[Neocons like Kenneth Adelman and Richard Perle are now scapegoating their 
gulls and tools for executing policies which were engineered and pushed by the 
neocons.  How do Bush, Rumsfeld and Cheney feel about being trashed by the 
neocons, after doing so many favors for them?  Use your empathetic imagination. 
 Contemplate the likely consequences -- they are not going to be pretty.]

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/11/18/AR2006111801076_pf.html

Embittered Insiders Turn Against Bush 
By Peter Baker
Washington Post Staff Writer
Sunday, November 19, 2006; A01



The weekend after the statue of Saddam Hussein fell, Kenneth Adelman and a 
couple of other promoters of the Iraq war gathered at Vice President Cheney's 
residence to celebrate. The invasion had been the "cakewalk" Adelman predicted. 
Cheney and his guests raised their glasses, toasting President Bush and 
victory. "It was a euphoric moment," Adelman recalled.

Forty-three months later, the cakewalk looks more like a death march, and 
Adelman has broken with the Bush team. He had an angry falling-out with Defense 
Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld this fall. He and Cheney are no longer on speaking 
terms. And he believes that "the president is ultimately responsible" for what 
Adelman now calls "the debacle that was Iraq."

Adelman, a former Reagan administration official and onetime member of the Iraq 
war brain trust, is only the latest voice from inside the Bush circle to speak 
out against the president or his policies. Heading into the final chapter of 
his presidency, fresh from the sting of a midterm election defeat, Bush finds 
himself with fewer and fewer friends. Some of the strongest supporters of the 
war have grown disenchanted, former insiders are registering public dissent and 
Republicans on Capitol Hill blame him for losing Congress.

A certain weary crankiness sets in with any administration after six years. By 
this point in Bill Clinton's tenure, bitter Democrats were competing to 
denounce his behavior with an intern even as they were trying to fight off his 
impeachment. Ronald Reagan was deep in the throes of the Iran-contra scandal. 
But Bush's strained relations with erstwhile friends and allies take on an 
extra edge of bitterness amid the dashed hopes of the Iraq venture.

"There are a lot of lives that are lost," Adelman said in an interview last 
week. "A country's at stake. A region's at stake. This is a gigantic situation. 
. . . This didn't have to be managed this bad. It's just awful."

The sense of Bush abandonment accelerated during the final weeks of the 
campaign with the publication of a former aide's book accusing the White House 
of moral hypocrisy and with Vanity Fair quoting Adelman, Richard N. Perle and 
other neoconservatives assailing White House leadership of the war.

Since the Nov. 7 elections, Republicans have pinned their woes on the president.

"People expect a level of performance they are not getting," former House 
speaker Newt Gingrich (R-Ga.) said in a speech. Many were livid that Bush 
waited until after the elections to oust Rumsfeld.

"If Rumsfeld had been out, you bet it would have made a difference," Sen. Arlen 
Specter (R-Pa.) said on television. "I'd still be chairman of the Judiciary 
Committee."

And so, in what some saw as a rebuke, Senate Republicans restored Trent Lott 
(Miss.) to their leadership four years after the White House helped orchestrate 
his ouster, with some saying they could no longer place their faith entirely in 
Bush.

Some insiders said the White House invited the backlash. "Anytime anyone holds 
themselves up as holy, they're judged by a different standard," said David Kuo, 
a former deputy director of the Bush White House's faith-based initiatives who 
wrote "Tempting Faith," a book that accused the White House of pandering to 
Christian conservatives. "And at the end of the day, this was a White House 
that held itself up as holy."

Richard N. Haass, a former top Bush State Department official and now president 
of the Council on Foreign Relations, said a radically different approach to 
world affairs naturally generates criticism. "The emphasis on promotion of 
democracy, the emphasis on regime change, the war of choice in Iraq -- all of 
these are departures from the traditional approach," he said, "so it's not 
surprising to me that it generates more reaction."

The willingness to break with Bush also underscores the fact that the president 
spent little time courting many natural allies in Washington, according to some 
Republicans. GOP leaders in Congress often bristled at what they perceived to 
be a do-what-we-say approach by the White House. Some of those who did have 
more personal relationships with Bush, Cheney or Rumsfeld came to feel the 
sense of disappointment more acutely because they believed so strongly in the 
goals the president laid out for his administration.

The arc of Bush's second term has shown that the most powerful criticism 
originates from the inside. The pragmatist crowd around Colin L. Powell began 
speaking out nearly two years ago after he was eased out as secretary of state. 
Powell lieutenants such as Haass, Richard L. Armitage, Carl W. Ford Jr. and 
Lawrence B. Wilkerson took public the policy debates they lost on the inside. 
Many who worked in Iraq returned deeply upset and wrote books such as 
"Squandered Victory" (Larry Diamond) and "Losing Iraq" (David L. Phillips). 
Military and CIA officials unloaded after leaving government, culminating in 
the "generals' revolt" last spring when retired flag officers called for 
Rumsfeld's dismissal.

