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  • Cohen: The Buck Doesn't Stop

    I think Cohen has a valid viewpoint...

    washingtonpost.com

    The Buck Doesn't Stop
    By Richard Cohen

    Tuesday, April 6, 2004; Page A21

    What happened March 25 was that one Washington institution quoted another to ask a third about accountability. The questioner was PBS's Jim Lehrer, who cited the late James Reston of the New York Times to ask Donald Rumsfeld why no one in Washington ever resigns for just being wrong. Rumsfeld, oozing cockiness, turned the personal into the theoretical and waltzed away from the question. I don't blame him. If, say, a Japanese government had performed as badly as the Bush administration has, there would be no one left to turn out the lights.

    In his questioning of Rumsfeld, the nimble Lehrer brought up Lord Carrington, the British defense minister at the time Argentina seized the Falkland Islands. Carrington admitted he had underestimated the threat and his resignation was therefore in order. If Rumsfeld had applied that rule to himself, he would be thrice gone -- once for Sept. 11, 2001; once for the absence of WMD in Iraq; and once more for not having enough troops in Iraq. If he were his own subordinate, he would fire himself.

    But from the president on down, no one in this administration ever admits a mistake or concedes having been wrong. Dick Cheney, whose slogan should be "Wrong Where It Matters," nonetheless takes to the stump to lambaste John Kerry. After all, the vice president is the very man who warned us, assured us, promised us that we must go to war with Iraq because, among other things, that nation had an ongoing nuclear weapons program. None has yet been found -- and no apology from Cheney has yet been issued. He was mistaken or dishonest. We await his choice.

    In his interview with Lehrer, Rumsfeld made the point that the United States does not have the British cabinet system or the Japanese culture regarding shame and accountability. For all the talk about the buck stopping in this place called "here," it usually never stops at all. But demanding resignations begs the question. It is not heads the American people want, it is humility.

    That is what's so lacking in the Bush administration. The real reason -- the terribly secret reason -- the administration was oh-so-slow to recognize the terrorist threat was precisely the quality so abundant in Rumsfeld: smugness. The Bushies knew it all. The very fact that the Clinton team told them to make terrorism job one led them to denigrate it: What did those Clinton jerks know?

    Instead, the Bush team had its eye on the ball -- missile defense and, of course, China and Russia. Missile defense was considered crucial, and opposition to this Reagan-era program was deemed both ideological and shortsighted. But it turned out that the "missiles" that struck the United States had the logos of American and United airlines on their fuselages, and no star wars system could have stopped them. It would have taken hard spy work and, as they say, boots on the ground in Afghanistan. It would have taken a little humility.

    That quality is precisely what commended the not-terribly-humble Richard Clarke to many of the Sept. 11 families: He apologized. He was sorry for what happened and sorry that his efforts had not somehow managed to avert a calamity. Lehrer cited Clarke's example to Rumsfeld, who just didn't get it. In fact, he recited all the reasons why Sept. 11 was really not his -- or anyone else in the Bush administration's -- fault. In spirit, he echoed Bush, who once said, "Had I known that the enemy was going to use airplanes to kill on that fateful morning, I would have done everything in my power to protect the American people." Yes, and had Custer known he was attacking so many Indians, he might have chosen to wash his hair that day instead.

    What is so perturbing about this administration is not that no one of note has resigned or been fired -- and some of them certainty deserve the ax -- but that there is not the slightest hint that anyone (except Colin Powell) appreciates that mistakes were made not out of sheer bad luck but because the assumptions, driven by ideology, were so bad.

    Terrorism, not missile defense, should have been the top priority; al Qaeda was and remains the threat, not Iraq. (That explains why Saddam Hussein is in jail while bin Laden is still on the loose, having slipped the noose in Afghanistan because the Pentagon left the job to locals.) Iraq was going to be a cakewalk -- the Middle Eastern version of the liberation of Paris -- and somehow that has not happened. In another country, some officials would quit in shame. In this one they can't even quit being smug.
    The Dude abides.

  • #2
    I agree that Bush can come off too smug. His administration could also be more open and show more humility.

