Posted on 06/08/2005 7:52:58 PM PDT by USAfearsnobody
Nixon's empire strikes back Bush's imperial project has succeeded by learning the chief lesson of Watergate - muzzle the press.
Sidney Blumenthal Thursday June 9, 2005
Guardian
The unveiling of the identity of Deep Throat - Mark Felt, the former deputy director of the FBI - seemed affirm the story of Watergate as the triumph of the lone journalist supported from the shadows by a magically appearing secret source. Shazam! The outlines of the fuller story we now know, thanks not only to Felt's selfunmasking but to disclosures the Albany Times Union of upstate New York, unreported so far by any major outlet. Felt was not working as "a disgruntled maverick ... but rather as the leader of a clandestine group" of three other high-level agents to control the story by collecting intelligence and leaking it. For more than 30 years the secrecy around Deep Throat diverted attention to who Deep Throat was rather than what Deep Throat was - a covertFBI operation in which Washington Post reporter Bob Woodward was almost certainly an unwitting asset. When FBI director J Edgar Hoover died on May 2 1972, Felt, who believed he should be his replacement, was passed over. The Watergate break-in took place a month later. As President Nixon sought to coerce the CIA and FBI to participate in his increasingly frantic efforts to obstruct justice, Felt, who had access to raw intelligence files, organised a band of his most trusted lieutenants and began strategic leaking. The Felt op, in fact, was part of a widespread revolt of professionals throughout the federal government against Nixon's threats to their bureaucratic integrity.
Nixon's grand plan was to concentrate executive power in an imperial presidency, politicise the bureaucracyand crush its independence, and invoke national security to wage partisan warfare. He intended to "reconstitute the Republican party", staging a "purge" to foster "a new majority", as his aide William Safire wrote in his memoir. Nixon himself declared in his own memoir that to achieve his ends the "institutions" of government had to be "reformed, replaced or circumvented. In my second term I was prepared to adopt whichever of these three methods - or whichever combination of them - was necessary."
But now George Bush is building a leviathan beyond Nixon's imagining. The Bush presidency is the highest stage of Nixonism. The commander-in-chief has declared himself by executive order above international law, the CIA is being purged, the justice department deploying its resources to break down thewall of separation between church and state, the Environmental Protection Agency being ordered to suppress scientific studies and the Pentagon subsuming intelligence and diplomacy, leaving the US with blunt military force as its chief foreign policy.
The three main architects of Bush's imperial presidency gained their formative experience amid Nixon's downfall. Donald Rumsfeld, Nixon's counsellor, and his deputy, Dick Cheney, one after the other, served as chief of staff to Nixon's successor, Gerald Ford, both opposing congressional efforts for more transparency in the executive.
With perfect Nixonian pitch, Cheney remarked in 1976: "Principle is OK up to a certain point, but principle doesn't do any good if you lose." During the Iran-contrascandal Cheney, a republican leader in the House of Representatives, argued that the congressional report denouncing "secrecy, deception and disdain for the law" was an encroachment on executive authority.
The other architect, Karl Rove, Bush's senior political aide, began his career as an agent of Nixon's dirty trickster Donald Segretti - "ratfuckers" as Segretti called his boys. At the height of the Watergate scandal, Rove operated through a phoney front group to denounce the lynch-mob atmosphere created in this city by the Washington Post and other parts of the Nixon-hating media".
Under Bush, the Republican Congress has abdicated its responsibilities of executive oversight and investigation. When Republican senator John Warner, chairman of the armed services committee, held hearings on Bush's torture policy in the aftermath of the Abu Ghraib revelations, the White House set rabid House Republicans to attack him. There have been no more such hearings. Meanwhile, Bush insists that the Senate votes to confirm John Bolton as US ambassador to the UN while refusing to release essential information requested by the Senate foreign relations committee.
One of the chief lessons learned from Nixon's demise was the necessity of muzzling the press. The Bush WhiteHouse has neutralised the press corps and even turned some reporters into its own assets. The disinformation WMD in the rush to war in Iraq, funnelled into the news pages of the New York Times, is the most dramatic case in point. By manipulation and intimidation, encouraging atmosphere of self-censorship, the Bush White House has distanced the press from dissenting professionals inside the government.
Mark Felt's sudden emergence from behind the curtain of history evoked the glory days of the press corps and its modern creation myth. It was a warm bath of nostalgia and cold comfort.
· Sidney Blumenthal is former senior adviser to President Clinton and author of The Clinton Wars
Mark Felt's sudden emergence from behind the curtain of history evoked the glory days of the press corps and its modern creation myth. It was a warm bath of nostalgia and cold comfort.
Oh, really Mrs. Bloomy?:
Terry Moran: Who made you the editor of Newsweek? Do you think it's appropriate for you, at that podium, speaking with the authority of the President of the United States, to tell an American magazine what they should print?
McClellan: I'm not telling them. I'm saying that we would encourage them to help--
Moran: You're pressuring them.
~
Behold folks, the un-dissenting, un-professional reporters at the White House Press Corps.
If those losers at the GUARDIAN tried pulling off in Britain what Moran did to McClellan in the USA--not to mention what Dan Rather tried to do since, after all, we are talking about the end to salad days--well...
Sidney Blewthemall, is at it again, anybody believe him this time?? I didn't think so!
Hilarious stuff from a scum sucking, Watergate-worshipping Clintonite sissy-thug like Sid.
What do you expect from a partisan hack?
As a bimbo who voted for Clinton twice, I now realize how important it is vote for those who will stop appointing judges dedicated to supporting the civil rights of predators.
"The three main architects of Bush's imperial presidency gained their formative experience amid Nixon's downfall."
The main architect of Clinton's imperial presidency gained her formative experience amid Nixon's downfall.
She also fondly remembers the days of treasonous reporters and the flies who fed them.
Who let this guy out of his pen?
This is what Hillary was alluding to. Does it makeny sense?
You will be seeing more of this. The Dems/hippies/media are trying to regain their days of power when they were able to bring down Nixon and have the USA leave Vietnam in shame. they then painted Nixon as the worst of the worst and they still do. Now they are trying to put Bush in the same corner and compare him to the Strawman-Nixon they built. This will continue until the election as Hillary and Bill get much more reasonable and move to the right.
It is all deceitful liberal politics.
Sidney who?
Precisely...
-Liars-- and Sleaze, Incorporated... ( my files on the clintons and friends )--
I once read that this scumbag Sidney Blumenthal is a wife beater.
I read that he beats her so badly that she lapses into comas at the hospital, and that's the only time he can have sex with her.
What's Sidney going to do when the Iraqis take his old buddy Saddam out and execute him?
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