On the domestic side, Bush allies in Congress, interest groups and the 
conservative media broke their solidarity with the White House out of 
irritation over a number of issues, including federal spending, illegal 
immigration, the Supreme Court nomination of Harriet Miers, the response to 
Hurricane Katrina and the Dubai Ports World deal.

Most striking lately, though, has been the criticism from neoconservatives who 
provided the intellectual framework for Bush's presidency. Perle, Adelman and 
others advocated a robust use of U.S. power to advance the ideals of democracy 
and freedom, targeting Hussein's Iraq as a threat that could be turned into an 
opportunity.

In an interview last week, Perle said the administration's big mistake was 
occupying the country rather than creating an interim Iraqi government led by a 
coalition of exile groups to take over after Hussein was toppled. "If I had 
known that the U.S. was going to essentially establish an occupation, then I'd 
say, 'Let's not do it,' " and instead find another way to target Hussein, Perle 
said. "It was a foolish thing to do."

Perle, head of the Pentagon's Defense Policy Board at the time of the 2003 
invasion, said he still believes the invasion was justified. But he resents 
being called "the architect of the Iraq war," because "my view was different 
from the administration's view from the very beginning" about how to conduct 
it. "I am not critical now of anything about which I was not critical before," 
he said. "I've said it more publicly."

White House officials tend to brush off each criticism by claiming it was 
over-interpreted or misguided. "I just fundamentally disagree," Cheney said of 
the comments by Perle, Adelman and other neoconservatives before the midterm 
elections. Others close to the White House said the neoconservatives are 
dealing with their own sense of guilt over how events have turned out and are 
eager to blame Bush to avoid their own culpability.

Joshua Muravchik, a neoconservative at the American Enterprise Institute, said 
he is distressed "to see neocons turning on Bush" but said he believes they 
should admit mistakes and openly discuss what went wrong. "All of us who 
supported the war have to share some of the blame for that," he said. "There's 
a question to be sorted out: whether the war was a sound idea but very badly 
executed. And if that's the case, it appears to me the person most responsible 
for the bad execution was Rumsfeld, and it means neocons should not get too 
angry at Bush about that."

It may also be, he said, that the mistake was the idea itself -- that Iraq 
could serve as a democratic beacon for the Middle East. "That part of our plan 
is down the drain," Muravchik said, "and we have to think about what we can do 
about keeping alive the idea of democracy."

Few of the original promoters of the war have grown as disenchanted as Adelman. 
The chief of Reagan's arms control agency, Adelman has been close to Cheney and 
Rumsfeld for decades and even worked for Rumsfeld at one point. As a member of 
the Defense Policy Board, he wrote in The Washington Post before the Iraq war 
that it would be "a cakewalk."

But in interviews with Vanity Fair, the New Yorker and The Post, Adelman said 
he became unhappy about the conduct of the war soon after his ebullient night 
at Cheney's residence in 2003. The failure to find weapons of mass destruction 
disturbed him. He said he was disgusted by the failure to stop the looting that 
followed Hussein's fall and by Rumsfeld's casual dismissal of it with the 
phrase "stuff happens." The breaking point, he said, was Bush's decision to 
award Medals of Freedom to occupation chief L. Paul Bremer, Gen. Tommy R. 
Franks and then-CIA Director George J. Tenet.

"The three individuals who got the highest civilian medals the president can 
give were responsible for a lot of the debacle that was Iraq," Adelman said. 
All told, he said, the Bush national security team has proved to be "the most 
incompetent" of the past half-century. But, he added, "Obviously, the president 
is ultimately responsible."

Adelman said he remained silent for so long out of loyalty. "I didn't want to 
bad-mouth the administration," he said. In private, though, he spoke out, 
resulting in a furious confrontation with Rumsfeld, who summoned him to the 
Pentagon in September and demanded his resignation from the defense board.

"It seemed like nobody was getting it," Adelman said. "It seemed like 
everything was locked in. It seemed like everything was stuck." He agrees he 
bears blame as well. "I think that's fair. When you advocate a policy that 
turns bad, you do have some responsibility."

Most troubling, he said, are his shattered ideals: "The whole philosophy of 
using American strength for good in the world, for a foreign policy that is 
really value-based instead of balanced-power-based, I don't think is disproven 
by Iraq. But it's certainly discredited."


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