Subscribe to Common Dreams News Updates
Most Popular This Week
Popular content
Today's Top News
Cheney Misled GOP Leaders, New Book Says
A GOP congressional leader who was wavering on giving President Bush authority to wage war in late 2002 said Vice President Cheney misled him by saying that Iraqi President Saddam Hussein had direct personal ties to al-Qaeda terrorists and was making rapid progress toward a suitcase nuclear weapon.
Vice President Dick Cheney in the Oval Office in June 2006. (Doug Mills/The New York Times) That's one of the revelations in the new book, "Angler: The Cheney Vice Presidency," by The Post's Barton Gellman.
Another is the inside story about how Cheney managed the process that led to his selection as vice president. Gellman reveals that Cheney did not fill out his own questionnaire for potential running mates; that ostensible top contenders for the ticket were not actually interviewed by Cheney or Bush; that the heart surgeon who vouched for Cheney's health never met him or reviewed his medical records; and that longtime counselor Dan Bartlett warned Bush "we're getting our asses kicked in the media" because the campaign knew so little about Cheney's record.
Two former Republican governors, Frank Keating of Oklahoma and John Engler of Michigan, accuse Cheney of leaking closely held information from Keating's questionnaire in order to damage his bid for a cabinet post. "Dick Cheney coming into my life has been like a black cloud," Keating tells Gellman.
The Post published excerpts of the new book in Sunday's and Monday's editions. It expands on a Pulitzer Prize-winning series Gellman wrote with former Post investigative reporter Jo Becker in 2007.
"Angler" is based on hundreds of previously unpublished interviews with present and former Cheney advisers, senior officials in federal agencies, diplomats, judges, military officers, senators and members of Congress. Among those who spoke on the record to Gellman are Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, National Security Adviser Stephen J. Hadley, White House Chief of Staff Joshua Bolten and his predecessor Andrew H. Card Jr., senior presidential advisers Dan Bartlett and Karl Rove, and numerous high ranking Justice Department alumni, including John Ashcroft and James B. Comey. Cheney and President Bush declined to be interviewed.
Some of the book's most significant news describes a three-month conflict between the Justice Department and the vice president's office over warrantless domestic surveillance. In addition to the excerpts published in the Post, Gellman's account of that program includes a scene in which the top White House national security lawyer begins hearing rumors of "the vice president's special program." John B. Bellinger III, who had not been informed of the operation, confronted Cheney's counsel, David S. Addington.
"I'm not going to tell you whether there is or isn't such a program," Addington replied, glowering. "But if there were such a program, you'd better go tell your little friends at the FBI and the CIA to keep their mouths shut."
Cheney's accusations about Saddam Hussein, described by former House Majority Leader Richard Armey, came in a highly classified one-on-one briefing in Room H-208, the vice president's hideaway office in the Capitol Building. The threat Cheney described went far beyond public statements that have been criticized for relying on "cherry-picked" intelligence of unknown reliability. There was no intelligence to support the vice president's private assertions, Gellman reports, and they "crossed so far beyond the known universe of fact that they were simply without foundation." Armey had spoken out against the coming war, and his opposition gave cover to Democrats who feared the political costs of appearing to be weak. Armey reversed his position after Cheney told him, he said, that the threat from Iraq was actually "more imminent than we want to portray to the public at large."
Cheney said, according to Armey, that Iraq's "ability to miniaturize weapons of mass destruction, particularly nuclear," had been "substantially refined since the first Gulf War," and would soon result in "packages that could be moved even by ground personnel." Cheney linked that threat to Saddam's alleged personal ties to al Qaeda, Armey said, explaining that "we now know they have the ability to develop these weapons in a very portable fashion, and they have a delivery system in their relationship with organizations such as al Qaeda."
"Did Dick Cheney ... purposely tell me things he knew to be untrue?" Armey said. "I seriously feel that may be the case...Had I known or believed then what I believe now, I would have publicly opposed [the war] resolution right to the bitter end, and I believe I might have stopped it from happening."
Gellman writes that Cheney was never the shadow president alleged by critics. He describes a trajectory of power in which the vice president began the first term with "a brief so wide-ranging and autonomous that he was the nearest thing we have had to a deputy president." But after the near-meltdown at the Justice Department in March 2004, Bush "came to see disadvantages in the arrangement, and over time it changed."
