Word: bushed
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...dramatic in a decade. President Nixon's proposal of dual representation for China is a major departure from previous U.S. goals in the international body. Equally novel, in its way, is the exuberant style of the man charged with making that policy succeed: Texas politician-turned-ambassador, George Bush...
Decked out in bright candy-striped shirts, Bush has stormed the protocol-conscious circle of U.N. diplomats since his arrival last March like-well, like a Texas politician rounding up supporters. He is lobbying for complicated parliamentary measures that would invite Peking in without throwing Taiwan out. Says Bush: "The idea here is to get the votes. If we have the votes, it's going to happen. If we don't, it won't. It's this simple, so I say don't bother me with the technicalities...
Boating and Barbecues. Bush's wide-open methods are in sharp contrast to the unobtrusive ways of his predecessor. Career Diplomat Charles Yost. Bush swings through the delegates' dining room slapping backs and greeting ambassadors by their first names as if he were still prowling the back corridors of Congress. He has replaced the standard U.N. luncheon-two hours, three wines, seven courses-with short working sessions in the U.S. mission on Manhattan's First Avenue, where guests sometimes must balance plates on their knees. Bush has invited several of his fellow ambassadors to his summer home...
...cheery approach masks one of the most serious and difficult diplomatic offensives in recent American history: bringing mainland China into the U.N. without allowing the expulsion of Taiwan. It will not be easy to achieve, as Bush quite readily admits. For one thing, he has had to convince delegates that President Nixon was really serious about fighting to retain Taiwan's seat; many of them cynically assumed that the U.S. would go through the motions of fighting for Taiwan, but would be just as glad to be defeated. Bush, who has personally visited nearly 50 delegations to plug...
...strategy may not work; in truth, the U.S. might be relieved of some sticky diplomatic problems if it fails and Taipei is expelled. But the Administration rejects suggestions that its effort to keep Taipei in the U.N. might be less than wholehearted. "We are going all out," said George Bush, U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. "It's going to be difficult, but we believe we have a chance...