The Buzzflash website is full of great stuff today as well, an example
below.

Brian

How I created the axis of evil
It is the phrase that defines the Bush era - and Washington insiders are
betting on whether it will turn up again in today's State of the Union
address. But David Frum, the man who coined it, is now out in the cold.
Julian Borger meets him

Julian Borger
Tuesday January 28, 2003
The Guardian

We are at the end of Year One in the time of the Axis of Evil. It was 12
months ago that George Bush took three apparently dissimilar countries
in his State of the Union address and fashioned a new enemy for America.
Banded together, the three rogue states, Iraq, Iran and North Korea,
conjured up an enemy every bit as fearsome as Ronald Reagan's "Evil
Empire". The phrase has not only defined the battle lines of the 21st
century, it has helped shape the world we now inhabit.

Bush's supporters naturally insist this is a good thing. It has opened
our eyes to the threat of weapons of mass destruction in the hands of
dictators. The detractors, who include most of Europe and the developing
world, see the axis of evil speech more as a self-fulfilling prophecy
that has set back the democracy movement in Iran, goaded North Korea
towards nuclear brinkmanship and undermined any incentive Saddam Hussein
might have had to disarm.

Bush himself has not used the phrase since summer, but Washington is now
placing bets on whether it will resurface in the State of the Union
address today. Whatever happens, its true father looks on in awe and
pride. David Frum, a 42-year-old Canadian who served for 13 months as a
presidential speechwriter and helped coin the fateful phrase, has just
written a book about the experience - a cardinal sin amid the hushed
piety of the White House.

Speechwriters are supposed to be anonymous. We are supposed to associate
the State of the Union speech, the rhetorical high point of the White
House calendar, with the president alone, not with the paid hack in the
back room. In retaliation, Frum has been left out in the cold in Bush's
Washington.

His book, The Right Man, tells how the callow and unimaginative American
prince was challenged by the horror of September 11 and responded Henry
V-style, by showing his true mettle. It is larded with chapter upon
chapter of rightwing polemic, brimming with contempt for European
"appeasers" and the "stinking bowl" of the Arab world.

As so often with the most vituperative pamphleteers, Frum is in person
genial and conciliatory. He argues that his former boss is misunderstood
in Britain, mainly because of his Texan drawl and Bible-thumping ways.
In fact, Frum suggests - and here he is surely stretching the hand of
doctrinal friendship further than credulity allows - Bush has a lot in
common with the average Guardian reader. "He is someone who takes a
moral view of the world and looks for big, bold answers," he says, by
way of evidence. He even suggests the "Bush-as-Guardian-reader" idea
would make a thought-provoking article.

As one of the louder voices of radical neo-conservatism, such
outside-the-box ideas are Frum's stock in trade and there are a lot of
them in The Right Man - so many that they invite the creeping suspicion
that the title does not just refer to Bush.

But the book is also a well-written memoir of Frum's short adventure in
the administration which just about lives up to its sales pitch as the
"first inside account" of the Bush White House.

Frum talks about Bush's sour, watchful presence, in contrast to the
jovial hick he sometimes appears in public. He talks about the
disconcerting grip evangelical Christianity has on the White House, its
squeaky-clean gentility and generally low level of intellectual
curiosity. The president, Frum tells us, is "sometimes glib, even
dogmatic; often uncurious and as a result ill-informed; more
conventional in his thinking than a leader should be".

Most interesting of all, The Right Man tells the story of how the axis
of evil got its name - an unnerving tale of rhetorical accident by which
a catchy phrase ended up driving policy. It begins when Bush's chief
speechwriter, Michael Gerson, approaches Frum a few weeks before the
pivotal State of the Union address and tells him, "Here's an assignment.
Can you sum up in a sentence or two our best case for going after Iraq?"

This was in late December 2001. Frum argues that this does not
necessarily mean a decision to oust Saddam had been taken, as he is sure
other speechwriters were working on more peaceful versions. But his was
the version that was used on January 29 2002.

