Cheney Uncloaks His Frustration With Bush
'Statute of Limitations Has Expired' on Many Secrets, Former Vice President Says
Cheney's disappointment with the former president surfaced recently in one of the informal conversations he is holding to discuss the book with authors, diplomats, policy experts and past colleagues. By habit, he listens more than he talks, but Cheney broke form when asked about his regrets.
"In the second term, he felt Bush was moving away from him," said a participant in the recent gathering, describing Cheney's reply. "He said Bush was shackled by the public reaction and the criticism he took. Bush was more malleable to that. The implication was that Bush had gone soft on him, or rather Bush had hardened against Cheney's advice. He'd showed an independence that Cheney didn't see coming. It was clear that Cheney's doctrine was cast-iron strength at all times -- never apologize, never explain -- and Bush moved toward the conciliatory."
The two men maintain respectful ties, speaking on the telephone now and then, though aides to both said they were never quite friends. But there is a sting in Cheney's critique, because he views concessions to public sentiment as moral weakness. After years of praising Bush as a man of resolve, Cheney now intimates that the former president turned out to be more like an ordinary politician in the end.
Cheney's post-White House career is as singular as his vice presidency, a position he transformed into the hub of power. Drained of direct authority and cast aside by much of the public, he is no less urgently focused, friends and family members said, on shaping events.
The former vice president remains convinced of mortal dangers that few other leaders, in his view, face squarely. That fixed belief does much to explain the conduct that so many critics find baffling. He gives no weight, close associates said, to his low approval ratings, to the tradition of statesmanlike White House exits or to the grumbling of Republicans about his effect on the party brand.
John P. Hannah, Cheney's second-term national security adviser, said the former vice president is driven, now as before, by the nightmare of a hostile state acquiring nuclear weapons and passing them to terrorists. Aaron Friedberg, another of Cheney's foreign policy advisers, said Cheney believes "that many people find it very difficult to hold that idea in their head, really, and conjure with it, and see what it implies."
What is new, Hannah said, is Cheney's readiness to acknowledge "doubts about the main channels of American policy during the last few years," a period encompassing most of Bush's second term. "These are not small issues," Hannah said. "They cut to the very core of who Cheney is," and "he really feels he has an obligation" to save the country from danger.
Cheney's imprint on law and policy, achieved during the first term at the peak of his influence, had faded considerably by the time he and Bush left office. Bush halted the waterboarding of accused terrorists, closed secret CIA prisons, sought congressional blessing for domestic surveillance, and reached out diplomatically to Iran and North Korea, which Cheney believed to be ripe for "regime change."
Some of the disputes between the president and his Number Two were more personal. Shortly after Bush fired Donald H. Rumsfeld, Cheney called his old mentor history's "finest secretary of defense" and invited direct comparison to Bush by saying he had "never learned more" from a boss than he had as Rumsfeld's deputy in the Ford administration.
The depths of Cheney's distress about another close friend, his former chief of staff and alter ego I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby, have only recently become clear. Bush refused a pardon after Libby's felony convictions in 2007 for perjury and obstruction of an investigation of the leak of a clandestine CIA officer's identity. Cheney tried mightily to prevent Libby's fall, scrawling in a note made public at trial that he would not let anyone "sacrifice the guy that was asked to stick his neck in the meat grinder." Cheney never explained the allusion, but grand jury transcripts -- and independent counsel Patrick J. Fitzgerald -- suggested that Libby's false statements aimed above all to protect the vice president.
Last month, an account in Time magazine, based on close access to Bush's personal lawyer and White House counsel, described Cheney's desperate end-of-term efforts to change Bush's mind about a pardon. Cheney, who has spent a professional lifetime ignoring unflattering stories, issued a quietly furious reply. In the most explicit terms, he accused Bush of abandoning "an innocent man" who had served the president with honor and then become the "victim of a severe miscarriage of justice." Cheney now says privately that his memoir, expected to be published in spring 2011, will describe their heated arguments in full.
Despite an ailing heart and reduced mobility, the former vice president at age 68 retains a prodigious capacity for work. He rises early, reads voraciously about history and current events, and acquired a BlackBerry in modest recompense for the loss of daily intelligence briefings. He allows himself some indulgences, Liz Cheney said in an interview. She said her father relishes his new freedom to take a morning drive to Starbucks in a black SUV, toting home the decaffeinated latte on which his doctor and his wife, Lynne, insist. He attends the soccer and softball games of his oldest grandchildren, Kate and Elizabeth, and spends more time than he could as vice president fly fishing near his vacation homes in Wyoming and on Maryland's Eastern Shore.
