http://www.vanityfair.com/politics/features/2006/12/neocons200612?printable=
true&currentPage=all

Vanity Fair Exclusive: Now They Tell Us

Neo Culpa

As Iraq slips further into chaos, the war's neoconservative boosters have
turned sharply on the Bush administration, charging that their grand
designs have been undermined by White House incompetence. In a series of
exclusive interviews, Richard Perle, Kenneth Adelman, David Frum, and
others play the blame game with shocking frankness. Target No. 1: the
president himself.

   by David Rose VF.COM
   November 3, 2006

I remember sitting with Richard Perle in his suite at London's Grosvenor
House hotel and receiving a private lecture on the importance of securing
victory in Iraq. "Iraq is a very good candidate for democratic reform," he
said. "It won't be Westminster overnight, but the great democracies of the
world didn't achieve the full, rich structure of democratic governance
overnight. The Iraqis have a decent chance of succeeding." Perle seemed to
exude the scent of liberation, as well as a whiff of gunpowder. It was
February 2003, and Operation Iraqi Freedom, the culmination of his long
campaign on behalf of regime change in Iraq, was less than a month away.

Three years later, Perle and I meet again at his home outside Washington,
D.C. It is October, the worst month for U.S. casualties in Iraq in almost
two years, and Republicans are bracing for losses in the upcoming midterm
elections. As he looks into my eyes, speaking slowly and with obvious
deliberation, Perle is unrecognizable as the confident hawk who, as
chairman of the Pentagon's Defense Policy Board Advisory Committee, had
invited the exiled Iraqi dissident Ahmad Chalabi to its first meeting
after 9/11. "The levels of brutality that we've seen are truly horrifying,
and I have to say, I underestimated the depravity," Perle says now, adding
that total defeat - an American withdrawal that leaves Iraq as an anarchic
"failed state" - is not yet inevitable but is becoming more likely. "And
then," says Perle, "you'll get all the mayhem that the world is capable of
creating."

According to Perle, who left the Defense Policy Board in 2004, this
unfolding catastrophe has a central cause: devastating dysfunction within
the administration of President George W. Bush. Perle says, "The decisions
did not get made that should have been. They didn't get made in a timely
fashion, and the differences were argued out endlessly.... At the end of the
day, you have to hold the president responsible.... I don't think he
realized the extent of the opposition within his own administration, and
the disloyalty."

Perle goes so far as to say that, if he had his time over, he would not
have advocated an invasion of Iraq: "I think if I had been delphic, and
had seen where we are today, and people had said, 'Should we go into
Iraq?,' I think now I probably would have said, 'No, let's consider other
strategies for dealing with the thing that concerns us most, which is
Saddam supplying weapons of mass destruction to terrorists.' ... I don't say
that because I no longer believe that Saddam had the capability to produce
weapons of mass destruction, or that he was not in contact with
terrorists. I believe those two premises were both correct. Could we have
managed that threat by means other than a direct military intervention?
Well, maybe we could have."

Having spoken with Perle, I wonder: What do the rest of the pro-war
neoconservatives think? If the much caricatured "Prince of Darkness" is
now plagued with doubt, how do his comrades-in-arms feel? I am
particularly interested in finding out because I interviewed many neocons
before the invasion and, like many people, found much to admire in their
vision of spreading democracy in the Middle East.

I expect to encounter disappointment. What I find instead is despair, and
fury at the incompetence of the Bush administration the neoconservatives
once saw as their brightest hope.

To David Frum, the former White House speechwriter who co-wrote Bush's
2002 State of the Union address that accused Iraq of being part of an
"axis of evil," it now looks as if defeat may be inescapable, because "the
insurgency has proven it can kill anyone who cooperates, and the United
States and its friends have failed to prove that it can protect them."
This situation, he says, must ultimately be blamed on "failure at the
center" - starting with President Bush.

Kenneth Adelman, a lifelong neocon activist and Pentagon insider who
served on the Defense Policy Board until 2005, wrote a famous op-ed
article in The Washington Post in February 2002, arguing: "I believe
demolishing Hussein's military power and liberating Iraq would be a
cakewalk." Now he says, "I just presumed that what I considered to be the
most competent national-security team since Truman was indeed going to be
competent. They turned out to be among the most incompetent teams in the
post-war era. Not only did each of them, individually, have enormous
flaws, but together they were deadly, dysfunctional."

Fearing that worse is still to come, Adelman believes that neoconservatism
itself - what he defines as "the idea of a tough foreign policy on behalf of
morality, the idea of using our power for moral good in the world" - is
dead, at least for a generation. After Iraq, he says, "it's not going to
sell." And if he, too, had his time over, Adelman says, "I would write an
article that would be skeptical over whether there would be a performance
that would be good enough to implement our policy. The policy can be
absolutely right, and noble, beneficial, but if you can't execute it, it's
useless, just useless. I guess that's what I would have said: that Bush's
arguments are absolutely right, but you know what, you just have to put
them in the drawer marked can't do. And that's very different from let's
go."

