Old Bush vs. new
WASHINGTON, Oct. 21 (UPI) -- The Bush administration is bracing
for a powerful new attack by Brent Scowcroft, the respected
national security adviser to the first President George Bush.
A Republican and a former Air Force general, Scowcroft is a
leading member of the bipartisan foreign policy establishment,
and his critique of both of the style and the substance of the
Bush White House, is slated to appear in Monday's editions of
the New Yorker magazine.
The article also contains some critical comments on the handling
of U.S. foreign policy by the current President Bush from his
father, whose 1989-1993 presidency is hailed for deft management
of the end of the Cold War, German unification, the first Gulf
war and the collapse of the Soviet Union.
The new attack comes hard on the heels of the denunciation of
"the cabal around Cheney's office" by Col. Larry Wilkerson, the
chief of staff to former Secretary of State Colin Powell in a
widely reported speech to the New American Foundation in
Washington this week. Wilkerson said the national security
decision-making process was effectively "broken."
Scowcroft's criticisms will be taken seriously at the highest
levels of the Bush administration because he is seen as a mentor
by some of its senior figures, notably Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice, whose political career began when she worked
under Scowcroft as an adviser on Soviet affairs.
The attack also comes as President Bush's opinion poll approval
ratings have sunk to around 37 percent, partly reflecting the
ill-handled federal government response to Hurricane Katrina's
devastation of the Gulf coast. But majorities of Americans are
also telling pollsters the country "is on the wrong track" and
saying the Iraq war was a mistake.
The beleaguered Bush administration is also nervously waiting to
see whether indictments in the CIA leak case are to be handed
down next week against two key White House aides, Karl Rove and
"Scooter" Libby. The White House is facing heavy flak from its
conservative base over the controversial nomination of the
president's counsel, Harriet Miers, to the vacant seat on the
Supreme Court. And traditional balanced-budget conservatives
have been dismayed by the double deficit, a combined deficit on
the federal budget and on the current account that adds up to
over $1 trillion this year.
A cartoon in the Washington Post Friday depicted the Bush White
House being inundated by "The Perfect Storm" of Miers, Hurricane
Katrina, Iraq, Rove, the budget deficit and the indictment this
week of the Republican leader in the House of Representatives,
Tom DeLay, on charges of money laundering campaign funds.
© Copyright 2005 United Press International, Inc. All Rights
Reserved
http://www.upi.com/SecurityTerrorism/view.php?StoryID=20051021-051052-6225r
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Report About the University of Oklahoma Bombing of October 1,
2005
Return to Part One
by Michael P. Wright
Table of Contents
A. Main Report
B. Sloppy Reporting from the Wall Street Journal
C. OU Student Newspaper Contradicts Itself About the Bombing
D. The Hinrichs Bomb and the Definition of Terrorism
mpwright9@aol.com
http://journals.aol.com/mpwright9/michael4