Monday, May 6, 2024

Top 5 This Week

spot_img

Related Posts

Bushmania in Slovakia!

Bill Sammon writes in the Washington Times this morning that according to the President of Slovakia, President Bush has gotten a bad rap from the liberal European media, which has systematically turned the European public against President George W. Bush.

Sammon also reports that the President got a rousing endorsement from the Slovak people who swarmed him and showed him their respect and admiration.

BRATISLAVA, Slovakia—The prime minister of Slovakia yesterday blamed the media for unfairly turning the European public against President Bush by negatively slanting coverage on Iraq.

After meeting with Mr. Bush twice in less than a week, Prime Minister Mikulas Dzurinda told reporters that the president also blamed the press for portraying him as eager to invade Iran to eradicate its nuclear program.

“President Bush told me in Brussels: ‘I am so unhappy that media creates the picture that Bush wants war in Iran. This is crazy,’ ” Mr. Dzurinda told a small group of reporters over lunch.

The prime minister was reminded that while the governments of Central and Eastern Europe supported Operation Iraqi Freedom, the populace was much more skeptical, according to polls.

Mr. Dzurinda responded by telling the journalists, including one from CNN, that he was “shocked” to see media outlets like CNN and the British Broadcasting Corp. (BBC) showing “only American soldiers killing people. But nobody was able to show Saddam Hussein, who killed many, many thousands of Iraqi people.”

“It was impossible to see a real picture of this regime,” he lamented. “And the result is the public is one day strongly against Bush. ‘Bush loves war,’ he’s ‘new terrorist,’ and so on and so on.”

The prime minister predicted that it is “only a question of time when people in Slovakia, in Germany, in European countries, will understand more that this activity were necessary. And the world, without Saddam Hussein, is much more democratic than before.”

Still, plenty of Slovaks braved nasty weather to give an enthusiastic reception to Mr. Bush’s speech yesterday at a Bratislava square where the protests that brought down communism 15 years ago began.

When he told the crowd of thousands that “the American people are proud to call you allies and friends and brothers in the cause of freedom,” his audience exploded with applause.

After the speech was over, Mr. Bush went into the crowd and was swamped by enthusiastic Slovaks—the first time he pressed the flesh during his five-day trip to Europe.

Foreign Minister Eduard Kukan said after the speech that “the meeting in the square was fantastic.”

Joel Johannesen
Follow Joel

Popular Articles