[Mb-civic] Article from The Nation
michael butler
michael at intrafi.com
Wed Nov 17 14:06:52 PST 2004
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http://www.thenation.com/thebeat/index.mhtml?bid=1&pid=2012
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11/17/2004 @ 10:17am
A Politician, Not a Diplomat
by John Nichols
Two weeks before the 2004 presidential election, the Bush
administration's national security adviser, Condoleezza Rice, made a
solemn pronouncement about her desire to remain outside the political
fight between Democrat John Kerry and the man who this week appointed
her to serve as Secretary of State. "I think it's important that we
not campaign," Rice said of national security aides. She emphasized
that this was a particular concern because "we are in a time of war."
Rice made her comments during an interview with the political editor
of KDKA, a Pittsburgh-based television powerhouse with a reach
capable of taking her words into the homes of millions of voters in
the battleground states of Pennsylvania, Ohio and West Virginia.
Then, in a display of her nonpolitical approach, Rice proceeded to
rip into Kerry's charge that the administration had botched the
search for Osama bin Laden. Kerry's assertion "is just not true,"
raged Rice, before again refuting the notion that she was
campaigning for Bush.
The next day, she flew to Cleveland, Ohio, the largest city in the
most hotly contested of all the battleground states and trashed Kerry
once more.
Two days later, she was in south Florida, one of the most hotly
contested regions of another battleground state where again she
dumped on Kerry's strategies for defending the United States before
declaring, "The global war on terror calls us, as President Bush
immediately understood, to marshall all the elements of our national
power to beat terror and the ideology of hatred that protects
(terrorists) and recruits others to their ranks."
During the months of September and October of 2001, Rice made no
public appearances outside Washington, during September and October
of 2002, she made one New York appearance, during September and
October of 2003, she appeared in New York and Chicago. But as the
November 2 election approached, Rice suddenly discovered the joys of
Pittsburgh and Detroit. With the man who she once mistakenly referred
to as "my husband" locked in a tough reelection campaign, Rice
appeared during the fall of 2004 at least one time each in the
battleground states of Oregon, Washington, North Carolina, Michigan
and Florida, and at least twice in the battleground states of
Pennsylvania and Ohio.
Rice's travels were, for the most part, paid for by the taxpayers.
And her aides insisted throughout the campaign season that, in the
words of James Wilkinson, a deputy national security advisor, "Dr.
Rice has continued the nonpolitical tradition of her post."
That pronouncement was so laughable, however, that the Washington
Post, which did the ablest job of tracking Rice's travels in the
months prior to the election, observed, "The frequency and location
of her speeches differ sharply from those before this election year
-- and appear to break with the long- standing precedent that the
national security adviser try to avoid overt involvement in the
presidential campaign. Her predecessors generally restricted
themselves to an occasional speech, often in Washington, but (by
late October) Rice will have made nine outside Washington since
Labor Day."
The woman who claimed she could not appear before the bipartisan
committee investigating the 9/11 attacks on New York and Washington
because it would break precedents set by past national security
advisers had no qualms about breaking past precedents when it came to
using her position to advance her favorite politician's interests.
"I'm afraid this represents, at least in my book, excessive
politicization of an office which is unusually sensitive," Zbigniew
Brzezinski, the Carter administration's national security, said of
Rice's pre- election travels. Brzezinski confirmed the Post's
observation that past national security advisers had "viewed the job
as not a highly political one."
Obviously, Rice had a different view. Her political campaigning was
so blatant and so extensive that the ranking Democrat on the House
Judiciary Committee, U.S. Representative John Conyers, D-Michigan,
sought a special counsel investigation of whether Rice had violated
the Hatch Act's provisions against campaigning by federal employees
who are on the job. "(Any) political activity on the part of the
national security adviser would undermine the trust bestowed on
such a non-partisan post," argued Conyers in a letter requesting
the inquiry.
Of course, there was never any question that Rice was engaging in
political activity. The only question was: For who? To be sure, her
busy schedule in the battleground states -- which supplemented
speeches with high-profile interviews with local television stations
and newspapers -- helped Bush. But it also helped Rice.
After Rice appeared in that city in September, the Seattle Times
newspaper pointed out that, "Rice sounded at times like a candidate."
In a sense, she was. Prior to the election, Washington was abuzz with
speculation about the all-but-certain departure of Secretary of State
Colin Powell, the closest thing the administration had to an
independent man of government -- as opposed to the programmed
politicos who peopled most major posts in the Bush White House. Rice,
who began campaigning for the Secretary of State post before the 2000
election, did not want there to be any doubt on the part of Bush or
Vice President Dick Cheney, the man who runs foreign policy for the
administration, that she would be a more loyal and dramatically more
politicized player than Powell.
And so she shall be.
Rice, whose many excuses for refusing to appear before the 9/11
Commission included a claim that she was too wrapped up in the
serious work of analyzing potential threats to the nation, has
always been able to find time for political work on behalf of the
Bush-Cheney team -- and on behalf of her own ambition. In March, at
the same time that she was stonewalling the 9/11 Commission, Rice
found time to deliver an extended briefing to top executives from
television networks, magazines, newspapers and other media
properties owned by Rupert Murdoch's News Corp. conglomerate. Even
as Spain's new prime minister was talking about withdrawing his
country's troops from Iraq, and Poland's president was suggesting
that he might do the same, Rice blocked out time to speak via
satellite to the Murdoch lieutenants gathered at the posh
Ritz-Carlton Hotel in Cancun, Mexico.
Certainly, her appearance helped to cement the relationship between
the Bush administration and Murdoch's media empire, which includes
the Fox broadcast and cable networks, the relentlessly pro-Bush New
York Post and the neoconservative Weekly Standard magazine. But it
also helped to position Rice as a Bush administration player who,
unlike Colin Powell, recognized the need to care for friendly media.
Where Bush, Cheney and the neoconservative readers and advisers who
have populated key positions inside the administration and at its
edges never trusted Powell, they know they can count on Rice. Just as
she politicized the national security adviser to an extent never
before seen, she will politicize the State Department. Any pretense
of independence or pragmatism will be discarded as quickly as was the
tradition of keeping the national security adviser out of politics.
With Powell, its feeble defender, on the way out of the State
Department, the last small voices of dissent within the foreign
policy bureaucracy will begin to fall silent. If Rice is confirmed,
as seems certain considering the partisan divide in the Senate, the
Department of State where Thomas Jefferson, William Jennings Bryan
and George Marshall once presided, will be little more than an arm of
the White House political operation. And the Secretary of State, who
has already proven herself to be more interested in campaigning than
in defending the best interests of the nation or its security, will
not be a diplomat. She will be a politician, nothing more and,
certainly, nothing less.
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John Nichols' book on Cheney, Dick: The Man Who Is President, has
just been released by The New Press. Former White House counsel John
Dean, the author of Worse Than Watergate, says, "This page-turner
closes the case: Cheney is our de facto president." Arianna
Huffington, the author of Fanatics and Fools, calls Dick, "The first
full portrait of The Most Powerful Number Two in History, a scary and
appalling picture. Cheney is revealed as the poster child for crony
capitalism (think Halliburton's no bid, cost-plus Iraq contracts) and
crony democracy (think Scalia and duck-hunting)."
Dick: The Man Who Is President is available from independent
bookstores nationwide and by clicking here
.
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