Second post on the inner workings of the White House in the twilight of the
Bush administration.
Embedded links have been transcribed to long form below, listed in order of
their appearance.  kwc


Shuttle Without Diplomacy

After signaling support for James Baker's Iraq proposals, Condi caved and
stood faithfully by the president's failing policies -- assuring her
irrelevance, and that of the State Department.
By Sidney Blumenthal, Salon, Jan. 11, 2007

James Baker, the consummate Republican political operator over the past 30
years, did not expect that President Bush would accept the recommendations
of the Iraq Study Group
<http://www.salon.com/opinion/blumenthal/2006/11/16/baker_rescue/index.html>
he co-chaired simply on its merits. Baker's hidden political hand was
unrevealed in the report's dire analysis or in its urgent suggestions for
diplomacy or force redeployment. Baker summoned as witnesses the Joint
Chiefs of Staff, the military commanders in Iraq past and present (including
the recently named commander there, Gen. David Petraeus) and even British
Prime Minister Tony Blair. But he understood that enlisting all of these
formidable figures was insufficient. Baker privately negotiated with Bush,
but he did not rest solely on his own powers of persuasion to convince the
president, as the report put it, that the "situation is grave and
deteriorating" and his policies are "not working."

Ultimately, Baker's political strategy counted on the decisive intervention
of one person in the president's closed inner circle -- who sees him alone
and could not be kept from him, and on whom he has become dependent for
support and trusts implicitly -- to deliver the bad news that continuing
those policies would only deepen the disaster and explain that he had no way
out except to change course.

After the debacle of the Israeli invasion of southern Lebanon, which
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice called "the birth pangs of a new Middle
East," her former mentor, Brent Scowcroft, the elder Bush's national
security advisor and still his public voice, published an article on July
30, 2006, in the Washington Post titled "Beyond Lebanon: This Is the Time
for a U.S.-Led Comprehensive Settlement." In it he argued that the peace
process the Bush administration had abandoned was essential in stabilizing
the whole region, not least Iraq, and in reducing the influence of Iran.

With the knowledge of the elder Bush and Baker, Scowcroft traveled to Egypt
and Saudi Arabia, broaching his ideas to President Hosni Mubarak and King
Abdullah. They told him they were fully supportive and prepared to step
forward, but were skeptical that Rice or Bush would embrace Scowcroft's
program. Meanwhile, Scowcroft and Baker began reassembling the elder Bush's
national security team, using the Iraq Study Group as a mobilizing tool.
They saw this as a last chance to save the Bush presidency, which was
indelibly tainting the father's legacy, and replace neoconservatism with
foreign policy realism.

At the end of August 2006, Scowcroft briefed Rice, according to a national
security official close to Scowcroft. She seemed to concur with his views
and asked him, "How are we going to present this to the president?" "Not
we," replied Scowcroft. "You." She appeared taken aback, but he emphasized
that she was the only one who could induce Bush to change his policies. Thus
Rice became the linchpin for Scowcroft's and Baker's plans.

Rice now confronted the biggest quandary of her career. On one side were the
authorities that had shaped her foreign policy experience, not only
Scowcroft and Baker but also, as she well knew, the looming shadow of Bush's
father. On the other was the president, who had raised her into Baker's
seventh-floor office in Foggy Bottom, whom she had flattered as the equal of
Lincoln and Churchill, and whom, in a telling Freudian slip, she had
referred to as "my husband" before a roomful of reporters and editors of the
New York Times. Throughout the run-up to the invasion of Iraq and afterward
Rice had been Bush's enabler.
<http://www.salon.com/opinion/blumenthal/2006/09/07/condi_rice/index.html>
It was because Scowcroft understood her special relationship that he sought
to win her over.

