Saturday, November 21, 2009

Nation & World

Ex-State official blasts 'Cheney-Rumsfeld cabal'

By Thomas Omestad
Posted 10/19/05

His is a name that appeared only rarely in the news media. But for more than three years, Lawrence Wilkerson was Colin Powell's chief of staff–and a key behind-the-scenes policy player at the State Department during most of President Bush's first term. As it turns out, he was also a high-level participant in the rampant infighting over foreign policy that often pitted State against Donald Rumsfeld's Defense Department and the office of Vice President Cheney.

President Bush speaks in the Rose Garden as Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld and Vice President Dick Cheney look on.
Paul J. Richards -- AFP/Getty Images

The 60-year-old Wilkerson left office in January, when Powell did. Since his departure, he has been doing some hard thinking about the first term. On Wednesday, in perhaps one of the most remarkable retrospectives yet offered by a senior alumnus of the Bush administration, Wilkerson ripped into what he calls the "Cheney-Rumsfeld cabal"–a duo he contends has been forging key decisions on Iraq and other issues in secret. The combination, he told an audience at the New America Foundation in Washington, "flummoxed the process."

Wilkerson's tone ranged from coolly academic to one not designed for tender ears. He described an administration in which a mistrusted bureaucracy was cut out of key decision making on Iraq, North Korea, and Iran, then had policies "foisted" on it.

"Decisions that send men and women to die," he said, "should not be made in a secret way." He described the pair as hailing from the same "military-industrial complex" that Dwight Eisenhower warned of in his farewell address as president.

A 31-year veteran of the military and a close aide to Powell for 16 years, Wilkerson has been both a policymaker and a policy analyst. He once directed the U.S. Marine Corps War College, and he is now a professor at George Washington University in Washington and the College of William and Mary in Williamsburg, Va. He is also at work on a book, some of which was apparently previewed Wednesday.

In a portrayal that is sure to be hotly rejected by the administration, Wilkerson argued that Cheney and Rumsfeld's dominance in part stems from "a president not much versed in international relations and not much interested either." He argues that then National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice, who succeeded Powell as secretary of state, was unwilling to provide a counterforce to them: "Rice made a decision that she would side with the president to build her intimacy with the president." Hence, Wilkerson says, she did not play the role of policy and bureaucratic "balancer" that is widely expected of the national security adviser.

As secretary of state since January, Rice has been able to use her closeness to the president to carve out greater "flexibility" for U.S. foreign policy, he says. But her moves also reflect trouble for the administration overseas, in the budget, and in the opinion polls showing diminished public support for Bush.

"The administration finds itself in some fairly desperate straits, politically and otherwise," he says.

Wilkerson said that to this day he cannot explain why the United States went to war in Iraq. He questions why the Bush administration waited for years to side with the European Union's diplomacy to counter Iran's alleged nuclear weapons development. And on the initially static U.S. diplomacy on North Korea's nuclear weapons programs, he asks, "Why did we wait three years to talk to the North Koreans?"

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