Rice sweetens as public sours
on President Bush
Anne Gearan
WASHINGTON — Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice has become
the most popular member of the Bush administration and a potential
candidate to succeed her boss in the White House, even as Americans
lose confidence in the president she serves and patience with the
Iraq war she helped launch.
Entering her second year as the country’s senior diplomat
and foreign policy spokeswoman, Rice has improbably shed much of
her image as the hawkish “warrior princess” at President
Bush’s side. The nickname was reportedly bestowed by her staff
at the White House National Security Council, where Rice was an
intimate member of Bush’s first-term war council.
Rice resolutely defends the post-Sept. 11 war on terrorism and the
expansive executive powers that Bush claims came with it. She has
lately sounded more optimistic than Bush about the progress of the
Iraq war and the future for that country.
Yet, it is unusual to hear anyone talk about Rice as an architect
of either of those two defining undertakings of the Bush presidency.
By a mix of charm, luck and physical distance from the White House,
Rice has managed to escape the fate of Bush and Vice President Dick
Cheney, who saw their public approval ratings fall to historic lows
before rebounding slightly recently.
Kurt Campbell, director of the International Security Program at
the Center for Strategic and International Studies, credits Rice’s
heavy travel schedule, an approach to diplomacy that is more pragmatic
than other Bush advisers, and a measure of personal pluck.
“She appears to have sort of skated away” from controversies
over U.S. intelligence failures and aggressive U.S. tactics in the
hunt for terrorists, Campbell said, and from the perception that
the United States is “slogging” along in Iraq.
“She appears at once to be close to the president but separate
and detached from some of the foibles of the administration, and
that’s a very hard thing to pull off,” he said.
Rice was as strong a public voice as any for going to war in Iraq.
She once famously warned of Saddam Hussein’s presumed weapons
of mass destruction: “We don’t want the smoking gun
to be a mushroom cloud.”
Although Rice’s first-term record on Iraq, terrorism and other
subjects made for a contentious Senate confirmation hearing last
January, most Americans apparently do not hold her personally responsible.
A Pew Research survey in October found that 60 percent of respondents
held either a very favorable or mostly favorable view of Rice, while
25 percent had a very or mostly unfavorable view — numbers
others in the Bush administration can only envy.
Two years after ousted Iraqi President Saddam Hussein was captured,
64 percent of respondents said the Iraq war was the right thing
to do. An AP-Ipsos poll this month showed that only 42 percent now
say it was the right decision, and support has also dropped for
staying in Iraq until the country is stabilized.
As for Bush, 42 percent said in this month’s AP poll that
they approve of his job performance, while 57 percent disapproved.
That was up from a 37 percent approval rating in November, but well
below his stratospheric numbers after Sept. 11.
Rice still has a long way to go to convince skeptics overseas that
the United States is not pursuing a misadventure in Iraq, and she
will always be the public face abroad of an administration that
many in Europe and the Arab world distrust, said Nathan Brown, visiting
scholar at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.
“She may present a slightly softer image, a slightly friendlier
image, one that is not knee-jerk defensive” on issues like
the mistreatment of terrorism detainees, Brown said. “But
there are limits to what she can do so long as the policy is unpopular.”
There is a glamour factor to Rice’s appeal, and curiosity
about the first black woman to hold the nation’s top diplomatic
post.
Rice, 51, grew up in the segregated South. She tries to soften the
brash image the United States often projects abroad by telling audiences
the discrimination she faced is proof that America isn’t perfect.
Rice has never married. She works long hours and keeps fit with
a rigorous daily exercise regimen. A clotheshorse, Rice has posed
for Vogue magazine in a couture ball gown.
She is fiercely loyal to Bush, and tries to downplay her own rising
stock and his public slide. Although mentioned as a possible Republican
candidate for president in 2008, Rice says she has never wanted
to run for elected office.
“I’ve got my hands full and I know what my skills, I
think, are,” Rice said in an Associated Press interview this
month.
She declined to point to any specific accomplishments for which
she takes personal credit, although she said she is pleased by developments
including warmer US-European relations after a chill over the Iraq
invasion.
“I’m a historian,” Rice said in the interview.
“I tend to see things in the big sweep of history and hope
that at some point somebody is going to look back and say, oh, something
that she did then mattered.”
Editor Anne Gearan covers foreign affairs in Washington for The
Associated Press.
(Associated Press)
|
|