Rice's turn appeared to be reflected in a speech delivered at the Middle
East Institute in Washington on Sept. 15 by Philip Zelikow, her counselor,
closest aide and friend, who had served with her under Scowcroft on the
elder Bush's National Security Council. Well publicized in advance, he
asserted that "some sense of progress and momentum on the Arab-Israeli
dispute is just a sine qua non for their ability to cooperate actively with
the United States on a lot of things that we care about." Immediately,
Zelikow came under fierce criticism from Vice President Cheney's office and
Rice publicly rebuked him, which provoked his abrupt resignation. In a Nov.
27 letter to her, he wrote that he had "some truly riveting obligations to
college bursars" for his children's tuition and instantly had to return to
his professorship at the University of Virginia (not exactly Goldman Sachs).

Nine days after Zelikow's resignation the Iraq Study Group report was
released. Informed correspondents of the Washington Post and New York Times
related in conversation that Bush furiously called the report "a flaming
turd," but his colorful remark was not published. Perhaps it was apocryphal.
Nonetheless, it conveyed the intensity of his hostile rejection. Still,
Scowcroft and Baker, like Vladimir and Estragon in "Waiting for Godot,"
waited for Rice.

Just as they used the Iraq Study Group as their instrument, Cheney
galvanized his neoconservative allies
<http://www.salon.com/opinion/blumenthal/2006/12/20/bush_war/index.html>
inside and outside the administration to counter it. In order to have their
own proposal they put Jack Keane, a former Army vice chief of staff and
longtime neocon fellow traveler, in touch with Frederick Kagan, an analyst
at the neocon American Enterprise Institute, who urged a massive "surge" of
troops into Iraq. Keane's presence lent a patina of military credibility.
Encouraged by Cheney's office, Kagan and Keane and a team of neocons at AEI
whipped up a PowerPoint presentation, and one week after the ISG report
release, on Dec. 11, they were ushered into Bush's presence.

The president had become enraged at the presumption of the Baker-Hamilton
Commission even before its members gave him their report. "Although the
president was publicly polite," the Washington Post reported, "few of the
key Baker-Hamilton recommendations appealed to the administration, which
intensified its own deliberations over a new 'way forward' in Iraq. How to
look distinctive from the study group became a recurring theme. As described
by participants in the administration review, some staff members on the
National Security Council became enamored of the idea of sending more troops
to Iraq in part because it was not a key feature of Baker-Hamilton."

Donald Rumsfeld had been sacrificed as the secretary of defense, but his
replacement, Robert Gates,
<http://www.salon.com/news/feature/2006/12/06/gates_hearing/index.html>   a
former director of the CIA and member of the ISG, turned from skeptic into
team player. The Joint Chiefs of Staff; Gen. John Abizaid, head of Central
Command; and Gen. George Casey, commander in Iraq, all opposed the "surge"
as no answer. Cheney and the neocons saw their opposition as the opening for
purging and blaming them. The Joint Chiefs were ignored and sidelined,
Abizaid was forced into retirement and Casey was removed (sent into internal
exile as Army chief of staff). Their dissent, leaked to the Washington Post
for appearance in the paper on the day of Bush's "surge" speech, was an
extraordinary gesture by the senior military leaders to distance themselves
from impending failure.

Rice, who had fallen into radio silence, canceling a scheduled speech on
"transformational diplomacy," finally intervened. When the U.S. military
commanders in Iraq and U.S. ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad protested against a
rush by the Iraqi government to hang Saddam Hussein, Rice overrode their
objections and gave the signal to Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki
<http://www.salon.com/opinion/feature/2006/05/11/maliki/index.html>  to
proceed

Maliki's management and subsequent defense of the gruesome circus
surrounding Saddam's execution disabused any illusion that he could act in
the larger Iraqi national interest rather than as a political representative
of Shiite sectarianism. He is to his marrow a creature of the Dawa Party,
founded by Muqtada al-Sadr's father, and his alliance with al-Sadr. While
the intent of the surge is to revitalize the Maliki government, that
government cannot and does not wish to be reformed. The problem is not
merely that Maliki is a weak political leader, or that his political
coalition wouldn't permit it, or that his Iranian sponsors wouldn't allow
repudiation -- all of which are indisputably true. The irreducible reason is
that Maliki exists only to achieve Shiite control, and if he did not he
would not exist. There is no other Maliki. Nor can Bush invent one.