Even when Cheney lost some of his influence, Gellman reports, he remained effective at slow-rolling initiatives he did not like. One senior foreign policy adviser, Aaron Friedberg, described the tactics as "rope a dope."
"Angler" recounts a meeting in the Situation Room in which the frustrated president, jamming a finger toward Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, demanded the start of long-delayed criminal proceedings against terrorist suspects held at Guantanamo Bay. "We are going to have a trial," Bush said, "and the proceedings are going to start by the end of January" 2004. Cheney and Rumsfeld failed to turn up for three consecutive meetings called by Rice to carry out the president's command.
On their third no-show--a month after Bush's deadline expired--CIA Director George Tenet exploded in profanity, Gellman reports. And Rice began to cry.
- Posted in



66 Comments so far
Show AllDick Cheney may well be the most predatory politician in US history. In his unrelenting quest for power at the expense of the entire nation, Cheney has even left the Bush machine in the dust.
q
Imagine how much we don't know, and never will know. Most evil VP ever. Most devious VP ever. Most secretive VP ever. Worst VP ever.
Worst VP Ever - and Congress went right along with it.
But there may be some hope in other parts of the world.
"Bolivian soldiers have arrested US Backed rebel governor and opposition
leader Leopoldo Fernandez, who is accused of being behind Pando massacre."
Hadn't heard that. Hopefully great news will continue from Bolivia AND Venezela.
Maybe , most predatory PERSON. Everyone keeps saying Dubya is a psychoapth (its sociopath now). I think he's an ass puppet. Cheney , I would say is the true, sociopathic personality. I think he knows it, too. And I dotn think he care. He's been out to "avenge Nixon" since he worked for him. I know Nixon's crimse pale in comparison to Bush's. But the Congress wont do anything!
Unless the Congress will ipeach hi he wil retire rich, and go live on a manmade island in Dubai. I hope the islands (in the shape of palm trees and "prayers" all sink.
I want to know, at what point will Republicans themselves say enough is enough. It's really their party that's suffering (in the political sense) because of Cheney and Bush. Are so many Repubs *that* spineless?
"Are so many Repubs *that* spineless?"
No. We are.
Spineless Dems goes without saying. I mean to say the Repubs themselves need to stop stonewalling and realize how badly they themselves are being damaged. Maybe then they could wash their hands in some small way by helping oust this guy.
For what its worth, since the Palin nomination proved that the RNC's only concern is keeping the party in power regardless of how corrupt or incompetent, a number of Republican apologists have started to complain. David Brooks in today's NYT, Ben Stein, George Will, even the war-mongering bigot Charles Krauthammer have all bemoaned the party's movement in the wrong direction over the past week. Since all of these men are a part of the educated "intellectual elite" and the McCain/Palin base is decidedly not, perhaps they are just feeling left out.
Maybe they are beginning to realize that having a dangerous psychopath in charge behind the scenes while a compliant dimwit front man does nothing hasn't been the brightest idea for moving America forward. Maybe they are realizing that while having Bush, a lightweight "Christian" who gave lip service to his "conversion" and the evangelicals, was acceptable as long as he pursued their ends, the Palin ascendency clearly means they have lost control of the GOP to the intellect-denying evangelical religious ultra-right ideological zealots.
More likely, maybe they are seeing their own investments and pensions in danger of falling into the same crapper as ours. They are watching as their precious market collapses in on itself, leaving them on the outside. [Because, although they were closer to the top of that Ponzi pyramid than we were and thus supported it wholeheartedly, they are still not high enough up for a taxpayer-funded bailout or Golden Parachute to save them.] Will they apologize to America and change their allegiance? Will they vote third party? No, they'll complain and try to take their party back internally. But putting emotion above intellect is a big step on the descent into totalitarianism, and their party and its leaders are dragging us all down that black hole.
No Republican policy in the last 50 years has improved the human condition in America. Now as the economic condition suffers under Republican mismanagement, some prominent Republican apologists are starting, too late, to wake up.
Cheney lied? Really? Oh, my God!!!
