Reprinted from The Fort Wayne News-Sentinel:
http://www.fortwayne.com/mld/newssentinel/7041286.htm
My favorite quotes....
"Bureaucratic infighting in foreign policy is nothing
new. During George Washington's administration, Thomas
Jefferson and John Adams battled, often viciously,
over whether the United States should tilt toward
England or France. Secretary of State George Shultz
and Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger squabbled in
the Reagan administration. National security adviser
Henry Kissinger overpowered Secretary of State William
Rogers in the Nixon administration, and Jimmy Carter's
secretary of state, Cyrus Vance, quit after the failed
1980 attempt to rescue American hostages in Iran,
which he'd opposed.
But the Weinberger-Shultz fights and those between
Vance and Carter's national security adviser Zbigniew
Brzezinski "look like Sunday school picnics" compared
with the present fights "in terms of freezing the
administration's ability to act," said a former U.S.
official, who requested anonymity because he still
deals with the U.S. government regularly.
The conflict pits so-called neo-conservatives led by
Vice President Cheney and Secretary of Defense
Rumsfeld against so-called pragmatists led by
Secretary of State Powell and is fueled by a major
difference in world outlook, say knowledgeable
officials.
"This time it's not about tactics; it's about
ideology," said one senior official who served in
several Republican administrations. "There's no
compromise possible between two opposing views of how
this country should deal with the rest of the world."
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