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Born at the Crest of the Empire

Monday, April 17, 2006

The evil that is Richard Bruce Cheney

I have read tens of thousands of stories about politics and this administration, but rarely have I come across one that paints such a convincing picture of Cheney as a Rasputin like courtier working his tendrils of co-conspirators to commandeer US foreign policy.
But officials who have opposed Cheney believe that President Bush has “views” only about basic principles, and that in making dozens of complex decisions he relies on pre-determined staff papers. Says one insider deeply involved in U.S. policy toward North Korea: “The president is given only the most basic notions about the Korea issue. They tell him, ‘Above South Korea is a country called North Korea. It is an evil regime.’ … So that translates into a presidential decision: Why enter into any agreement with an evil regime?”

Last fall, when U.S. envoy Christopher Hill was planning to visit North Korea to try to resolve the impasse over that country’s nuclear weapons, Cheney’s staff intervened to kill Hill’s mission, according to sources involved in planning his trip. That the Office of the Vice President can kill a major initiative by the State Department and the NSC, on an issue of the highest priority, is stark testament to the sustained power of the vice president’s office.....


(The article closes)The true measure of how powerful the vice president’s office remains today is whether the United States chooses to confront Iran and Syria or to seek diplomatic solutions. For the moment, at least, the war party led by Dick Cheney remains in ascendancy.

There are several other fairly concrete examples of hijacked policy and undue influence in this article, but I thought this version of Bush as the foolish king might inspire a few more people to read it.
This article depicts the halls of power as Shakespearean or operatic....

It's long, but if you've got a little time......

8 Comments:

  • Bruce? And I didn't even think he had a mother...
    But how do you find out so much about this secretive Rasputin? He sems more a concept, or shadow than a person.

    By Blogger Cartledge, at 1:41 PM  

  • Last fall, when U.S. envoy Christopher Hill was planning to visit North Korea to try to resolve the impasse over that country’s nuclear weapons, Cheney’s staff intervened to kill Hill’s mission...

    And experts estimate that North Korea will have a delivery system that can reach the US West Coast within the next 5 years. [sigh] Nope, no threat there.

    By Anonymous Anonymous, at 3:18 PM  

  • Cartledge, Rasputin is over used, but I don't know enough midieval history to find an adequate analogy. He is the evil slimy court member who is guiding the impaired or foolish king.

    And, Kvatch, N. Korea is an utter failure. And there are no talks planned. No initiatives under way. Seemingly no effort at all. Nothing.

    Mike

    By Blogger mikevotes, at 5:54 PM  

  • If North korea was laden with oil, you can bet Cheney would be drawing up plans to nuke it right now. But now he's probably buying up all the land along the San Andreas fault line.

    By Blogger Lew Scannon, at 6:38 PM  

  • You know, I hate it when you assign homework, but that was well worth it.

    By Blogger Lew Scannon, at 7:06 PM  

  • Yeah, I rarely recommend directly, and I have never recommended anything this long(after all, that album's never as good as your friend thinks it is,) but just for the picture this paints.

    There has been lots of talk about the neocons hijacking foreign policy, but I have never seen anything this blow by blow on how they did it.

    Unfortunately the examples aren't Iraq, but from the examples they offer, it does give a decent picture.

    I am now more assured than ever that the word "cabal" is correct in its application.

    Mike

    By Blogger mikevotes, at 9:11 PM  

  • On Rasputin; I was thinking Felix Edmundovich Dzerzhinsky might be more apropos - controlling cabinet, the legislature and/or through the apparatus of state security. References to Nazism arriving in the US are doing the rounds, but I expect there isn’t a great difference between that extreme and the Soviets.
    But I’m not sure, Felix was such a flash guy, and he never shot anyone by accident. Maybe there is no real historic comparison.

    By Blogger Cartledge, at 11:46 PM  

  • You're far beyond me. My historcal knowledge is not that deep.

    I blame the public schools.

    Mike

    By Blogger mikevotes, at 7:07 AM  

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