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To: Bernard Marx

Goss got screwed by Negroponte who wanted the DNI job. Bush took his usual hands-off approach and ended up losing the best CIA Chief he could have had and got himself a guy as DNI who was hated by State and had no real connections to most of the other 15 agencies.

Bush refuses to become involved in actual politics. He apparently thinks its either beneath him or its just not dignified to practice the art of politics. And while he makes himself defenseless by refusing to fight back, his enemies within our government gut him on a regular basis and put his closest friends on the chopping block (Rove, Libby, etc).

I really didn’t expect Bush would be so incredibly neutered when it came to partisanship. I guess I should have seen it coming from his days in Texas but I thought that having seen how partisanship works when his dad got eaten alive that he would be smart enough to know that if you don’t hit your enemies in the nose they will continue to put their nose in your affairs. Its probably been the biggest disappointment for me in him as a President - his unwillingness to fight anybody within the borders of the U.S. or even speak up when he or his allies are attacked (unless its the last 30 days before an election and he’s at a campaign event - that is apparently the only place he is willing to state the truth about the other side).


25 posted on 12/08/2007 1:35:01 AM PST by bpjam (Harry Reid doesn't even have 32% of my approval)
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To: bpjam
Immediately after the last election I published a vanity entitled, Why We Lost. I reproduce a portion of that now because it echoes your post. Some years ago I published my thoughts about the Bushes and their political philosophy which I concluded then was not essentially conservative. I add that old post as well.

In thinking about this I had mostly confined my thoughts to domestic politics. Somehow I thought that Bush's inexperience in both domestic and international politics could be compensated for by Dick Cheney. Indeed, the left-wing press has been full of articles and even books describing Cheney's attempts to intimidate the CIA into coughing up the kinds of analysis that would justify war against Iraq. The CIA, of coarse, has denied this explicitly and the 9/11 commission and the Senate investigating commission have exonerated Cheney. But there is no doubt the Cheney had a very lively personal interest in the analytical workings of the CIA concerning Iraq and this was demonstrated by his frequent trips to Langley. The fact that the CIA has written this document, that it has defeated Porter Goss, that it is leaked repeatedly to the New York Times without consequences, that Valerie Plame could get away with her atrocities, all demonstrate that something has gone terribly wrong with the agency which is beyond the capacity of George Bush, and I would say, Dick Cheney, to fix.

The implications for our national security are grave.

Here is my first post written just after the' 06 election:

Other reasons are less easily identifiable and more subjective in nature. One goes to the very essence of the character of George Bush. I've long published that he is not a movement conservative, in fact he is not a conservative at all but rather he is a patrician with loyalties to family, friends, and country. His politics are animated not by conservative ideology but by a noblisse oblige which, as a substitute for political philosophy, move him to act from loyalty and love of country. The result of this is that he does not weigh his words and actions against a coherent standard grounded in conservatism, but instinctively reacts to do what is right for family, friends, and country. Thus we get Harriet Meirs, pandering to the Clintons and Kennedys, prescription drug laws, campaign finance laws, runaway spending, and the war in Iraq. The conservative movement is left muddled and confused and the Republican Party undisciplined and leaderless. In these circumstances all manner of mischief is possible beginning with corruption and indiscipline in the ranks. To be effective, a president must be feared as well is loved. A President is more than just Commander in Chief and Chief Executive of the nation, he is the titular head of his party and he must rule it. If Bush was willing to pander to the likes of Teddy Kennedy, what did Senator John McCain have to fear from him? Bush has utterly failed in his role as head wrangler of the Republican Party.

Other subjective reasons for the debacle involve Bush's personal character. He is essentially a nonconfrontational man who would rather operate through collegiality than through power. This is reinforced by his Christian belief and he will almost literally turn the other cheek. So, his loyalty to family and friends affects his appointments and produce mediocrities like Brown at FEMA and Ridge at Homeland Security and Harriet Meirs. It makes him shrink from prosecuting the crimes of his enemies even to the point of overlooking real security lapses committed by The New York Times. It makes it very difficult for Bush to discipline his troops and fire incompetent or disloyal subordinates. Instead he soothes them with the Medal of Freedom.