    But I disagree with statements like this:

    Terrorism, not missile defense, should have been the top priority
    That's just 20-20 hindsight. No administration ever took terrorism seriously enough. So, why pile on the current administration based on hindsight?
    "Need some wood?" -- George W. Bush, October 8, 2004

    "Historians will judge if this war is just, not your punk ass." -- Dave Glover, December 8, 2004

    Comment


    • #3
      Cohen's point, with which I agree, is that this gang seems to believe we work for them, rather than visa versa.

      Moe
      The Dude abides.

      Comment


      • #4
        But from the president on down, no one in this administration ever admits a mistake or concedes having been wrong.
        Quite true. Unfortunately, that's also quite true in every administration.

        Comment


        • #5
          I should have known, it's Clinton's fault... ...Reg proves the point with yet ANOTHER deflection: "they did it, too!!"

          Moe
          The Dude abides.

          Comment


          • #6
            Originally posted by Moe_Szyslak@Apr 6 2004, 12:06 PM
            Cohen's point, with which I agree, is that this gang seems to believe we work for them, rather than visa versa.

            Moe
            Agreed

            Although I think I find it a little less atypical than you do.
            Un-Official Sponsor of Randy Choate and Kevin Siegrist

            Comment


            • #7
              "they did it, too!!"
              Not "they."

              "They all."

              When was the last time you saw ANY government official go before a camera and say, "I blew it. Totally screwed the pooch. My fault entirely."

              (Hint: 1961, Bay of Pigs).

              I granted your point and you still want to argue. Liberal bitch....!

              Comment


              • #8
                Originally posted by phantom@Apr 6 2004, 12:59 PM
                I agree that Bush can come off too smug. His administration could also be more open and show more humility.

                But I disagree with statements like this:

                Terrorism, not missile defense, should have been the top priority
                That's just 20-20 hindsight. No administration ever took terrorism seriously enough. So, why pile on the current administration based on hindsight?
                right....but who in the hell, in their right mind, thinks star wars is going to work?

                moronic.
                Are you on the list?

                Comment


                • #9
                  They were appointed to power by a 5-4 SC vote, and behave as if they won by 20 points. The steamroller is used on any who disagree, domestic or international.

                  Typical of GWB, of whom Ann Richards said: "he was born on third base and thinks he hit a triple..."

                  Moe
                  The Dude abides.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    That's pretty much their style; no doubt about it. However, after CLINTON, someone actually taking a stand and sticking to it is a welcome change. (Had to say that; sorry.)

                    Cohen is largely right, but he's so damn snippy and smartassed about it that he's equally obnoxious.

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      This is how the polarized state of our political debate really hurts the country.

                      Both sides -- Republicans and Democrats -- think the other side is evil. Not just wrongheaded, but evil. So when the Bush people get into office, what do they do with any information, idea, trend, observation, et. al., presented to them by the Clinton administration, about terrorism or anything else? They ignore or dismiss it.

                      Same thing will undoubtedly happen if Kerry beats Bush.

                      Neither side will admit they might have been wrong. That would mean the other side is right. No way either can live with that. Or campaign on it.
                      "There are only two ways to live your life. One is as though nothing is a miracle. The other is as though everything is a miracle."
                      --Albert Einstein

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Originally posted by Moe_Szyslak@Apr 6 2004, 01:15 PM
                        They were appointed to power by a 5-4 SC vote, and behave as if they won by 20 points. The steamroller is used on any who disagree, domestic or international.
                        A President should do his job differently based on how many points he won by?
                        "Need some wood?" -- George W. Bush, October 8, 2004

                        "Historians will judge if this war is just, not your punk ass." -- Dave Glover, December 8, 2004

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          They were appointed to power by a 5-4 SC vote,
                          Question: Had Gore gained the presidency via a 5-4 vote, would he have been "appointed" too?

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Has the Gulf of Tonkin and the fictitous attack on The USS Maddux been mentioned?

                            Stryker

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Originally posted by ReggieCleveland@Apr 6 2004, 01:12 PM
                              "they did it, too!!"
                              Not "they."

                              "They all."

                              When was the last time you saw ANY government official go before a camera and say, "I blew it. Totally screwed the pooch. My fault entirely."

                              (Hint: 1961, Bay of Pigs).

                              I granted your point and you still want to argue. Liberal bitch....!
                              there is precedent....

                              http://reserve.mg2.org/apologies.htm
                              The Dude abides.

                              Comment

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