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Wilkerson: the consequences of telling the truth Email Print

"The worst ineptitude I've seen"

truth-telling is rarely the route to popularity and this story reflects a great deal more about colin powell than it does about larry wilkerson...

   The split came as both men left the administration -- Powell as secretary of state, Wilkerson as his chief of staff -- after working side by side for 16 years. Wilkerson, a once-loyal Republican with 31 years of Army service, has emerged in recent months as a merciless critic of President Bush and his top people, accusing them of carrying out a reckless foreign policy and imperiling the future of the U.S. military.

with a presidential administration dead set on demonizing, marginalizing and virtually destroying any and all critics, wilkerson, a career insider, must have concluded that, despite the consequences, he could no longer remain silent...
   Wilkerson calls Bush an unsophisticated leader who has been easily swayed by "messianic" neoconservatives and power-hungry, secretive schemers in the administration. In a landmark speech in October, Wilkerson said: "What I saw was a cabal between the vice president of the United States, Richard Cheney, and the secretary of defense, Donald Rumsfeld, on critical issues that made decisions that the bureaucracy did not know were being made."

    He is particularly appalled by U.S. treatment of enemy detainees, counting at least 100 deaths in custody during the course of the war on terrorism -- 27 of them ruled homicides. "Murder is torture," he says. "It's not torture lite."

    As for the invasion of Iraq? A blunder of historic proportions, he believes.

    "This is really a very inept administration," says Wilkerson, who has credentials not only as an insider in the Bush I, Clinton and Bush II presidencies but also as a former professor at two of the nation's war colleges. "As a teacher who's studied every administration since 1945, I think this is probably the worst ineptitude in governance, decision-making and leadership I've seen in 50-plus years. You've got to go back and think about that. That includes the Bay of Pigs, that includes -- oh my God, Vietnam. That includes Iran-contra, Watergate."

    Such a critique, coming from a man who was long thought to speak for Powell, is seismic in Washington power circles. Some observers used to regard Powell and Wilkerson as so close that they enjoyed a "mind meld," but now Powell distances himself from the pronouncements of his former aide.

shame on powell... after his performance in front of the united nations, powell has a great distance to go to achieve redemption and forgiveness, not only with the american people but with himself and, after all, when it comes down to it, it's ourselves we have to live with every day...

visit my blog: And, yes, I DO take it personally


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You just beat me to it. I had posted at DKos and was getting ready to cross post here. We even highlighted similar quotes.

I abhor the dull routine of existence. I crave for mental exhaltation. Sherlock Holmes.

by Carnacki on 01/19/2006 11:51:44 AM EST

i tend to follow your posts at kos and have used several on my own blog... we are evidently attracted by similar stuff...

the real tragedy of this particular story is that if colin could just get past the "good soldier" tape that must be playing in an endless loop in his head, he could provide some "real soldier" type leadership and people would sit right up and listen... i'd like to see bushco try and brush THAT off... as my grandma used to say, "if wishes were horses, beggars would ride..."

How do I get a transfer out of this chickenshit outfit?

by profmarcus on 01/19/2006 04:06:25 PM EST

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