CHILMARK, Mass. (AP) —
President Barack Obama has spent less time away from the White House than his
predecessors. But his two-week break on the resort island of Martha's Vineyard
and hours on the golf course have his detractors teeing up as they highlight
the slew of foreign policy crises currently facing the United States. See more pictures after cut...
The criticism has the
president's aides confronting a question it faces whenever Obama gets away: Is
there ever a good time for the commander in chief to take a few days off?
Since becoming president, Obama has taken
20 vacations lasting two to 15 days. As of Friday, he has spent all or part of
138 days on "vacation."
By the same point in his second term,
President George W. Bush spent 381 partial or complete days at his ranch in
Crawford, Texas, and another 26 at the Bush family compound in Kennebunkport,
Maine, according to CBS News reporter Mark Knoller's widely respected record
keeping on the presidency. Other recent American leaders also spent more time
away.
But images of Obama playing
leisurely rounds of golf as the U.S. strikes Islamist militants in northern
Iraq have been jarring to some, particularly his fiercest national security
critics. After delivering an angry statement Wednesday condemning the beheading
of American journalist James Foley by the Islamic State group, Obama
immediately hit the links.
"Every day, we find new evidence that
he'd rather be on the golf course than he would be dealing with the crisis
that's developing rapidly in the Middle East," former Vice President Dick
Cheney told Fox News this week.
Obama, well known for his love
of golf, has played eight rounds since arriving on the Massachusetts island 12
days ago. He went golfing last week after addressing the nation from the yard
of his vacation home on Iraq and the civil unrest in the St. Louis suburb of
Ferguson, Missouri, linked to the fatal shooting of a black 18-year-old by a
white police officer.
He plays most weekends when he is at the
White House, joining many of his predecessors who also enjoyed the game.
Some of the negative reaction reflects
that the White House occasionally allows media to photograph the president when
he is playing golf. By contrast, there are no photos of him playing basketball
or during his regular gym workout.
With the U.S. engaged militarily in Iraq,
and struggling to secure a cease-fire between Israel and Hamas militants in
Gaza and ease tensions between Russia and Ukraine, the White House released
photos of Obama early in the vacation being briefed by top aides, including
national security adviser Susan Rice and Attorney General Eric Holder. Other
images captured him on the telephone with world leaders.
Obama's aides counter
criticism of his vacations by saying he travels with what essentially is a
mini-White House. The entourage comes complete with top advisers and senior
staff, and communications equipment needed to do the job from wherever he may
be.
"Just because the
president is in a different location doesn't mean he's not doing his job,"
said White House spokesman Eric Schultz, who accompanied Obama on vacation.
"He's been deeply engaged on issues both domestically and abroad."
Cheney contrasted Obama's continued
vacation with British Prime Minister David Cameron suddenly returning to London
during his time off.
Cameron returned from vacation in Portugal
to chair an emergency meeting on the humanitarian crisis in northern Iraq. He
departed this week on the second part of his scheduled vacation to Cornwall, in
southwest England, but headed back just a day later for crisis meetings after
Foley's death. Cameron resumed his vacation the following day.
Obama also interrupted his
vacation, returning to the White House for meetings Monday and Tuesday. The
break was planned long before U.S. airstrikes in Iraq started or Ferguson,
Missouri, became a hotbed of civil disobedience in the days after the Aug. 9
shooting of Michael Brown.
Obama resumed his vacation on Tuesday. He
leaves the island Sunday.
Other presidents have
vacationed during foreign policy flare-ups.
President George H.W. Bush took a
three-week break in Maine in 1990 after ordering the U.S. military to turn back
Saddam Hussein's Iraqi forces in Kuwait. He swatted away questions about
Persian Gulf action while on the golf course, later saying "I just don't
like taking questions on serious matters on my vacation . . . I hope you'll
understand when I'm recreating, I will recreate. And when we're working, which
I'm trying up here, I'll work hard."
In 2002, President George W. Bush also was
on the golf course when he reacted to terrorist bombings in Israel, saying:
"I call upon all nations to do everything they can to stop these terrorist
killers. Thank you. Now watch this drive."
Bush later gave up playing
golf after the U.S. military death toll in Iraq began to rise.
Bush has defended Obama's fondness for
golf.
___
Associated Press writers Jim Kuhnhenn in
Edgartown, Massachusetts, and Jill Lawless in London contributed to this
report.
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