WASHINGTON - A year after Hurricane Katrina pounded the US Gulf Coast and left New Orleans in ruins, President George Bush is still grappling with the political fallout from a response widely viewed as inept.
As the storm's August 29 anniversary approaches, memories are being rekindled of corpses and debris piling up in the streets and desperate victims pleading for help from rooftops and the sweltering Superdome in New Orleans.
Those pictures -- juxtaposed with the government's failure to muster an adequate initial response -- shattered the image that Bush sought to cultivate after the September 11 attacks as a strong and effective leader.
Katrina, which killed about 1,500 people and displaced hundreds of thousands across four states, was a catalyst for a slide in Bush's poll numbers from which he has only partially recovered.
Bush visits Mississippi on Monday before heading to New Orleans to dine with local officials. He will stay overnight in the still-struggling jazz city and spend the day there on Tuesday -- the one-year anniversary of Katrina's landfall.
Bush admitted the early effort to rush food, medicine and rescuers to the Gulf Coast was flawed and eventually forced out the top emergency management official, Michael Brown. The hurricane response highlighted racial inequities with many poor and black residents of New Orleans suffering the most.
His defenders insist that blame for the troubled Katrina relief effort must be shared with local officials.
But Bush initially chose to view the damage from his plane, making him appear aloof. He did visit the Gulf Coast four days after the hurricane where he praised Brown for doing a "heck of a job" -- a comment that has been ridiculed.
Bush critics got new fodder in March when a videotape surfaced showing him meeting with government officials before the storm. They warned him the levees protecting New Orleans could be topped, undercutting the president's comments just after the storm that the levee breach had not been anticipated.
After meeting at the White House on Wednesday with Rockey Vaccarella, who lost everything in Katrina and now lives in a trailer, Bush told reporters the Katrina anniversary was a time to remember people's suffering.
He added, "I also want people to remember that a one-year anniversary is just that, because it's going to require a long time to help these people rebuild."
- REUTERS
Botched Katrina response haunts Bush one-year on
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