http://www.thewashingtonnote.com/archives/002145.php
May 24, 2007
Cheney Attempting to Constrain Bush's Choices on Iran Conflict: Staff Engaged 
in Insubordination Against President Bush 



There is a race currently underway between different flanks of the 
administration to determine the future course of US-Iran policy. 

On one flank are the diplomats, and on the other is Vice President Cheney's 
team and acolytes -- who populate quite a wide swath throughout the American 
national security bureaucracy.

The Pentagon and the intelligence 

intelligence establishment are providing support to add muscle and nuance to 
the diplomatic effort led by Condi Rice, her deputy John Negroponte, Under 
Secretary of State R. Nicholas Burns, and Legal Adviser John Bellinger. The 
support that Director of National Intelligence Mike McConnell, Secretary of 
Defense Robert Gates, and CIA Director Michael Hayden are providing Rice's 
efforts are a complete, 180 degree contrast to the dysfunction that 
characterized relations between these institutions before the recent reshuffle 
of top personnel.

However, the Department of Defense and national intelligence sector are also 
preparing for hot conflict. They believe that they need to in order to convince 
Iran's various power centers that the military option does exist.

But this is worrisome. The person in the Bush administration who most wants a 
hot conflict with Iran is Vice President Cheney. The person in Iran who most 
wants a conflict is Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. Iran's Revolutionary 
Guard Quds Force would be big winners in a conflict as well -- as the political 
support that both have inside Iran has been flagging.

Multiple sources have reported that a senior aide on Vice President Cheney's 
national security team has been meeting with policy hands of the American 
Enterprise Institute, one other think tank, and more than one national security 
consulting house and explicitly stating that Vice President Cheney does not 
support President Bush's tack towards Condoleezza Rice's diplomatic efforts and 
fears that the President is taking diplomacy with Iran too seriously.

This White House official has stated to several Washington insiders that Cheney 
is planning to deploy an "end run strategy" around the President if he and his 
team lose the policy argument.

The thinking on Cheney's team is to collude with Israel, nudging Israel at some 
key moment in the ongoing standoff between Iran's nuclear activities and 
international frustration over this to mount a small-scale conventional strike 
against Natanz using cruise missiles (i.e., not ballistic missiles). 

This strategy would sidestep controversies over bomber aircraft and overflight 
rights over other Middle East nations and could be expected to trigger a 
sufficient Iranian counter-strike against US forces in the Gulf -- which just 
became significantly larger -- as to compel Bush to forgo the diplomatic track 
that the administration realists are advocating and engage in another war.

There are many other components of the complex game plan that this Cheney 
official has been kicking around Washington. The official has offered this 
commentary to senior staff at AEI and in lunch and dinner gatherings which were 
to be considered strictly off-the-record, but there can be little doubt that 
the official actually hopes that hawkish conservatives and neoconservatives 
share this information and then rally to this point of view. This official is 
beating the brush and doing what Joshua Muravchik has previously suggested -- 
which is to help establish the policy and political pathway to bombing Iran.

The zinger of this information is the admission by this Cheney aide that Cheney 
himself is frustrated with President Bush and believes, much like Richard 
Perle, that Bush is making a disastrous mistake by aligning himself with the 
policy course that Condoleezza Rice, Bob Gates, Michael Hayden and McConnell 
have sculpted.

According to this official, Cheney believes that Bush can not be counted on to 
make the "right decision" when it comes to dealing with Iran and thus Cheney 
believes that he must tie the President's hands.

On Tuesday evening, i spoke with a former top national intelligence official in 
this Bush administration who told me that what I was investigating and planned 
to report on regarding Cheney and the commentary of his aide was "potentially 
criminal insubordination" against the President. I don't believe that the White 
House would take official action against Cheney for this agenda-mongering 
around Washington -- but I do believe that the White House must either shut 
Cheney and his team down and give them all garden view offices so that they can 
spend their days staring out their windows with not much to do or expect some 
to begin to think that Bush has no control over his Vice President.

It is not that Cheney wants to bomb Iran and Bush doesn't, it is that Cheney is 
saying that Bush is making a mistake and thus needs to have the choices before 
him narrowed. 

-- Steve Clemons

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