But Cheney passes most of his days at the top of the garage at his new house in McLean, where he built an office under the dormered roof and filled it with books and binders of his vice presidential papers. He kept copies of the unclassified ones and consults the rest on visits to the National Archives. He took detailed notes in the White House, head bobbing up and down as he wrote and sometimes disappearing from the screen in videoconferences. Those notes, according to one person who has discussed them with Cheney, will form the core of his account of the Bush years.
"What impressed me was his continuing zeal," said an associate who discussed the book with Cheney. "He hadn't stepped back a bit from the positions he took in office to a more relaxed, Olympian view. He was still very much in the fray. He's not going to soften anything or accommodate shifts of conscience. There was no sense in which he looked back and said, 'I wish I'd done something differently.' Rather, there was a sense that they hadn't gone far enough. If he'd been equipped with a group of people as ideologically rigorous as he was, they'd have been able to push further."
Some old associates see Cheney's newfound openness as a breach of principle. For decades, he expressed contempt for departing officials who wrote insider accounts, arguing that candid internal debate was impossible if the president and his advisers could not count on secrecy. As far back as 1979, one of the heroes in Lynne Cheney's novel "Executive Privilege" resolved never to write a memoir because "a president deserved at least one person around him whose silence he could depend on." Cheney lived that vow for the next 30 years.
As vice president, according to one witness, Cheney "was livid" when the memoir of L. Paul Bremer, who led the occupation of Iraq, made the less-than-stunning disclosure that Cheney shared Bremer's concern about U.S. military strategy. A Cabinet-level Bush appointee recalled that Cheney likewise described revelations by former Treasury secretary Paul H. O'Neill and former White House spokesman Scott McClellan as "beyond the pale."
"If he goes out and writes a memoir that spills beans about what took place behind closed doors, that would be out of character," said Ari Fleischer, who served as White House spokesman during Bush's first term.
Yet that appears to be precisely Cheney's intent. Robert Barnett, who negotiated Cheney's book contract, passed word to potential publishers that the memoir would be packed with news, and Cheney himself has said, without explanation, that "the statute of limitations has expired" on many of his secrets. "When the president made decisions that I didn't agree with, I still supported him and didn't go out and undercut him," Cheney said, according to Stephen Hayes, his authorized biographer. "Now we're talking about after we've left office. I have strong feelings about what happened. . . . And I don't have any reason not to forthrightly express those views."
Liz Cheney, whom friends credit with talking her father into writing the book, described the memoir as a record for posterity. "You have to think about his love of history, and when he thinks about this memoir, he thinks about it as a book his grandchildren will read," she said.
What the former vice president assuredly will not do, according to friends and family, is break a lifetime's reticence about his feelings. Alluding to Bush's forthcoming memoir, Cheney told one small group recently that he had no interest "in sharing personal details," as the former president planned to do.
"He sort of spat the word 'personal,' " said one person in the room.
Twitter
StumbleUpon
Facebook
Delicious
Digg
Newsvine
Google
Yahoo
Technorati
29 Comments so far
Show AllThis is a classic psychopath --- a man utterly devoid of empathy or sympathy, even down to his "never apologize, never explain" mantra. As one with some years personal experience dealing with the subject, I recognize this "shining example". If curiosity should make anyone want to know more, Just google "The Mask of Sanity", and Ponerology.
Boy, you said it: He is one Nasty Dick.
They pulled off the TARP robbery and by now they split up the dough. And I'm sure they are still stunned just how easy it was. It was even easier than the Neil Bush Silverado Savings and Loan job in the 80's. But if there's one constant in the world of crime it is this:
There is no honor among thieves.
And if Cheney is miffed that the illiterate bush is going to include personal stuff in his "My Struggle", just wait until the shamed Libby writes his! Or maybe, turdblossom's going to pop his head out one last time and write a book. Somebody somewhere is going to spill the beans about Dirty Dick Deeds, Done Dirt Cheap.
Isn't it ironic that Cheney sees himself as the person who most correctly appreciates the grave threat of nuclear terrorism, when corporatist policies seem to be transforming America into a land of prisons and tent cities?
Why would terrorists waste a nuclear weapon on prisons and tent cities? All they need to do is let the banks and the health care industries run their course.
Isn't it interesting that Cheney argues that candid internal debate is impossible if the president and his advisers could not count on secrecy? Didn't he also argue that if Americans are not doing anything wrong, they shouldn't have anything to hide? Wasn't that the basis for domestic spying?
I think the clinical definition of "delusional" has to be when one thinks that they and they alone possess the only true grasp of reality. Clinging to that fantasy probably warps the Mind.