Looking for historical resonance, Frum goes leafing through the speeches
of Franklin Roosevelt, in particular the "day of infamy" address to the
nation that followed Pearl Harbor. "On December 8 1941, Roosevelt had
exactly the same problem we had. The United States had been attacked by
Japan, but the greater threat came from Nazi Germany," Frum argues. In
effect, al-Qaida is Japan and no prizes for guessing who plays Hitler
this time around.

The phrase Frum comes up with is "axis of hatred", describing the
ominous but ill-defined links between Iraq and terrorism. It is Gerson
who tweaks the phrase into the "axis of evil", to make it sound more
"theological".

"I thought that was terrific," Frum says. "It was the sort of language
President Bush used."

The national security adviser, Condoleezza Rice and her deputy, Stephen
Hadley, then add Iran on the grounds that denouncing the ruling
theocracy might accelerate the incipient revolt they see emerging in the
street protests. Why North Korea gets tacked on to the axis is not clear
in the book - although Pyongyang's presence does bring the number of
miscreants up to the magic number three, and ensures the list is not
entirely Islamic.

Watching from home, Frum was spellbound. "When I heard that speech, I
thought it was one of the great moments in American history. I thought
it was magnificent," he says. "Even though I know I shouldn't be
surprised by Bush, I am always surprised. Up until the last, he looks
like he might compromise and do the small thing. And then he does the
big thing."

"The big thing" in this case was very big indeed. What had begun life as
a speechwriter's conceit a month before had filled with hot air and
taken off, casting a monumental shadow over the rest of the world.

It also, paradoxically, put a bit of a dent in Frum's own standing in
the White House. Hearing of his presence at its creation, his wife,
Danielle Crittenden, emailed their circle of friends: "I realise this is
very 'Washington' of me to mention, but my husband is responsible for
the 'axis of evil' segment of Tuesday's State of the Union address." She
signed off adding: "So I'll hope you'll indulge my wifely pride in
seeing this one repeated in headlines everywhere!!"

Frum said the email "only went to about 15 people", but one of that
number clearly lacked discretion and it ended up splashed across the
online magazine, Slate. Frum left the White House soon after.

One year on, he insists his departure had nothing to do with his wife's
email. He just got fed up with writing for someone else. "As thrilling
as it was, speechwriting is ultimately frustrating for someone who wants
to be a writer," he says.

He insists his White House colleagues were amused or sympathetic
throughout the two-week scandal, but the truth is that this White House
does not appreciate the hired hands stealing the president's thunder. In
the book, the president comes across as a far more commanding presence
in private than in front of the cameras. "Bush was a sharp exception to
the White House code of niceness. He was tart, not sweet," Frum writes.
"In private, he was not the easy, genial man he was in public. Close up,
one saw a man keeping a tight grip on himself.

"In that hour, Bush had settled one thing in my mind: I could never
again take seriously the theory that somebody else was running this
administration ... but where was he leading us all to?"

The answer turns out to be: "God knows." According to Frum, the Bush
White House is in the grip of Christian evangelism. The first words he
hears on his first day at work are: "Missed you at Bible study," - a
rebuke to his new boss, Gerson, from some unnamed Bush lieutenant.
Attendance at such sessions were "if not compulsory, not quite
uncompulsory either".

The president, according to Frum, believes that the future is in
"stronger hands than his own". It is a theme which is beginning to
emerge from the Bush administration. While most people saw the
extraordinary circumstances of the 2000 election as a fluke, Bush and
his closest supporters saw it as yet another sign he was chosen to lead.
Later, September 11 "revealed" what he was there for.

The president's gut instincts are consequently taken extremely
seriously. After interviewing the president at considerable length, Bob
Woodward said those instincts had virtually become the object of a White
House religion. It is a religion to which Frum, one of the few Jews in
the Bush White House, became a convert. The rest of us can only wonder,
as Frum once did, where we are all being led.


Guardian Unlimited © Guardian Newspapers Limited 2003

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