White House Watched

By Dan Froomkin

<http://voices.washingtonpost.com/white-house-watch/?hpid=opinionsbox1>http://voices.washingtonpost.com/white-house-watch/?hpid=opinionsbox1

Today's column is my last for The Washington 
Post. And the first thing I want to say is thank 
you. Thank you to all you readers, e-mailers, 
commenters, questioners, Facebook friends and 
Twitterers for spending your time with me and 
engaging with me over the years. And thank you 
for the recent outpouring of support. It was 
extraordinarily uplifting, and I'm deeply 
grateful. If I ever had any doubt, your words 
have further inspired me to continue doing 
accountability journalism. My plan is to take a 
few weeks off before embarking upon my next 
endeavor -- but when I do, I hope you'll join me.

It's hard to summarize the past five and a half years. But I'll try.

I started my column in January 2004, and one 
dominant theme quickly emerged: That George W. 
Bush was truly the proverbial emperor with no 
clothes. In the days and weeks after the 9/11 
terror attacks, the nation, including the media, 
vested him with abilities he didn't have and 
credibility he didn't deserve. As it happens, it 
was on the day of my very first column that we 
also got the first insider look at the Bush White 
House, via Ron Suskind's book, The Price of 
Loyalty. In it, former Treasury Secretary Paul 
O'Neill described a disengaged president "like a 
blind man in a room full of deaf people", 
encircled by "a Praetorian guard," intently 
looking for a way to overthrow Saddam Hussein 
long before 9/11. The ensuing five years and 
1,088 columns really just fleshed out that 
portrait, describing a president who was 
oblivious, embubbled and untrustworthy.

When I look back on the Bush years, I think of 
the lies. There were so many. Lies about the war 
and lies to cover up the lies about the war. Lies 
about torture and surveillance. Lies about 
Valerie Plame. Vice President Dick Cheney's lies, 
criminally prosecutable but for his chief of 
staff Scooter Libby's lies. I also think about 
the extraordinary and fundamentally cancerous 
expansion of executive power that led to 
violations of our laws and our principles.

And while this wasn't as readily apparent until 
President Obama took office, it's now very clear 
that the Bush years were all about kicking the 
can down the road - either ignoring problems or, 
even worse, creating them and not solving them. 
This was true of a huge range of issues including 
the economy, energy, health care, global warming 
- and of course Iraq and Afghanistan.

How did the media cover it all? Not well. Reading 
pretty much everything that was written about 
Bush on a daily basis, as I did, one could 
certainly see the major themes emerging. But by 
and large, mainstream-media journalism missed the 
real Bush story for way too long. The handful of 
people who did exceptional investigative 
reporting during this era really deserve our 
gratitude: People such as Ron Suskind, Seymour 
Hersh, Jane Mayer, Murray Waas, Michael Massing, 
Mark Danner, Barton Gellman and Jo Becker, James 
Risen and Eric Lichtblau (better late than 
never), Dana Priest, Walter Pincus, Charlie 
Savage and Philippe Sands; there was also some 
fine investigative blogging over at Talking 
Points Memo and by Marcy Wheeler. Notably not on 
this list: The likes of Bob Woodward and Tim 
Russert. Hopefully, the next time the nation 
faces a grave national security crisis, we will 
listen to the people who were right, not the 
people who were wrong, and heed those who 
reported the truth, not those who served as 
stenographers to liars.

It's also worth keeping in mind that there is so 
very much about the Bush era that we still don't 
know.

Now, a little over five months after Bush left 
office, Barack Obama's presidency is shaping up 
to be in large part about coming to terms with 
the Bush era, and fixing all the things that were 
broken. In most cases, Obama is approaching this 
task enthusiastically - although in some cases, 
he is doing so only under great pressure, and in 
a few cases, not at all . I think part of Obama's 
abiding popularity with the public stems from 
what a contrast he is from his predecessor -- and 
in particular his willingness to take on 
problems. But he certainly has a lot of balls in 
the air at one time. And I predict that his 
growing penchant for secrecy - especially but not 
only when it comes to the Bush legacy of torture 
and lawbreaking - will end up serving him poorly, 
unless he renounces it soon.

Obama is nowhere in Bush's league when it comes 
to issues of credibility, but his every action 
nevertheless needs to be carefully scrutinized by 
the media, and he must be held accountable. We 
should be holding him to the highest standards - 
and there are plenty of places where we should be 
pushing back. Just for starters, there are a lot 
of hugely important but unanswered questions 
about his Afghanistan policy, his financial 
rescue plans, and his turnaround on transparency.

So now I'm off. I wish The Washington Post well. 
I'm proud to have been associated with it for 12 
years (I was a producer and editor at the Web 
site before starting the column.) I remain a big 
believer in the "traditional media," especially 
when it sticks to traditional journalistic 
values. The Post was, is and will always be a 
great newspaper, and I have confidence that it 
will rise to the challenges ahead.

I'll be announcing my next move soon on 
whitehousewatch.com and also to anyone who 
e-mails me at 
<mailto:froom...@gmail.com>froom...@gmail.com. 
Please stay in touch.
© 2009 The Washington Post Company
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