And after a few jabs at the president for his low approval ratings here at home (still higher than approval ratings for Congress) and having to travel with a high level of secrecy because these regions are unsecured (and that's all his fault , of course) this MSNBC article makes a couple interesting points.
George W. Bush on Wednesday made his first visit to Afghanistan since US forces toppled the Taliban regime in late 2001.
The US president's un-scheduled stop in Kabul came as he made his way to New Delhi, where he was to be greeted by some of the most pro-American metropolitan elites in the world. Mr Bush's approval ratings may have dropped to a low of 34 per cent at home, but in India, they are double that. |
Indians love Bush. Who knew? But the article lauds the possible civil nuclear agreement between India and the US as landmark deal. One snag is of course getting the assurances that nuclear technologies given to India won't be used for nuclear weapons. India is already a nuclear power, so I can't imagine that this is anything more than diplomatic speak. What are they gonna do, they've already got nukes. It's more important to have India as an ally in the region, sure Bush will talk tough against further nuclear weaponization because of the Iran pickle and that Pakistan is our ally in the GWOT, but I don't think it's for anything more than public relations. Hopefully the deal gets signed. Dubya could use some good press. |