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Edited on Wed Jan-14-04 04:54 PM by salin
make sense with all folks have witnessed... then you would be correct.
The problem - is that the whole descriptions ring true.
Disengaged from policy... Bush can rarely speak in-depth about any issues, this suggests that he doesn't grasp the big concepts... as if they are never presented to him... or the fly over his head.
There have been other stories over a couple of years that are consistent with this. First was a similar description (of politics determining policy in absence of any intellectual policy debates) from John DiLulio in Esquire, and then former speech writer Frum writes a fluff piece that has a surprisingly similar (but written in friendly terms) description.
Then there have been several instances where a foreign dignitary who has met with Bush later comments to the press that bush hadn't understood the issues so a great deal of time had to be spent "teaching" bush about the issues (on of these was a Saudi Crown Prince.) The point being that either Bush didn't want to be briefed before meeting an important foreign dignitary, or he couldn't grasp the issues if he had been briefed (or a combination - which actually fits a description condi gave - that the briefings are summarized into simplified sound bites for busy - missing all complexity.)
So on this point... the description sounds true.
Policy is decided by ideologues and is not discussed debated Similar to the first point, but different. This suggests that one point side is given and people all agree (or just don't speak). The whole Iraq buildup but lack of contingency planning, and lack of plans for after the govt fell is HARD evidence of this being true.
It is backed up by criticisms of the lack of plans cited by several well respected, conservative republican senators.
The decision to invade Iraq was made in the early days. Again, this makes sense when one begins to re-listen to bush's first major speech after 911 and the State of the Union speech (the Axis of Evil). In addition Rumsfeld's comments suggesting using 9-11 as a reason to invade, suggest that the plans and discussion about invading already existed... and he was asking for the pretext. So the description, makes sense. Then add the funky efforts of the VP to allow any records from his Energy Task Force... (which many folks have seen as unrelated)... and the document that O'Niell showed to 60 Minutes (btw we have seen the document before - so this can't just be spun as "leaking.").. and the impression that this had been a long-term, ongoing conversation as ONiell suggests... makes sense.
That there was little/no hard evidence of Iraq having Weapons of Mass Destruction. Given not finding weapons, disproven "evidence" (in many places from many sources, covered in many media fora), the NewYorker piece about how intelligence was being handled (Seymour Hersh "StovePipe"), and insiders such as Karen Kiatowski saying the same thing... ONiell just seems to be corroborating info already out there rather than saying something new.
My point is that in the end - it is the overall gut-level impression that the public creates that will have a lasting impact (positive or negative). I believe that ONiell's interviews and Suskind's book give details and descriptions - but most importantly reinforce the impression on the points raised above that had already made it into the public dialog/psyche. I think it will push more folks who had already grown skeptical over the line... and will push some who had still been in denial but fighting skepticism... over into the skeptical camp. For those folks the next drip or so will push them over as well.
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