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The New York Times
17 December 2004

Fiddling as Iraq Burns
    By BOB HERBERT

The White House seems to have slipped the bonds of simple denial and
escaped into the disturbing realm of utter delusion. On Tuesday, there was
President Bush hanging the nation's highest civilian honor, the
Presidential Medal of Freedom, on George Tenet, the former C.I.A. director
who slept through the run-up to Sept. 11 and then did the president and
the nation the great disservice of declaring that it was a "slam-dunk"
that Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass destruction.

It was a fatal misjudgment.

Another Medal of Freedom was given to Paul Bremer III, the chief civilian
administrator of the American occupation, who made the heavily criticized
decision to disband the defeated Iraqi Army and presided over an
ever-worsening security situation. Thousands upon thousands have died in
this unnecessary and incompetently conducted war, yet here was the
president handing out medals as if some kind of triumph had been achieved.
If these guys could get the highest civilian award, what honor is left for
someone who actually does a good job?

A third medal was given to Gen. Tommy Franks, who led the invasion of
Iraq, which Mr. Bush, in his peculiar way, has characterized as a
"catastrophic success." It's an interesting term. Some people have applied
it to the president's run for re-election.

By anyone's standards, terrible things are happening in Iraq, and no
amount of self-congratulation in Washington can take the edge off the
horror being endured by American troops or the unrelenting agony of the
Iraqi people. The disconnect between the White House's fantasyland and the
world of war in Iraq could hardly have been illustrated more starkly than
by a pair of front-page articles in The New York Times on Dec. 10. The
story at the top of the page carried the headline: "It's Inauguration Time
Again, and Access Still Has Its Price - $250,000 Buys Lunch With President
and More."

The headline on the story beneath it said: "Armor Scarce for Heavy Trucks
Transporting U.S. Cargo in Iraq."

This administration has many things on its mind besides the welfare of
overstretched, ill-equipped G.I.'s dodging bombers and snipers in Iraq. In
addition to the inauguration, which will cost tens of millions of dollars,
Mr. Bush is busy with his obsessive campaign against "junk and frivolous
lawsuits," his effort to further lighten the tax load on the nation's
wealthiest individuals and corporations, and his campaign to cut the legs
from under the proudest achievement of the New Deal, Social Security.

So much for America's wartime priorities.

Even domestic security gets short shrift. During the Republican
convention, Mr. Bush said, "I wake up every morning thinking about how to
better protect our country." Try squaring that with the Bernard Kerik
fiasco, in which the administration's background check of its candidate
for the nation's ultimate domestic security post was handled with the same
calamitous incompetence as the intelligence effort that led to the war in
Iraq.

Mr. Bush's pick (at Rudy Giuliani's urging) for homeland security
secretary turned out to be a slick character who had once ducked a
required F.B.I. clearance, had a social relationship with the owner of a
company suspected of business ties to organized crime figures and had
rented a love nest that overlooked the ruins of the World Trade Center.

"I'm Not Perfect," said a headline next to Mr. Kerik's picture in
Tuesday's New York Post.

You wonder, with so much at stake, where to look in the Bush constellation
for the care and competence that the times call for. Colin Powell is
heading toward the exit, to be replaced by Condoleezza Rice, who did her
best to petrify the nation with loose talk about mushroom clouds. Dick
Cheney would still have us believe in a link between Saddam Hussein and Al
Qaeda.

The man who took the lead in vetting Bernie Kerik, the White House counsel
Alberto Gonzales, was also the point person in the administration's bid to
duck the constraints of the Geneva Conventions, and even to justify
torture.

Mr. Gonzales is a favorite of the president, who has nominated him to be
attorney general and may someday appoint him to the Supreme Court.

Medals anyone? The president may actually believe that this crowd is the
best and brightest America has to offer. Which is disturbing.


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