http://www.waynemadsenreport.com/
November 16, 2006 -- Signs of Bush 41-Cheney clashes arise in contradictory 
administration policy decisions. 

One of the signs that there is an intensive clash between the increasingly 
influential James Baker, Robert Gates, Brent Scowcroft group affiliated with 
George H. W. Bush and the remaining administration neo-cons centered around 
Vice President Dick Cheney is the battle to keep John Bolton at the US Mission 
to the UN. The neo-cons in the administration are trying to come up with ways 
to keep Bolton in his position even though the current Republican-led Senate 
Foreign Relations Committee (with the support of defeated Rhode Island 
Republican Senator Lincoln Chafee) does not look likely to approve Bolton's 
nomination. Incoming chairman Joe Biden said as far as he is concerned the 
Bolton nomination is dead.



Bolton: Cheney is fighting to keep another one of his allies from being tossed 
by the Bush administration.

However, neo-cons, including Cheney, are toying with the idea of appointing 
Bolton to the third ranking position at the UN mission, which does not require 
Senate confirmation. By not filling the vacant ambassador position, Bolton 
would serve as an unconfirmed acting ambassador. It is well known that 
following Donald Rumsfeld's ouster at the Pentagon, Bolton is one of Cheney's 
sole remaining allies. Bolton is also vehemently anti-Iranian and opposed to 
the Baker-Hamilton committee's outreach to Tehran. Therefore, it is important 
for Cheney to keep Bolton at the UN to rattler sabers at Iran. Bolton is also 
supported by the Israeli lobby in Washington that does not want to see any 
Washington-Tehran talks dedicated to working together on Iraq.

There is also another wild card working in Bolton's favor. While he was at the 
State Department Bolton gathered a number of NSA intercepts on US persons and 
may be using their content to blackmail members of the administration and 
Congress to support his continued tenure at the UN. 

WMR reported on Bolton's involvement in the NSA surveillance on May 15, 2005:

According to National Security Agency insiders, outgoing NSA Director General 
Michael Hayden approved special communications intercepts of phone 
conversations made by past and present U.S. government officials. The 
intercepts are at the height of the current controversy surrounding the 
nomination of Undersecretary of State John R. Bolton as ambassador to the 
United Nations. It was revealed by Connecticut Senator Christopher Dodd during 
Bolton's Senate Foreign Relations Committee nomination hearing that Bolton 
requested transcripts of 10 NSA intercepts of conversations between named U.S. 
government officials and foreign persons. Later, it was revealed that U.S. 
companies [also treated as "U.S. persons" by NSA] were also identified in an 
additional nine intercepts requested by Bolton. However, NSA insiders report 
that Hayden approved special intercept operations on behalf of Bolton and had 
them masked as "training missions" in order to get around internal NSA 
regulations that normally prohibit such eavesdropping on U.S. citizens. 

<<attachment: bolton2.jpg>>

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