What does it matter? The Republican leaders and their rank-and-files are nothing but rubberstamps anyway. The Republicans and half the Democrats bought into the lies on Iraq without reviewing the facts or even questioning the lies and now we have nothing to prove for it other than the fact that the sole purpose for invading Iraq was to enrich the criminal oil tycoons as the results are now showing. Moreover, more people in Iraq and other neighboring countries are converting from secular to hard-core Islam. So much for winning the oxymoronic "war on terror".
What makes you think we want to win the war on terror or the war on drugs? If we continue to lose the war on terror the military industrial complex flourishes. If we continue to lose the war on drugs we have a druged out and compliant population.
I'm waiting to find out Cheney's connection to the mysterious flight in US airspace of the B-52 loaded with nuclear cruise missiles.
Have all of the witnesses committed suicide yet?
How many books exposing and chronicling the Bush/Cheney cabal of lies and deception does that now make? It's getting sooo blase. Ho hum, too tired to even read this one. Think I'll go watch Congress on C-Span, it's the best remedy for insomnia there is.
So
Yeah...that about sums it up...in Cheney's own words.
The irony hurts.
Recent comments from Palin supporters that they "know she is a liar and a hypocrite" indicate that the US electorate couldn't care less about liars and hypocrites. The failure of Congress to punish this behavior will lead to ever more blatant lies and hypocrisy.
But she seems like the kind of person you could go hunting with, maybe take a helicoptor ride and shoot a Wolf or Bear. So she tells a small untruth from time to time, she'll fit right in when she gets to the White House.
Dah!
"Governments lie!" I.F. Stone
And the overly frequent political road to getting into government position is best portrayed by this quote...
"Platforms are what you run on -- and then run from once elected." Woodrow Wilson
Jeffrey September 16th, 2008 2:36 pm
Dah!
Yeah, exactly! I'm shocked!, shocked! to find that Cheesedick Cheney is a liar and a criminal! And look at that pack of pinched-face assholes standing behind him in the accompanying photo. And then there's Cheney's expression. Actors who played SS men and Gestapo agents in Hollywood World War II movies were expert at that expression. They would flash it just before the second lead was tortured to death.
Cheney must go down in history like Hitler, WAR CRIMINAL!
Anyone remember Nicolai Ceausescu, Romania's vicious Communist leader during 1965 - 1989? Remember what they did to him after the fall of the Iron Curtain? It took a revolution and a coup to unseat Ceausescu. Then, he and his wife were executed.
On a Christmas Day...
Cheney is a criminal. Anyone who is in a position to prosecute him and doesn't, is complicite in his crimes.
Cheney is clearly the key operative in the coup of 2000 and most of the crimes of this illegitimate regime.
I'm not prone to violence, but if I were, Cheney and his little punk Addington would be at the top of my list!
So we've got a Secretary of State so ineffectual, all she can do is sit in meetings and cry? There's no crying in government!
And I can't help but feel so sorry for her! There there, now Condosleaza, don't cry, every little thing's gonna be alright...
She cried? I do not believe it. Oh wait a minute, she was feeling sorry for herself because she had been dissed -- yeah, maybe.
That expression on his face says it all: I lied, murdered, tortured, so what?
I can say anything I want to say, do anything I want to do, take anything I want and there is not a damn thing anybody can do about it.
I have screwed the country in ways you will never know about and in ways from which the people will never recover. So?
Reagan destroyed a lot of lives but the Americans took control of his legacy and built him into someone to emulate.
Ok, we could not really criticize him when he was suffering for Alzeimers without looking insensitive, and then he went and died and we needed to respect the dead. And all through that time the Repugs were remaking Reagan's image and legacy.
Just wait, they will do the same with Cheney.
We need to know all we can about this guy and not "dishonour" his memory by pretending that he was something he was not.
We need to be sure that Cheney goes the same way as other of his ilk - like Hilter.
Let's realize that the people failed to put enough pressure on Congress to impeach Cheney. Does that make them Fascists? Probably! It puzzles me how Democracy became so dispensable. Perhaps our schools have become factories for the production of young Fascists. I know that the great majority of social studies classes in High School are taught by coaches, not academics. I also know that High School Administrators are almost exclusively chosen from the ranks of coaches. Coaches, like policemen, almost exclusively identify with Republicans. High Schools are probably not producing many citizens anymore, they are producing consumers only. Bush and Cheney are the beneficiaries. We are likely to see more Cheney's.