I spend the better part of two weeks in conversations with some of the
most respected voices among the neoconservative elite. What I discover is
that none of them is optimistic. All of them have regrets, not only about
what has happened but also, in many cases, about the roles they played.
Their dismay extends beyond the tactical issues of whether America did
right or wrong, to the underlying question of whether exporting democracy
is something America knows how to do.

I will present my findings in full in the January issue of Vanity Fair,
which will reach newsstands in New York and L.A. on December 6 and
nationally by December 12. In the meantime, here is a brief survey of some
of what I heard from the war's remorseful proponents.

Richard Perle: "In the administration that I served [Perle was an
assistant secretary of defense under Ronald Reagan], there was a
one-sentence description of the decision-making process when consensus
could not be reached among disputatious departments: 'The president makes
the decision.' [Bush] did not make decisions, in part because the
machinery of government that he nominally ran was actually running him.
The National Security Council was not serving [Bush] properly. He regarded
[then National-Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice] as part of the family."

Michael Ledeen, American Enterprise Institute freedom scholar: "Ask
yourself who the most powerful people in the White House are. They are
women who are in love with the president: Laura [Bush], Condi, Harriet
Miers, and Karen Hughes."

Frank Gaffney, an assistant secretary of defense under Ronald Reagan and
founder of the Center for Security Policy: "[Bush] doesn't in fact seem to
be a man of principle who's steadfastly pursuing what he thinks is the
right course. He talks about it, but the policy doesn't track with the
rhetoric, and that's what creates the incoherence that causes us problems
around the world and at home. It also creates the sense that you can take
him on with impunity."

Kenneth Adelman: "The most dispiriting and awful moment of the whole
administration was the day that Bush gave the Presidential Medal of
Freedom to [former C.I.A. director] George Tenet, General Tommy Franks,
and [Coalition Provisional Authority chief] Jerry [Paul] Bremer - three of
the most incompetent people who've ever served in such key spots. And they
get the highest civilian honor a president can bestow on anyone! That was
the day I checked out of this administration. It was then I thought,
There's no seriousness here, these are not serious people. If he had been
serious, the president would have realized that those three are each
directly responsible for the disaster of Iraq."

David Frum: "I always believed as a speechwriter that if you could
persuade the president to commit himself to certain words, he would feel
himself committed to the ideas that underlay those words. And the big
shock to me has been that although the president said the words, he just
did not absorb the ideas. And that is the root of, maybe, everything."

Michael Rubin, former Pentagon Office of Special Plans and Coalition
Provisional Authority staffer: "Where I most blame George Bush is that
through his rhetoric people trusted him, people believed him. Reformists
came out of the woodwork and exposed themselves." By failing to match his
rhetoric with action, Rubin adds, Bush has betrayed Iraqi reformers in a
way that is "not much different from what his father did on February 15,
1991, when he called the Iraqi people to rise up, and then had second
thoughts and didn't do anything once they did."

Richard Perle: "Huge mistakes were made, and I want to be very clear on
this: They were not made by neoconservatives, who had almost no voice in
what happened, and certainly almost no voice in what happened after the
downfall of the regime in Baghdad. I'm getting damn tired of being
described as an architect of the war. I was in favor of bringing down
Saddam. Nobody said, 'Go design the campaign to do that.' I had no
responsibility for that."

Kenneth Adelman: "The problem here is not a selling job. The problem is a
performance job.... Rumsfeld has said that the war could never be lost in
Iraq, it could only be lost in Washington. I don't think that's true at
all. We're losing in Iraq.... I've worked with [Rumsfeld] three times in my
life. I've been to each of his houses, in Chicago, Taos, Santa Fe, Santo
Domingo, and Las Vegas. I'm very, very fond of him, but I'm crushed by his
performance. Did he change, or were we wrong in the past? Or is it that he
was never really challenged before? I don't know. He certainly fooled me."

Eliot Cohen, director of the strategic-studies program at the Johns
Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies and member of the Defense
Policy Board: "I wouldn't be surprised if what we end up drifting toward
is some sort of withdrawal on some sort of timetable and leaving the place
in a pretty ghastly mess.... I do think it's going to end up encouraging
various strands of Islamism, both Shia and Sunni, and probably will bring
de-stabilization of some regimes of a more traditional kind, which already
have their problems.... The best news is that the United States remains a
healthy, vibrant, vigorous society. So in a real pinch, we can still pull
ourselves together. Unfortunately, it will probably take another big hit.
And a very different quality of leadership. Maybe we'll get it."




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