From Crittendon:
Of the actual participants in events, there is a heavy reliance on well-known Rumsfeld-Cheney adversaries such Richard Clarke, Richard Armitage, with no mention of the fact that they, and virtually everyone in this depiction of recent history, have axes to grind and their own sullied legacies to patch up.
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Now I know I will not bother with this. I had almost completely succeeded in forgetting the names Richard Clarke and Richard Armitage, and never want to hear them again!
I have major reservations with anything that PBS is involved in. FilmCutter may feel it is a fair documentary, and I haven’t seen it so can’t comment one way or another. But I’ve voiced my reservations. Its seems others on this and the other thread have been even more vocal.
But if FilmCutter hasn’t done his homework as to what FreeRepublic members expect as ‘fair and balanced’, then he deserves to take shots when advertising his work here.
Speaking of Armitage:
FEBRUARY 2003 : (ARMITAGE ON IRAN... A DEMOCRACY?) The axis of evil was a valid comment, but I would note theres one dramatic difference between Iran and the other two axes of evil, and that would be its democracy. And you approach a democracy differently, —————Richard Armitage, Feb. 2003———via 2 posted on 03/06/2005 7: 55:58 AM PST by wolf24 | To 1
JANUARY 2005 : (REPORT : ARMITAGE ADMITS HE AND POWELL SOMETIMES WENT PUBLIC WITH THEIR VIEWS IN AN EFFORT TO MANIPULATE BUSH POLICY) WASHINGTON (AP) — Baring one of Washington’s worst-kept secret, Secretary of State Colin Powell’s deputy said he and Powell sometimes went public with their dissenting views to try to influence Bush administration policy. Richard Armitage, who leaves along with Powell at the end of President Bush’s first term, described the process as using the “bully pulpit.’’ “Differences of opinion are something you as a citizen and I as a citizen should value in your government,’’ Armitage said in an interview with ...[NPR]’s “Morning Edition’’ on Thursday. “You really want it.’’
Powell and Armitage, whose friendship was forged decades ago, share foreign policy views that are distinctly more moderate than those of Bush and other key presidential advisers. They also made far more use of media interviews and speeches to promote U.S. foreign policy than their predecessors. Armitage made clear in the interview that the public appearances had another design, as well — to reflect and register the views of the State Department as well as influence the shaping of policy.
“When Secretary Powell speaks or when Rich Armitage speaks, we’re putting out our views. And we will do so respectfully, of course,’’ Armitage said according to a text released Friday by the State Department. “This is what the president paid us for, to bring him our views.’’ “And, of course, he can agreee with us or not, as he chooses,’’ Armitage said.
Armitage offered no examples of specific areas or issues of disagreement, although his response was to a question that suggested that Powell and he had been at odds with other top administration officials on policies involving North Korea and the Middle East. Powell is known to have pushed for negotiations with North Korea over its nuclear weapons programs, a strategy Bush adopted after months of review at the beginning of his first term. On the Middle East, Powell sometimes sought more flexibility from Israel, than did the White House, in dealing with the Palestinians. “You don’t want a government that sees everything the same way,’’ Armitage said. “That would be bad — it would lead to bad government, in my view.’’———— Armitage says he and Powell went public to try to sway Bush [State shouldn’t agree with White House]BARRY SCHWEID AP Diplomatic Writer , Charleston Gazette ^ | 1-15-05
2005 : (REPORT: ARMITAGE ANGLES FOR RUMSFELD’S JOB...)
MARCH 13, 2006 : (WASHPO’S BEN BRADLEE FINGERS ARMITAGE) THE WASHINGTON POST’s famous Watergate editor Ben Bradlee claims that it was former State Department Deputy Secretary Richard Armitage who was the individual who leaked the identity of CIA official Valerie Plame. In the latest issue of VANITY FAIR: “Woodward was in a tricky position. People close to him believe that he had learned about Plame from his friend Richard Armitage, Colin Powell’s former deputy, who has been known to be critical of the administration and who has a blunt way of speaking. ‘That Armitage is the likely source is a fair assumption,’ former WASHINGTON POST editor Ben Bradlee said.” ‘I had heard about an e-mail that was sent that had a lot of unprintable language in it.’” Developing...-——— “WASH POST’s Ben Bradlee Claims Plame Leaker Was Richard Armitage,” The Drudge Report, march 13, 2006 | Drudge
MARCH 31, 2006 : (ARMITAGE IS ELECTED AS A NEW OUTSIDE DIRECTOR BY CONOCO) HOUSTON, March 31, 2006 -— The board of directors of ConocoPhillips has elected Richard L. Armitage, Bobby S. Shackouls and William E. Wade Jr. as new outside directors. This increases the total number of ConocoPhillips directors to 18, of which 17 are outside directors.....-————?
Conoco... wonder how Conoco’s board “feels” about Iran?
APRIL 2006 mid : (CONOCO’s ARMITAGE & SENATOR LUGAR vs RICE & BOLTON ON ENGAGEMENT WITH IRAN MEME) Only days after former Deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitage urged the Bush Administration to engage the Iranians in talks rather than launch air strikes against their nuclear facilities (see DallasBlog story on Armitages remarks here), the Republican Chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee echoed Armitages views. Here are excerpts from the Australian story which lays out Senator Richard Lugars position on the Iranian situation:
Influential Republican senator Richard Lugar has urged the Bush administration to change its Iran strategy, saying the US must talk directly to Tehran about its nuclear ambitions instead of pushing for economic sanctions.
Senator Lugar said Iran, as the world’s fourth-largest supplier of oil, was “part of the energy picture” and urged President George W. Bush to play “cool” and seek direct negotiations.
He said it was too soon to be pressing the international community for economic sanctions against Iran, a strategy being strongly urged by the US ambassador at the UN, John Bolton, and, more recently, by Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice. -——— “Senator Lugar Calls For Talks With Iran,” by Tom Pauken, DallasBlog.com, 04/19/2006