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New In case you wondered how Colin Powell got in there..
(and how Cheney's loathing prevailed) and other sordid aspects of the Seven Year bItch of National Destruction -- "Cheney's Law" currently on Frontline has a nice lilt {with pictures} and [link|http://www.salon.com/books/feature/2007/11/09/house_of_bush_3/index.html?source=newsletter| Salon] is publishing excerpts of Craig Unger's mini-history. As the details fill-in from a whole shelf of books / while impeachment remains reserved for violations of Puritan sex-fear traditions ... the entire genre seems now to be about: Heh, you thought that last tell-all had some raunchy details -??- Kid-grade corruption! now Read This cha cha cha..
How Cheney took control of Bush's foreign policy

The new veep installed crony Don Rumsfeld as secretary of defense, and would've won Paul Wolfowitz the top post at CIA -- if not for Wolfowitz's zipper problem.

Editor's note: This is Part 3 of an excerpt from "The Fall of the House of Bush: The Untold Story of How a Band of True Believers Seized the Executive Branch, Started the Iraq War, and Still Imperils America's Future." Part 1 ran on Nov. 7; Part 2 ran on Nov. 8. For more information on the book, visit craigunger.com

By Craig Unger



Nov. 9, 2007 | Much as he loathed Colin Powell, Vice President-elect Dick Cheney realized that the immensely popular general -- the most trusted man in America -- was essential to the political perception of the incoming Bush administration's foreign policy decisions. As former speaker of the house Newt Gingrich put it, "If you're George Bush, and the biggest weakness you have is foreign policy, and you can have Cheney on one flank and Powell on the other, it virtually eliminated the competence issue."

As a result, on December 16, 2000, three days after Al Gore conceded defeat, Colin Powell was flown to Bush's ranch in Crawford, Texas, where the president-elect announced his first cabinet appointment: Colin Powell as secretary of state. "He is a tower of strength and common sense," said Bush. "You find somebody like that, you have to hang on to them. I have found such a man."

Tears filled Bush's eyes. "I so admire Colin Powell," he later explained. "I love his story."

Unlike other designated cabinet appointees, Powell had not been vetted by Cheney or other campaign officials. Nor, according to "Soldier: The Life of Colin Powell," Karen DeYoung's comprehensive biography of him, was Powell even asked any serious foreign policy questions. Such discussions were not necessary. According to a former Pentagon official who had worked with Cheney during the first Gulf War, "Cheney's distrust and dislike for Mr. Powell were unbounded." In other words, Powell was only there for show. Cheney immediately took measures to undermine him. The chess game began.

At the Crawford press conference on December 16, Powell was dazzling -- too dazzling for his own good. As he proceeded with his lengthy discourse about the state of the world, Bush's admiring expression gradually turned to one of sour irritation. Afterward, Richard Armitage, Powell's close friend and longtime colleague, told the secretary of state-designate that he had been so comfortable in front of the cameras compared to the president-elect, that it was somewhat disturbing. "It's about domination," Armitage advised Powell. "Be careful in appearances with the president."

Armitage wasn't the only one to notice. "Powell seemed to dominate the President-elect ... both physically and in the confidence he projected," reported the Washington Post. New York Times foreign affairs columnist Thomas Friedman concluded that Powell "so towered over the president-elect, who let him answer every question on foreign policy, that it was impossible to imagine Mr. Bush ever challenging or overruling Mr. Powell on any issue."

None of this was lost on Cheney. Initially, Bush and he had decided that the new secretary of defense would be former Indiana senator Dan Coats, a Christian fundamentalist on the Senate Armed Services Committee who had won over the Christian Right thanks to his undiluted antipathy toward gays in the military. But now it was abundantly clear to Cheney that Coats would be no match for Powell. When Coats added that he did not consider missile defense an urgent priority, Bush and Cheney dumped him immediately.

Meanwhile, Bush proceeded to pick other key cabinet officials. On December 22, he announced that his attorney general would be John Ashcroft, who had just been defeated in a bid for reelection as senator from Missouri. Ashcroft, who had preached at Jerry Falwell's Thomas Road Baptist Church, was a member of the Assemblies of God church, the denomination of Jimmy Swaggart, Jim and Tammy Faye Bakker, and Elvis Presley, which was known for charismatic practices such as faith healing and speaking in tongues.

As secretary of commerce, Bush picked Don Evans, an evangelical oil man friend from Texas who had introduced Bush to the Community Bible Studies program in Midland. As chief White House speechwriter, Bush picked Michael Gerson, a graduate of Wheaton College, the so-called Harvard of evangelical colleges. These were the very people whom Neil Bush had scorned as "cockroaches" issuing "from the baseboards of the Bible-belt," and whom Bush 41 had derided as the "extra-chromosome set."

As the cabinet began to take shape in late December, Colin Powell still presented the biggest potential obstacle to the ambitions of Cheney and the neocons. There was less than a month before the inauguration. Time was running out. They had to find a way to neutralize him.

[More . . .]

New Can't wait to forward this
to me sainted muther. She is a Yellow Dawg Democrat and the one subject we luuuuuv to talk about is what a conspiracy this admenstruation has been.

Great stuff!

Thanks Ashton.
Smile,
Amy
New "Admenstruation" - that's a new one. Love it! Thanks! :-)
New :-D
Smile,
Amy
New OTOH, what took you seven years???
If you'd been a little quicker, we might have been spared three (soon four) of them.

;-) | :-/


   [link|mailto:MyUserId@MyISP.CountryCode|Christian R. Conrad]
(I live in Finland, and my e-mail in-box is at the Saunalahti company.)
Ah, the Germans: Masters of Convoluted Simplification. — [link|http://www.thetruthaboutcars.com/?p=1603|Jehovah]
New Finally stopped eating wheat
Haven't you been keeping up? Gluten was fogging my brain. I'm thinking clearly and have more energy than I ever imagined.

Oh, and I'm losing weight like there's no tomorrow.

Yeah, Baby!
Smile,
Amy
New Ah, yes, of course. (And the Evil Grape on mine, as you saw)
New Agreed. Very Nice.
May I use it?
jb4
"It's hard for me, you know, living in this beautiful White House, to give you a firsthand assessment."
George W. Bush, when asked if he believed Iraq was in a state of civil war (Newsweek, 26 Feb 07)
New What can I say. I was inspired. :-)
By all means, just tell 'em where ya got it :-D
Smile,
Amy
     In case you wondered how Colin Powell got in there.. - (Ashton) - (8)
         Can't wait to forward this - (imqwerky) - (7)
             "Admenstruation" - that's a new one. Love it! Thanks! :-) -NT - (CRConrad) - (6)
                 :-D -NT - (imqwerky) - (5)
                     OTOH, what took you seven years??? - (CRConrad) - (2)
                         Finally stopped eating wheat - (imqwerky) - (1)
                             Ah, yes, of course. (And the Evil Grape on mine, as you saw) -NT - (CRConrad)
                     Agreed. Very Nice. - (jb4) - (1)
                         What can I say. I was inspired. :-) - (imqwerky)

I'll give up my thesaurus when you pry it from my frigid, frosty, frozen, cadaverous, lifeless, stiff, defunct extremities.
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