I've always wondered about the enormous mental capacity for fear or acceptance of death when someone faces their own demise with each breath or heart skip. Dick Cheney lives existentially due to this constant threat, although not the way of most existentialists - with a calm sense of the Now, or taking risks with their own lives - rather, Cheney has had the power to risk the lives of others.
He continues to prove he cares little about achieving peace through anything other than domination and death. His thinking is prehistoric and his way is that of a dying breed. While others on this planet Awaken and seek betterment for all people, he continues to see the enemy at the door with napalm behind its back.
It will be a sad day when Dick Cheney dies. It will be incredibly sad that a man with his breadth of worldview could not awaken from the nightmare he dreamt with his eyes open. I imagine on that day, the cornucopia of pharmaceuticals that preserved his frankenstein body, that fueled his toxic thoughts for so long, shall become the wastings of his righteous reign, flushed down the toilet to poison the waters flowing from his sanctuary of historic memoirs, just as he poisoned and destroyed the lives of those whose families still weep. No matter. Isn't a savior always right, no matter the collateral damage?
I don't care that Cheney is writing a memoir. I just think that he should be writing it within a prison cell with a bed and a toilet in the corner, not in the cozy surroundings of his Virginian compound.
And besides, how much truth can we expect from a man who unremittingly lied about weapons of mass destruction in Iraq.
Since, no doubt someday we will have a future attack on our soil since all crumbling empires have internal attacks, Cheney is just positioning himself to be see as prescient.
As happened to Nixon before him, Bush promises to be dubbed with that ultimate curse among the hard-core right wing: he was actually a liberal.
If the average American knew half of what the average poster here knows this would be a far different world. Tragically it appears to be impossible to get the average American to turn off the TV and actually learn something.
Cheney continues to play by his tried and true script. Lie, keep on lying, and never, ever let up. Keep em scared and you can take everything - in fact, the fear adled and ignorant masses will line up to pony up the dough. I doubt Cheney really believes all his lies. He operates from a simple philosophy: I am the powerful, you are the teeming, ignorant masses who understand very little of the real world. But I do, so its best you just sit this out, go back to your churches and football games, and let the big boys make the big decisions. A tyrant, pure and simple, who used Bush as a sock puppet. So in his second term Bush woke up from his stuper a bit - so what? The damage was done, and Bush wouldn't have done anything differently anyway. He was just the friendly face of Cheney's inexorable corporate takeover of our foreign policy.
Not exactly Cheney's corporate takeover, he had many teachers along the way, but I do agree with your tone.
Bad dog!
I find it almost impossible to give any credence to the supposed worries the Vice-President has about potential nuclear weapons finding their way into terrorists hands from countries who access the weapons themselves. I say this after reading Sibel Edmonds recitation of what she encountered as a translator for the US intelligence authorities. There she ran into evidence of state department sale of nuclear secrets to Turkey, Pakistan and who knows how many other dangerous entities. If the Bush Administration really was worried about such things it wouldn't be secretly inviting every dictatorial Tom, Dick and Harry to partake of the nuclear information. I know Bush was totally incompetent but that he was a traitor also boggles my mind.
Archie1954 August 13th, 2009 6:25 pm.......Since you did not think Bush (and his entire family/dynasty) are notorious traitors, may I recommend, "Family of Secrets"..Russ Baker.
I would also recommend going to israelshamir.net and scrolling down to the collateral damage articles....a long read that will boggle your mind.
You misunderstood the comment - Archie BELIEVES that Bush is a traitor...
The best thing for Cheney is a stake through his malfunctioning heart.
Baloney, let him live and watch the GOP disappear cause he was too evil and stupid to use his power the right way.
I'm very appalled at this romancing of the legacy of this Corporatist. His views are only a little less delusional than Adolph Hitler's. I would be only about as curious about learning the psychopathology that serial killers use to justify their own NEUROTIC behavior. Comparisons between this man and any psychopath serving a life sentence or waiting the death penalty anywhere in the US are bound to be very rich in volume.
I can't stand listening to him talk hate, so I only remember a few of the news slices from his monotonous diatribe about "Knowing that Sadam has Weapons of Mass Destruction", or his involvement in deliberately revealing the name of Joseph Plame for political manipulation, or as this article reminisces about his on/off relation with his commander in chief over which one gets the R-E-S-P-E-C-T.
I am nauseated just reading this. Ask any serving member or any Veteran if the Pentagon did them any favors.
If the Nuremberg laws were applied, they both would be hanging from a rope right now...
Let us pray.
"Personal details" indeed.