Interesting, if possibly unsubstantiated, viewpoint on coaches. Of course, like pastors, priests, and dictators, coaches are authoritarians - "What I say goes because I said it!" If our children are laboring under authoritarian rule in their schools and churches it's no wonder they cheer it in our government.
Whatever "ranks" school administrators are chosen from, they tend to model their behavior after the ideals of the Republican corporate world. We call them "Educrat$" and budget concerns seem to be the main issue, and the preservation and growth of their own salaries are top priority. Education or the choice of competent teachers are irrelevant issues. They are supported by relatives and friends and cronies are then appointed as the "chosen" teachers who get to keep their jobs and are awarded tenure.
Cheney is the most evil person in the USA. He needs to be prosecuted for Crimes against Humanity. He is slime. Anyone who really cares about this country will sign on to Rep. Kucinich's articles of impeachment for both Cheney and Bush II.
Cheney is the most evil person in the world, not merely in the U.S.A. When will he be hung? Bush has never been anything but a dope head and a play boy. Cheney a high profile sickho. History will really have a dead beat male whorehouse for these nothings.
This latest revelation from another deceived Republican ( a real piece of work in Dick Armey) about being lied to by Dick Cheney merely cements his reputation as the Cardinal Richelieu of the USA.
Perhaps the most treasonous person to ever hold high office in the US. His secrecy, deceit and disdain for true democracy will be a stain on the body politic of this great country for generations. Sadly he'll live out his life very wealthy and very well protected.
maybe a strong magnetic campaign button can fix that pesky pace maker that works too well.
The evil part of me says "That's too fast and painless." I'm still pretty young, I've got years ahead of me to suffer through this train-wreck.
For somebody who says he's confident of his place in history, Cheney's sure making it difficult for future historians to decipher just what in the hell he did while he was polluting the capital with his foul presence.
so as the republican ship crashes on the rocks of the financial mess it created with utterly foolish de-regulation, and 2 wars of choice(read invation / occupation), the rats are now leaving the ship... crying foul of their masters before the whole soggy mess sinks into sea of history , under the heading of failed experiment.
where were these guys and gals all this long 8 years?
pffff stinks to high heaven!
Someone explain Armey's lame excuse that he trusted Cheney to have better intelligence than any other agency? If he was so conflicted, why didn't he cross-check the claims Cheney was making? I don't buy it.
How much do you know about Dick Armey? The Republican party is his church. Extreme right politics is his religion. No proof was necessary. He had faith.
What You Can Do to Put Bush and Cheney Behind Bars
http://www.afterdowningstreet.org/node/35995
FREE AMERICA
REVOLUTIONARY (DIRECT) DEMOCRACY
Wh nat can we do to put Bush and Chenny behind bars? An honeat investigation by the people in authority. Nancy Pelosi and Harry Reid are not them. Marine Col. Murthy is the right man.
Nothing will be done before the election.
First, we get rid of both Pelosi and Reid, then we force OUR Congress to prosecute Cheney and Bush. If this isn't done, we can count on worse the next time.
Let the hand washing begin. There is a lot of cya going on here. Better to tell all now than be caught later when all the finger pointing is going on.
"Angler: The Cheney Vice Presidency." More like, "Dangler," as in dick...(oops, meant to capitalize that d).
Just heard Barton Gellman interviewed on Fresh Air. Cheney has subverted the Constitution and damaged this country more than any one person in memory. He repeatedly lied and went behind even Bush's back (granted, it wasn't hard to do) to push his own agenda through.
Dick Cheney has turned out to be the most harmful person to this country in my memory. Prosecute and throw him in prison (along with his sock puppet) after the election. It is Congress' constitutional duty.
Maybe Cheney and or Addington pissed off someone at the FBI or CIA. And maybe someday soon some very horrible bit of information lands at the NYT's.
Deepthroat was a pissed off FBI guy; he helped drop Nixon.
To Hope.
Post sez: "Dan Bartlett warned Bush 'we're getting our asses kicked in the media'" ...
***
Typo alert.
That word "kicked" should be spelled "kissed".