Posted on 03/06/2003 9:49:29 AM PST by Elkiejg
Edited on 03/08/2003 12:46:43 PM PST by Admin Moderator. [history]
Dereliction of Duty
Patterson, Colonel Robert
From the officer entrusted with our nation's nuclear codes: proof that Bill Clinton cared little for national security and put every American in mortal danger.
When he was tapped to accompany President Clinton and carry the nuclear "football" that contains the top-secret codes the President needs in case of nuclear war, Colonel Robert "Buzz" Patterson was proud and grateful. He had already put his life on the line for his country many times as he flew combat missions over the Persian Gulf and Bosnia, and he was honored to take on this new and awesome responsibility.
But when he entered the Clinton White House, his gratitude and awe soon gave way to shock, revulsion, and sorrow - as he saw first-hand the cavalier and self-serving way Slick Willie and his henchmen went about the business of running the country. In Dereliction of Duty: An Eyewitness Account of How Bill Clinton Compromised America's National Security, Patterson tells the whole story. Day in and day out in the Clinton White House, he witnessed the President's contempt for the military, his indifference to important issues except insofar as they served his own political or personal purposes, and his reduction of the Office of the Presidency to a playground for his own ambition and thirst for sordid perks.
Patterson not only had numerous opportunities to see Clinton's irresponsibility and neglect of his duties: he also witnessed Hillary's furious, profane rages and relentless shifting of blame to subordinates; the general disdain of Clinton staffers toward the military; and much more. The Clinton White House more closely resembled a college fraternity house than the seat of government of the most powerful nation on earth - and it all led, Patterson argues compellingly, to our armed forces and intelligence services falling into such a demoralized, unprepared state that a disaster was just waiting to happen. That disaster happened on September 11, 2001.
Just when you thought you'd heard it all about Clinton.
Why the biggest security risk in the Clinton White House was the Slick One himself (plus details of the day he lost his copy of top-secret nuclear codes!)
How Slick Willie lost a crucial chance to strike strategic targets in Iraq because he wouldn't let his golf game be interrupted long enough to examine the situation and give the necessary orders
The day the President neglected to change the country's top secret nuclear codes: he was too distracted by the Monica Lewinsky story breaking in the Washington Post
Osama bin Laden: how he came close to being caught on Clinton's watch - except that the President hesitated too long in deciding to give the order
Clinton's dishonesty: how it extended to everything from his golf game to his extramarital affairs and - most ominously of all - to his priorities as president and his concern for our national security
Military personnel: forbidden to wear their uniforms inside the White House - by order of Hillary Clinton!
What Clinton finally did to lose virtually all the faith and trust that military men had placed in him
Clinton's cynicism: how he was able to turn on grief when needed to gain political points - and turn it off just as quickly
The subtle and not-so-subtle racism on display regularly among Clinton staffers
Hillary: "Harsh, difficult, and unpredictable" - and more about why administration officials fled from their desks and scurried into hiding places to avoid having to deal with her
How the Clintons spent more than $15,000 of the taxpayers' money to airlift Chelsea's forgotten backpack of books to their vacation spot in the Virgin Islands
Slick Willie's mood swings: with Hillary around, it was fruit, veggie plates, and ever-so-correct behavior. When she was gone? Booze, babes and barbecue
A Whitewater smoking gun? The mysterious file box that was Hillary's most important - and most closely watched - piece of luggage
How Clinton revealed his ignorance of and contempt for the military in ways that any military officer would notice
The direct correlation between Clinton's political trouble at home and his trips abroad - which cost American taxpayers half a billion dollars
Air Force One: how Slick Willie tried to turn it into a sexual playground (behaving in a manner that would have landed him in the brig if he had been a military man)
How the Clinton White House neglected basic understandings of military and defense policy - and compounded this ignorance with arrogance toward the men in uniform
Why Clinton policy in Somalia was a clear recipe for disaster
Clinton's response to terrorist attacks throughout his administration: lots of talk and little action
The appalling details of the day Slick Willie gave the Secret Service the slip and left the man holding the nuclear football to walk back to the White House alone
How Hillary revealed her basic ignorance of the nature and parameters of the United Nations mission in Bosnia that she was helping to oversee
When President Clinton met Colonel Patterson's wife - and eyed her as if he were in a singles bar
The shocking reason why Clinton had to discontinue his jogging regimen
Inside the Clinton White House: why it seemed disorganized and highly undisciplined to military men and career government service officers
The bold-faced and outrageous lie that Clinton repeated over 130 times during his 1996 campaign for reelection
How the Clinton administration time and time again attempted to cover up the shortcomings of its policies, rather than deal with them squarely and correct them
The high Clinton administration official who admitted, "It was very clear to me right away that we were making this up as we went along"
Patterson explains that he wrote Dereliction of Duty not to attack Bill Clinton, but out of his sense of responsibility as a military man to serve the common good. "And I know," explains Patterson, "that the greater good was demonstrably not served by President Clinton and his administration, which put personal wants and needs ahead of the national interest." That makes this book more important than just a record of Clinton's misdeeds: it is essential reading for every patriot who wants to do his part to prevent such a debased character from ever occupying the Oval Office again.
That's a "funny thing"? Not so funny... rather tragic and disgusting.
While maybe it should be a "blockbuster", I'm afraid all this will be viewed as "old news" and dismissed by the media and public at large. Trying to nail down Bubba is a frustrating job -- but maybe this will just add to that famous "legacy". Sorry to sound discouraged.
I believe his father was a very senior ranking officer (retired now). Buzz is smart and oozes integrity and professionalism. I am not surprised he wrote this book. What he witnessed will be ignored by the prestitutes, but history will be satisfied.
apparently there is NOTHING huge about his genitalia, warts or otherwise...
ROKbLMAO! Damn, now I have gum stuck up the back of my nose.
I never ceased to enjoy reviewing our men and women in uniform and hope I started a new tradition for presidents. As commander in chief, I discovered it was customary for our uniformed men and women to salute whenever they saw me. When I'd walk down the steps of a helicopter, for example, there was always a marine waiting there to salute me. I was told presidents weren't supposed to return salutes, so I didn't, but this made me feel a little uncomfortable. Normally, a person offering a salute waits until it is returned, then brings down his hand. Sometimes, I realized, the soldier, sailor, marine, or airman giving me a salute wasn't sure when he was supposed to lower his hand. Initially, I nodded and smiled and said hello and thought maybe that would bring down the hand, but usually it didn't. Finally, one night when Nancy and I were attending a concert at the Marine Corps headquarters, I told the commandant of marines, "I know it's customary for the president to receive these salutes, but I was once an officer and realize that you're not supposed to salute when you're in civilian clothes. I think there ought to be a regulation that the president could return a salute inasmuch as he is commander in chief and civilian clothes are his uniform." "Well, if you did return a salute," the general said, "I don't think anyone would say anything to you about it."The next time I got a salute, I saluted back. A big grin came over the marine's face and down came his hand. From then on, I always returned salutes. When George Bush followed me into the White House, I encouraged him to keep up the tradition. - Ronald Reagan
Courtesy of Simon and Schuster
http://tinyurl.com/700j
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