Starting with the naming of Philip Zelikow as Executive Director.
Ironically, Zelikow was nominated not by the WH or Congressional Repubs but by Slade Gorton, who had recently been ousted as Senator from Oregon in the 2002 elections. Gorton was considered not exactly friendly to the Bushists. The reason he pushed the notoriously arrogant, much-disliked Zelikow, according to Shenon, is that he'd been on the Carter-Ford commission investigating the Florida Election fiasco with him and thought he was meticulous, efficient and "brilliant."
But, while aware that Zelikow co-authored a book on national security with Condi Rice in the 1990s, co-chairs Tom Kean and Lee Hamilton (talk about "brilliant") were allegedly unaware that Zelikow was on the Bush transition team for national security matters and that he had written *the* document arguing against long-standing precedent and in favor of preemption in the months right after 9/11, a document that defined the Bushist push to war with Iraq. Over and over, Zelikow used his position as agenda setter to give air to the preemption doctrine--even going so far as to have conspiracy loon Laurie Mylroie (who saw Iraq behind every act of terrorism against the US, including the Oklahoma City bombing of 1995), in one of the first "expert" witness sessions. And this was AFTER the war had started and it became clear the WMD argument was nothing but gas, so to speak.
Zelikow was also dogged in his defense of Rice--not explicit, but tactical--from criticism in the testimony. A natural-born control freak, he insisted on vetting every piece of information passing through his investigators' hands, and was especially interested in evidence Condi Rice had shoved the Clinton admin's obsession with bin Laden and al Qaeda to the back burner, despite Richard Clarke's persistence in pushing it back to the front.
I'm in the middle of the book right now. It's not perfect. Not very well written--suffering from the reporter's tendency to repeat facts over and over, as if each new chapter is another day's news story. But for such a complex subject matter, maybe that's not such a bad fault after all.
This is an important book. It deserves a wide audience.
You can read more about it
here.