Another thing he won't reveal is political details. What's he going to write, a cookbook?
"John P. Hannah, Cheney's second-term national security adviser, said the former vice president is driven, now as before, by the nightmare of a hostile state acquiring nuclear weapons and passing them to terrorists."
Well, perhaps that explains the missing nuclear armed cruise missile. I wonder who is going to get hit, and who will get the blame? Another black op. We're so good at it. Practice makes perfect, and Cheney will be there crowing, "I told you so!"
This is what passes for news at the WaPo...?
Pathetic...
Cheney is a monster... Not a wistful grandpa who now has more time to fish...
He had his own death squad... He was involved with the false-flag operation of 9-11...
He was named by Madam Palfrey as a regular customer of her prostitution service...
He has been accused of using MKUltra sex slaves by Mark & Kathy O'Brien... (google it!)...
He profitted off of no-bid contracts for Halliburton and KBR in Iraq and New Orleans...
He is only kept alive by modern science... As his heart stopped decades ago...
"...the former vice president is driven, now as before, by the nightmare of a hostile state acquiring nuclear weapons and passing them to terrorists. Aaron Friedberg, another of Cheney's foreign policy advisers, said Cheney believes "that many people find it very difficult to hold that idea in their head, really, and conjure with it, and see what it implies." "
Oh, bullshit. Many of us see very clearly the risks that nuclear proliferation brings, including the devolution of threat from state terrorists to non-state terrorists.
Critics of US policy have long pointed out the abject refusal of this country to meet its obligations under the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty, to which the US is signatory, and under which it is obligated (with Russia China France and Britain) to abolish its own nuclear weapons and refuse assistance to other countries in obtaining nuclear weapons.
Instead the US (and Dick Cheney) winks at Israel's nuclear arsenal, winks at Pakistan's nuclear weapons, and directly supports India's development of nuclear weapons.
The US also continually, blatantly illegally, "modernizes" its own nuclear arsenal, while promoting nuclear power and the mining and refining of radioactive materials necessary to produce the building blocks of nuclear weapons. Cheney and his ilk have always promoted, not resisted, nuclear terror.
The crude and complete hypocrisy of Cheney's remarks and ideology go unremarked, because such truths are unthinkable, unmentionable in "mainstream" US discourse.
Just another article trying to water down (rewrite) history!
CAUTION!
Dick Cheney is the source of a newly mutated HIV variant called "Hearing AIDS".
You get it from listening to assholes.
I'm waiting for the audio book, read by the author himself.
With each passing day we find that what we knew then and were ridiculed for pointing out was all true - that the Cheney/Bush administration was just a gigantic criminal enterprise funded with our money. Dick Cheney is perhaps the most heinous criminal, the worst traitor, in US history. He orchestrated our entry into two illegal wars and should be tried for war crimes on the world stage. It'll never happen, of course. As noted above, all our best mercenaries are still revered rather than reviled. Our failed rogue state does not even belong on the roster of nations; capitalism has been our god and our demise.
Greed, Anger, Delusion. Is there a better example of all three evils in one person ? - Dick makes Nixon seem to have been quite Healthy, almost normal.
But who (besides Kissinger) has made more money for Big Oil than this Dick ? He will now zip up his fly and start talking turkey - after he has screwed us all so well.
I do not belive he deserves the death sentence for his many crimes while Kissinger still roams free and famous around his former killing fields. We have a tradition of keeping our best "earners" alive to encourge futher generations of front men to step up and keep the rich rich and the poor KIA'd.
It is obvious that mister Cheney is mentally ill; perhaps driven so by personal fear and a constant diet of delusion. Not that it excuses his behavior, necessarily, only explains it.
Now let's thank the Washington Post and other hot air blowers for bringing out this silly joke about Dick 'Whips and" Cheney having it out with W. The damn joke is on us!
AD
Cheney is one nasty dick.
Once, while channel surfing, far back in the Bush years, I watched Cheney making a speech in front of his crowd. All his attempts at humor were at Bush's expense and Bush wasn't even present. The snarky jabs provided some interesting insight. To say that Cheney resented Bush is an understatement and he couldn't suppress it in front of the home crowd, although he usually sucked up to Bush whenever he was on camera. Cheney is a twisted man and that is what drives him.
And What is Obama's excuse for keeping with the Cheney worldview? That he is a weak man or a manipulated man or does he pander to men like Cheney?
It is just mindboggling that this soon after Bush's exit, with the revelations about him doing the right thing in opposition to Cheney and now with Obama following the Cheney gameplan, that Bush, as he predicted would be redeemed in time. Lol!