpected Turns
|
Discussion Policy
Comments that include profanity or personal attacks or other inappropriate comments or material will be removed from the site. Additionally, entries that are unsigned or contain "signatures" by someone other than the actual author will be removed. Finally, we will take steps to block users who violate any of our posting standards, terms of use or privacy policies or any other policies governing this site. Please review the full rules governing commentaries and discussions. You are fully responsible for the content that you post.
|
SOCHI, Russia International summits are usually the most scripted thing a president does. He shows up in a foreign capital, people read their talking points, sign the precooked documents that usually don't mean very much, shake hands, pose for pictures, declare it a great success and go home.
And then there was last week.
When President Bush arrived in Europe for a NATO summit and a follow-up meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Sochi, he and his aides were not at all certain how things would turn out. Bush was pushing for NATO membership road maps for two former Soviet republics, Ukraine and Georgia, and advisers went into the summit thinking there was a better than even chance of getting them. In the end, Germany and France blocked him but agreed to an encouraging statement.
Similarly, the Sochi trip was a fluid exercise. The very decision to go there was not made until just 10 days before Bush's departure, which in presidential terms is a last-minute decision that set both governments scrambling to pull together the extensive logistics, not to mention the politics. Aides first predicted he might get a missile defense deal, then said he wouldn't, then hammered out a statement with the Russians and called it a major breakthrough.
At times, nothing seemed to be going quite according to plan. The NATO discussion of Ukraine and Georgia became so heated and so drawn out at one point that a dinner scheduled for 90 minutes went 3 1/2 hours. During the formal session the next day, when NATO expected to admit three new members, Greece vetoed one of the candidates, Macedonia, prompting the Macedonians to storm out of the meeting.
Bush, too, bolted out of a later meeting, though out of exhaustion rather than protest. Putin subverted all the careful planning by showing up uninvited to a NATO dinner that evening.
And he later surprised Bush in Sochi by pulling him onto a stage during another dinner to dance with the folk performers. ("It was a Russian version of the Africa move," spokeswoman Dana Perino said afterward, referring to Bush's impromptu dancing during his February trip to Africa.)
"People really got off script," national security adviser Stephen J. Hadley said at one point during the trip. "You know, the characterization of these meetings are people sitting around a table reading prepared talking points. [But] in the discussions today, people talked with a first person and a passion that was interesting."
Hadley was thinking in particular of what he called an "astonishing" scene when German Chancellor Angela Merkel was surrounded by a cluster of men in suits haggling out a statement on Ukraine and Georgia. "It doesn't happen in NATO meetings a lot," Hadley said. "It's a good thing. It's an indication of this alliance, I think, grappling with real issues in a very meaningful way."
And a spontaneous way, for a change.
Low-Carb Rice
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice joined Bush on his trip, catching up to him from her Middle East trip. She's been quite the globetrotter lately, challenging Henry Kissinger's record for foreign travel. So with all that frequent flying, how does she keep in shape?
Fitness magazine has the sweaty scoop with an interview and picture spread showing the chief U.S. diplomat doing tummy crunches and working with weights with her personal trainer. "How does one of the most controversial figures in the White House today seem to shut it all down, throw on a sports bra and let the pressures of the day slide off her back?" the magazine teased in its introduction.