George Bush is a singularly inarticulate man. When he is not delivering a prepared speech, his sincerity and goodness of character come through, but his policies often die an agonizing death along with the syntax. The truth is that Bush has never been able, Ronald Reagan style, to articulate well the three or four fundamental issues which move the times in which we live. One need only cite the bootless efforts to reform Social Security as an example. His inability to tell America why we must fight in Iraq to win the greater worldwide war against terrorism, or how we are even going to win in Iraq, has been fatal to the Republicans' chances in this election. Of course, one can carry this Billy Budd characterization too far and it is easy to overemphasize its importance, but it is part of the general pattern which has led us to this pass. It is a very great pity that the bully pulpit has been squandered in the hands of a man so inarticulate. That the bully pulpit was wasted means that there are no great guiding principles for the country, for the party, for the administration, for Congress to follow, or for the voters to be inspired by. If the voters went into the booth confused about what the Republican Party stands for, the fault is primarily George Bush's.

.............................................................................................................................................................................................................. Here is the second post written many years ago:

I too have written such e-mails in my head. The problem is not really that George Bush would not read them but that he would not heed them. The problem with George Bush is that he is not primarily a conservative, he is primarily a Christian, and he does not have a calculus that is congruent with yours or mine, even though both of us might be Christians. George Bush sees partisan politics as petty and ultimately meaningless. We see partisanship as the indispensable stuff of freedom. At election time the Bushes will hold their nose and dip into partisanship. But it is not in their essential nature to wage war for tactical political advantage.

George Bush wants what Bill Clinton wanted: To fashion a legacy. He does not want to be remembered as the man who cut a few percentage points from an appropriation bill but as the man who reshaped Social Security. I've come to the conclusion that the Bushes see politics as squirmy, fetid. It must be indulged in if one is to practice statesmanship but it is statesmanship alone that that is worthy as a calling.

They are honest, they are loyal, they are patrician. There would've been admired and respected if had lived among the founding fathers. But it is Laura Bush and Momma Bush who really and truly speak for the family and who tell us what they are thinking and who they are. There's not a Bush woman who does not believe in abortion. They believe in family, they live in loyalty, they believe in the tribe, but they do not believe in partisan politics.

I believe it is time for us to decide no longer to be used by the Bush family as useful idiots and instead to begin to use the Bushes as our useful idiots . I say this with the utmost admiration and respect for everything the Bushes stand for. Who would not be proud beyond description to have a father or an uncle who was among the first and youngest of naval aviators to fight in the Pacific and to be twice shot down. Not a stain or blemish of corruption or personal peccadillo has touched the family(except for the brother whom I believe was cleared of bank charges). They are the living embodiment of all that is good and noble in the American tradition.

But they are not conservative.


37 posted on 12/08/2007 5:05:16 AM PST by nathanbedford ("Attack, repeat attack!" Bull Halsey)
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To: bpjam
Goss got screwed by Negroponte who wanted the DNI job.

I saw that happening but figured Negroponte had Bush's cojones in a vise of some kind and was twisting the handle. The more I look at it I'm inclined to think Bush is simply politically incompetent as you say. He seems to live in the same kind of reality-insulated bubble his patrician Daddy inhabited during his "Read my lips" days.

Now I read this: "...two months after Goss was nominated, Bush asked Congress to implement a recommendation from the 9/11 commission to create an overall national intelligence director, which would oversee the CIA and 14 other intelligence agencies -- a change that diluted the authority of the CIA director."

Looks to me like Bush's foot wound was a self-inflicted gunshot. In one act of grand incompetence he not only backstabbed Goss, but ended up creating a total bureaucratic nightmare for our security apparatus. If it was bad before it's probably past the point of hopelessness now. Witness the current tape-destruction mess.

56 posted on 12/08/2007 8:52:23 AM PST by Bernard Marx
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