Bush's "surge," therefore, is a military plan that cannot produce its stated
political outcome and will instead further unleash the forces he claims will
be controlled. His offensive to subdue the Sunni insurgents, for example, is
already accelerating the ethnic cleansing of Baghdad by the Shiite militias,
which, rather than being contained, are further empowered.

Bush's rhetoric about "democracy" underlines his studied error in ignoring
the lessons of nation building deeply ingrained in the experience of the
U.S. Foreign Service and U.S. military in Bosnia and Kosovo. From the start,
in the 2000 campaign, Bush disdained "nation building" as Bill Clinton's
project. During and after the Iraq invasion, his ideological preconceptions
and hostility to the State Department precluded him from adopting its
successes.

In Bosnia and Kosovo, full sovereignty was not granted through an
election -- to this day -- which would have turned over the country to one
of the three contending religio-ethnic groups and fomented opposition
insurgencies. Instead, the U.S. led in organizing a broad range of
international partners and institutions in creating a structure of stability
that is a basis for gradual democratic development. By contrast, the
election Bush promoted in Iraq was political grandstanding in the name of
"democracy" that incited the exclusion of Sunnis and aggravated civil
warfare. Almost everything in place in Bosnia and Kosovo is absent in Iraq.
The former is an example of U.S. leadership, the latter a case study in
amateurish blundering. Moreover, Bush has turned "democracy" into a synonym
for failure.

The State Department has been completely sidelined in the making of Bush's
latest and last policy on Iraq. Its experience in the Balkans remains
thoroughly ignored. And Rice does nothing to call it to Bush's attention,
for that would require her to point out his shortcomings. The State
Department founders like a ghost ship. Rice meanders back and forth to and
from the Middle East, the shuttle without the diplomacy.

After twice rejecting the job of deputy secretary of state, John Negroponte,
the director of national intelligence, was implored to accept it. In
exchanging a Cabinet post for a sub-Cabinet one, a position of policymaking
for an administrative post, Negroponte excited rumors that he would only
have decided to make the switch if he believed that Rice would eventually
leave and he would ascend to her job. But, once again, the logic of that
Washington gossip is merely rational. Rice the irrelevancy remains Bush's
indispensable devotee.

This story has been corrected
<http://www.salon.com/letters/corrections/2007/index.html#casey>  since it
was first published.

http://www.salon.com/opinion/blumenthal/2007/01/10/condi_rice/
<http://www.salon.com/opinion/blumenthal/2007/01/10/condi_rice/>

All the Father’s Men
http://www.salon.com/opinion/blumenthal/2006/11/16/baker_rescue/
<http://www.salon.com/opinion/blumenthal/2006/11/16/baker_rescue/>
Bush’s Top Female Enabler
http://www.salon.com/opinion/blumenthal/2006/09/07/condi_rice/index.html
<http://www.salon.com/opinion/blumenthal/2006/09/07/condi_rice/index.html>
Behind Bush’s New Way Forward (see previous post)
http://www.salon.com/opinion/blumenthal/2006/12/20/bush_war/index.html
<http://www.salon.com/opinion/blumenthal/2006/12/20/bush_war/index.html>
The UnRumsfeld
http://www.salon.com/news/feature/2006/12/06/gates_hearing/index.html
<http://www.salon.com/news/feature/2006/12/06/gates_hearing/index.html>
Saving Iraq: Mission Impossible
http://www.salon.com/opinion/feature/2006/05/11/maliki/index.html
<http://www.salon.com/opinion/feature/2006/05/11/maliki/index.html>


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