Benjamin F. Carlson: Spoiling for a Bush-Cheney Fight
The former vice-president plans to slam Bush in his memoir, and pundits are oddly eager.
Dick Cheney, the most powerful American vice-president in history, thinks his considered opinion was ignored under Bush's second term. His upcoming memoir, as reported by Barton Gellman in this morning's Washington Post, purports to detail the inconveniences he believed he suffered. These include:
*Bush bowed to hostile public opinion
*Bush "moved away" from him on waterboarding, secret CIA prisons, and domestic surveillance
*Bush ignored the possibility of "regime change" in North Korea and Iran
*Bush fired Rumsfeld and left Scooter Libby out to dry
Are these legitimate complaints for a vice-president, a position whose power and prestige were famously compared to a "bucket of warm piss?" Commentators tend to treat Cheney as his own category. Since he came out to do battle with Obama earlier this year, left-leaning pundits no longer need to hammer home the ex-VP's unsavoriness, instead adopting the tone of eager spectators...
Read entire article at The Atlantic
Dick Cheney, the most powerful American vice-president in history, thinks his considered opinion was ignored under Bush's second term. His upcoming memoir, as reported by Barton Gellman in this morning's Washington Post, purports to detail the inconveniences he believed he suffered. These include:
*Bush bowed to hostile public opinion
*Bush "moved away" from him on waterboarding, secret CIA prisons, and domestic surveillance
*Bush ignored the possibility of "regime change" in North Korea and Iran
*Bush fired Rumsfeld and left Scooter Libby out to dry
Are these legitimate complaints for a vice-president, a position whose power and prestige were famously compared to a "bucket of warm piss?" Commentators tend to treat Cheney as his own category. Since he came out to do battle with Obama earlier this year, left-leaning pundits no longer need to hammer home the ex-VP's unsavoriness, instead adopting the tone of eager spectators...