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Ed wrote: ..The other is sustainability. Prospects for
the US economy are not good. Money is needed at home to patch up
deteriorating infrastructure and growing unemployment. There is also a
third factor: growing cynicism as the Haliburons, Bechtels and Worldcoms are
seen to be principal beneficiaries. Or, as we
remember from Vietnam, you simply restate the policy and hope no one notices
how 1) false 2) inadequate 3) deceptive the first plan was. Beware the Credibility Gap. - KWC Why the CEO in Chief Needs an
Audit By Richard Cohen, WP, Thursday,
July 10, 2003; Page A23 The Bush White House
is run on a business model. The president is the CEO. He delegates to others, including
the vice president, who was once a CEO himself. It therefore should come as no
surprise that George W. Bush, a Harvard MBA after all, is doing what other CEOs
do when they get into trouble. In his case, he's "restated" his
reasons for going to war. Corporations do this
all the time. If a profit of, say, $2.8 billion turns out to be a loss of a
similar amount on account of unanticipated developments (corruption, greed, the
demands of mistresses), the figure merely gets "restated." Usually no
one is held responsible for this, because a billion here or a billion there
can, as we know, fall through the cracks. In fact, the CEO -- having been given
a bonus for such a banner year -- is then given another one for managing his
company through difficult times. In the same way, the
president recently restated some of the reasons for invading Iraq. Saddam
Hussein's nuclear weapons program, which Bush told the world was being
"reconstituted," may in fact not exist. The White House the other day
restated its earlier insistence that Iraq had tried to buy uranium from the
West African nation of Niger. It turned out that the supporting documents had
been forged. The White House admitted that in a press release left behind after
Bush had departed for Africa. Similarly, the
accusation that Iraq was buying high-strength aluminum tubes, which Bush said
were "used to enrich uranium for nuclear weapons," has to be
restated. The tubes appear to have been bought for another purpose entirely and
may not be high-strength after all.
As for the charge that Iraq was bristling with other weapons of mass
destruction, none have yet been found, raising the distinct possibility that --
in an upcoming quarter -- this too will be restated and the Bush administration
will take a one-time charge against future credibility. In fact, should we --
the stockholders of this operation -- look back at the original business plan
for the proposed Bush administration, we will find that almost everything has
been restated. During the campaign, Bush said he would not go in for
peacekeeping operations abroad. He appears ready to do so in Liberia. He also
said he would not get engaged, as did the previous CEO, Bill Clinton, in the
nitty-gritty of Middle East peace negotiation. The administration is now
choosing intersections in Gaza for traffic lights. Restatement follows
restatement until we poor stockholders have no choice but to conclude that
either the Bush administration did not know what it was talking about when it
came into office or does not know what it is talking about now. Not even in
corporate America can you hold two contradictory positions simultaneously. One
of them, as any CEO can tell you, has to be restated. The Bush
administration's interim business plan called for the capture or killing of
Osama bin Laden. On account of a botched operation in the Tora Bora area of
Afghanistan, this now has to be restated. Similarly, the proclaimed
determination to rid the world of Saddam Hussein also has not succeeded. As
with bin Laden, this failure will be restated as not being all that important.
You learn this sort of thing in business school. In fact, the entire
business plan for Iraq has to be restated. It turns out that the country simply
will not govern itself, that some elements resent the U.S. occupation and that
it will take more troops to administer the country than originally thought. In
some way, this abject failure to plan for an occupation -- despite repeated
warnings -- will have to be creatively restated. To paraphrase the president,
bring on the restatement. The dangers of an
immense budget deficit have been restated. Rising unemployment has been
restated to blame the Clinton administration. The critical importance of
relations with Mexico has been restated. The evils of affirmative action were
-- after the Supreme Court ruled -- restated and so, of course, were the
reasons for going to war in Iraq. Now it is to rid that country of Saddam
Hussein and establish the predicates for a Middle East peace. I like them both. Still, all these
restatements suggest a business plan that was both flawed from the start and
implemented with an appalling level of incompetence. Despite that, the CEO of
this mismanaged operation is not held accountable and remains popular with the
shareholders. It used to be that the buck stopped with the president. To state
the obvious, that's been restated. |
- [Futurework] Vietnam, the Sequel Karen Watters Cole
- Re: [Futurework] Vietnam, the Sequel Ed Weick
- RE: [Futurework] Vietnam, the Sequel Karen Watters Cole
- Re: [Futurework] Vietnam, the Sequel Brad McCormick, Ed.D.
- Re: [Futurework] Vietnam, the Sequel Karen Watters Cole
- Re: [Futurework] Vietnam, the Sequel Ray Evans Harrell
- RE: [Futurework] Vietnam, the Sequel Karen Watters Cole
- Re: [Futurework] Vietnam, the Seque... Ray Evans Harrell
- RE: [Futurework] Vietnam, the Sequel Karen Watters Cole
