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|  |  |  Just Above Sunset October 24, 2004 - Say what? Who are you going to believe?  Me, or your own eyes? |  | ||
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|  |  | This last week started
                  out with more and more web logs and commentary sites each now proclaiming to be a “Proud Member of the Reality-Based
                  Community” – in reaction to the New York Times Sunday magazine item Without a Doubt by Ron Suskind (October 17, 2004) –a discussion of how George Bush makes decisions.  (One such site is here.)  … In the summer of 2002, after I had written
                  an article in Esquire that the White House didn't like about Bush's former communications director, Karen Hughes, I had a
                  meeting with a senior adviser to Bush. He expressed the White House's displeasure, and then he told me something that at the
                  time I didn't fully comprehend -- but which I now believe gets to the very heart of the Bush presidency.  And we’re off to
                  the races.  I remember sitting in the White House looking at those generals, saying do you have what you need
                  in this war? Do you have what it takes? I remember going down to the basement of the White House the day we committed our
                  troops as last resort. Looking at Tommy Franks and the generals on the ground. Asking them do we have the right plan with
                  the right troop level? And they looked me in the eye and said, yes, sir, Mr. President.  Right.  The top U.S. commander in Iraq complained to the Pentagon last winter that his supply situation
                  was so poor that it threatened Army troops' ability to fight, according to an official document that has surfaced only now.
                   Sanchez doesn’t get
                  it. The man is obviously far too reality-based.  The militant group led by terror mastermind Abu
                  Musab al-Zarqawi, believed to be behind many deadly attacks in Iraq, has declared its allegiance to Osama bin Laden, citing
                  the need for unity against "the enemies of Islam."  Rick, The News Guy
                  in Atlanta, comments – I've not yet heard the official administration response, but only imagine it will go something
                  like this: "You see? We told you so!"    As our friend Joseph, the
                  expatriate guy in Paris, writes us –  If this isn't positive proof of the wrong-headedness of GWB's foreign policy, I don't know what
                  is. Ah well, the world became
                  what we imagined it would become.  … the record of the past four years doesn't leave much doubt that Bush has little use for
                  inconvenient data and disdains anyone who fails to immediately see the things that seem so obvious to him — often with
                  disastrous results. More interesting, though, is why Bush acts this way, and to understand that you have to read Suskind's
                  piece pretty carefully.  Ah yes, reality is scary
                  stuff.  And Bush is scared, and we as a people are scared.  So avoid it at all costs.  You can win an election
                  that way.  I saw an amusing thing on CNBC last week.  Reality?  Complexity? 
                  Who needs it?  Leadership has nothing to do with that?  That idea is in the air – Bush will make things simple
                  and clear.  And often wrong.  And far from the reality of events.  But simple and clear…  What interested me most about the article was that it resolved a puzzle about the administration
                  that seems to have come up in a half-dozen conversations recently. I've tried to expand on the managerial argument
                  for the profound domestic and international failures. Based on no knowledge at all except what I've read in Suskind, Woodward,
                  etc, I have always imagined that the president is one of those bad managers who is so focused on making the decision ("I'm
                  the one who decides") and on short, conclusive meetings that he doesn't allow a full airing of information to come out, or
                  to hear disagreements. The meeting that in the Clinton White House would have stretched into two hours, blowing the entire
                  day's schedule but ultimately leading to a smarter result, is in the Bush White House "resolved" when the CEO speaks, and
                  everyone leaves the room, most of them a little doubtful about the choice but loyal to the commander-in-chief. A lot of people
                  I've talked to think that managerial analysis is short-sighted: "It's religion. It's got something to do with religion and
                  fundamentalism," they respond… Suskind's article largely confirms my speculation about Bush's managerial style: Doesn't
                  ask many direct or penetrating questions. Limits sharply the number of people who have access to him. Reaches decisions abruptly,
                  and then treats doubts or alternative views as disloyalty, etc. And as a result, he has wound up way, way over his head….
                   Yep – and then there’s
                  this -  Bush's belief that he is literally God's instrument is periodically denied yet far more often
                  asserted, in ways subtle and not-so-subtle. In fact, Bush's approach to governance is virtually impossible without this belief.
                  When you don't ask for facts, for understanding, for knowledge - indeed, when these things become your enemy - you can only
                  proceed if you believe that your instincts are beyond questioning. If God is working through you, then your every whim is
                  divinely sanctioned. In June 2003, the Israeli newspaper Ha'aretz reported that Bush told then-Palestinian Prime Minister
                  Mahmoud Abbas, "God told me to strike at al-Qaeda and I struck them, and then he instructed me to strike at Saddam, which
                  I did, and now I am determined to solve the problem in the Middle East. If you help me I will act, and if not, the elections
                  will come and I will have to focus on them."  Now THAT is an interesting
                  question.  Near the end of his presentation, an Army lieutenant colonel who was giving a briefing showed
                  a slide describing the Pentagon's plans for rebuilding Iraq after the war, known in the planners' parlance as Phase 4-C. He
                  was uncomfortable with his material — and for good reason.  Think about it.  As
                  Kevin Drum puts it -  The Army War College. A half dozen intelligence reports. The DIA. The Pentagon. The State Department.
                  There was plenty of warning. The Bushies just chose not to believe it because....why? Because they just didn't want to, apparently.
                   Or as our friend Joseph
                  writes us -  This article details how the monster was made. As many of us noticed at the time, our CEO administration
                  ignored the advice of the best minds at West Point, the Army and the DOD, and the last 90 years of our experience the governance
                  of successful large-scale US military action abroad. They reached for the rulebook, and threw it away. All for a theory.  Indeed.  … the creeping Putinization of American life (the Sinclair incident, the threatening letter
                  to Rock The Vote, the specter of the top official in the House of Representatives making totally baseless charges of criminal
                  conduct against a major financier of the political opposition [shades of Mikhail Khodorovsky], the increasing evidence that
                  the 'terror alert' system is nothing more than a political prop, the 'torture memo' asserting that the president is above
                  the law, the imposition of rigid discipline on the congress, the abuse of the conference committee procedure, the ability
                  of the administration to lie to congress without penalty, the exclusion of non-supporters from Bush's public appearances,
                  etc.) |  |  | 
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                   This issue updated and published on...
                   
 Paris readers add nine hours....
                   
 
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