Though Rick Warren of Saddleback Church in California rightly awarded President Bush the “International Medal of Peace” for his humanitarian work in Africa, the Left has refused to salute President George W. Bush and his noble efforts. Mona Charen says that if President-elect Obama continues Bush's policies, Obama will be given the Nobel Prize and canonized. But it is Bush who deserves the credit he rarely receives. Charen writes:
From the beginning of his administration, President Bush
has pushed for more aid to Africa. Motivated perhaps by his deeply felt
Christian faith (relieving poverty in Africa has become a major
charitable push among evangelicals), the president has pressed for
greater aid to Africa across the board. The original PEPFAR legislation
(President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief), which passed in 2003, was
the largest single health investment by any
government ever ($15
billion). At the time the initiative was launched, only about 50,000
sub-Saharan Africans were receiving antiretroviral treatment for AIDS.
Today, 1.7 million people in the region, as well as tens of thousands
more around the globe, are receiving such treatment. PEPFAR has also
funded efforts to prevent mother-to-child transmission of the AIDS
virus, provided compassionate care to the sick and dying, and cared for
5 million orphans. One aspect of the program has been to reduce the
stigma of the AIDS diagnosis in Africa.
In July of this year, the president requested that
funding for PEPFAR be doubled to $30 billion. The new funding will be
used to train 140,000 new health-care workers. It would also address
other illnesses, like tuberculosis, that often complicate AIDS.
When he traveled to Africa earlier this year (his second trip to the region as president), President Bush was greeted by enthusiastic crowds and grateful heads of state. Of the ten nations around the world that expressed the most positive feelings toward the U.S.A. in a recent Pew poll, eight were in Africa. (The other two were Israel and the U.S.) President Jakaya Kikwete of Tanzania paid tribute to Mr. Bush, saying, as the Christian Science Monitor reported, “Different people may have different views about you and your administration and your legacy. We in Tanzania, if we are to speak for ourselves and for Africa, we know for sure that you, Mr. President, and your administration have been good friends of our country and … of Africa.” . . . [Read more . . .]