There are two schools of thought regarding President George W. Bush’s Middle East peace extravaganza held last month on the shores of the Chesapeake Bay in Maryland, which brought together for the first time 16 Arab countries and Israel in a non-violent environment. One group believes it was a waste of time, pure theatrics by an administration desperate to leave something more substantial for the history books than the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. Critics of Bush’s foreign policy were quick to denounce the Annapolis antics as just a mega-photo opportunity and a publicity seeking stunt meant to take focus off the economy, a US dollar at its weakest point in decades, a hurting real estate market going south as a result of the sub-prime scandal and gas prices going through the roof. Then there are the optimists, the president’s supporters and those who believed a miracle could be accomplish