Posted By Thomas E. Ricks Share

In the new issue of Parameters, the journal of the Army War College, a review of Jane Mayer's essential book, The Dark Side, concludes that after 9/11, VP Cheney was "unnerved." The reviewer, Jeffrey Record, a professor at the Air War College, writes that, "Having underestimated the al Qaeda threat before 9/11, Cheney overcompensated; in the weeks following the at­tacks he traveled with a doctor as well as a duffel bag containing a gas mask and a biochemical survival suit.," he writes.

Record likes the book: "The Dark Side is a gripping, meticulously researched, and deeply disturbing book that vindicates the observation of the great Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis that ‘the greatest dangers to liberty lurk in insidious encroachment by men of zeal, well-meaning but without understanding.'"

EXPLORE:SECURITY, TERRORISM
 

BILL KELLER

9:46 PM ET

May 15, 2009

Insidious indeed

911 and the utter lack of competence in intelligence appears to have placed all the cabal at the top of Imperial GOP Washington into a degree of desperation from a perceived mortal vulnerability to all the unwashed and unWASPed. That these who spoke to a lesser god not from their Gothic realm of exclusivity could execute a daring undetected attack on the center of commercial manipulation, must have made them question the value of expensive places of civility that did not immune them to this world.

Barbarianism which had worked so well for their ancestors from the middle ages could only give them comfort.

Seems our enemy was very good in making these men and women dance to their shock and awe also.

 

DRDAVE91

7:47 AM ET

May 16, 2009

Sadly

the conclusions of Ms. Mayer's excellent reporting and Dr. Record's analysis would be lost on the principals who drove the Global War on Terror during the Bush years. Dr. Record, wrote an outstanding analysis on the neocon strategy and its shortcomings in 2003. His warnings were uniformly ignored, which led to the ensuing deterioration of the wars we were prosecuting in the Middle East.

 

DAVE-T

2:24 PM ET

May 16, 2009

I disagree that Dick Cheney

I disagree that Dick Cheney was unnerved and well intentioned after 9/11... I believe Cheney knew exactly what he wanted to do after 9/11. I think he knew what he wanted to do on 9/10...

Remember it was Cheney and some other eventual cabinet level Neocons who wrote that to fundamentally change the nature of U.S policy would take an event on the order of a "new Pearl Harbor"... they wrote that in the late 90's. I guess now some/most of you have placed me in the "conspiracy" believer category... I have to ask... What do you think 9/11 was? Another "intelligence failure?"

This thing was a shake down, and still is... the only thing that has made sense about the how and why is the money... who has benefited and their connections to the Neocons...

Our safety was not the priority, fear... and the willingness to sheepishly follow, and to dampen our civil liberties was their goal... and that goal was met.

 

XSAMPLEX

12:36 PM ET

May 18, 2009

The Dark Side

I have grown to interpret Cheney's miserable personality as the psychological adaptations (evasions) of a coward who cannot consciously admit as much to himself. The notion that he might "overcompensate" for his safety following 9/11 is wholly consistent with that theory.

Think about it, when has Cheney ever argued for principle over safety? Never, that I can recall.

 

BILL KELLER

6:24 AM ET

May 19, 2009

In the end did he just try repeat the appearance of John McCain

in pajamas confessing to the torturer's desired crime. Isn't that all one can expect from a torturer. 'Just get em to admit that bin Laden was their co-conspirator' must have driven him and little George to applause as they watched an old video with John McCain wearing those pajamas and bow and admit to desired crimes.

This video would be a very good black and white prototype of what could be done along the rendition routes that fed their gulags.

Cost was no object to win the trifecta opportunity that gave them so much excitement after 911.

Apparently syrupy smiling Lindsey Graham could be relied upon to help carry this off if as no less than a Senate and Senator McCain handler.

 

RUBBER DUCKY

3:56 PM ET

May 21, 2009

HOOK!

It's time to acknowledge that Cheney has a wildly perverted understanding of the Constitution. Bizarre. Unsound. Dangerous. He has had his time on the stage. He screwed the pooch. Hook please. HOOK!

 

JOHN WHEELER

9:26 AM ET

May 25, 2009

KILL WAR COLLEGES RICKS SAYS IN UNPROFESSIONAL ARTICLE

Tom Ricks wrote in the Washington Post to abolish all Academies and War Colleges but still has not told which if any of the Academies or War Colleges he has actually visited so that readers and listeners would know if Ricks had any valid knowledge of what he is talking about. That is, Ricks popped-off with "Lets kill Annapolis et al" with no personal knowledge of the life, culture, ethos of each of the Academies.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/04/16/AR2009041603483.html

The article by Tom Ricks in this case is irresponsible and sloppy and Ricks owes cadets, midshipmen, families, NOK, grads, prospects and his readers an apology for his weak journalism. His topic, Accountability and Transparency, is excellent -- Grads more or as much as any others urge Accountability and Transparency of their Academies -- and War Colleges -- and I have written so; but his actual article is so failed as to warrant some decent apology especially for injury to those who cannot hit back: families and NOK and the dead and prospects for academies affected by the sloppy article.

By way of introduction, my West Point class is 1966. I chaired construction of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in DC and worked with vets for decades building the Korean War Veterans Memorial, the Women's statue at the Wall, the Women in Military Service Memorial in DC and Memorials in many states. Right now I work to help the project for the WW II Women Pilots (WASPs) be awarded a Congressional Gold Medal, as were the Tuskegee Airmen. That legislation has just passed the Senate. For President Reagan I planned and directed the Vietnam Veterans Leadership Program in 47 states. Some of the programs continue to this day, on their own funding. The VVLP mission is to link vets up with each other to find jobs and to break the false stereotype of vets as folks to feel sorry for, to pity, to treat as victims; instead to recognize vets as Strong Warfighters and Strong Citizens. Many VVLP guys and gals now work this mission for Iraq and Afghanistan vets.

Here is why Tom Ricks owes an apology. First, he seems not even to know that USCGA and USMMA exist. But his piece would abolish them. What an insult to USCGA and USMMA -- to say abolish them and not mention them. Second, Ricks does not say where on the web his cost data can be obtained and examined. Third, he in fact has not visited all the Academies and War Colleges he would shut, in a way to learn their ethos and culture and effectiveness of teaching, but by his tone of (false) knowledge, readers would think he has some close knowledge of the schools; West Point reports that Ricks has visited briefly, but not to learn anything at West Point of depth about the life and values of cadets and West Point and of West Point grads.

Fourth, Ricks omits mention that Washington and Jefferson long ago had sharp discussions about the need for West Point, and Washington strongly wanted the Academy. Jefferson opposed until right after he became President and saw the light, so to speak. He set up West Point (and so all Academies) (except USCGA) to draw youngsters from all walks of life -- the very poor especially -- proportionately from all over America through Congressional appointment. The Academies Reflect America thanks to Jefferson's Genius and Washington's Leadership.

Ricks seems not to know that the founders were clear on the need for a National Military Academy and he does not re-examine their arguments. USCGA brings in applicants by examination only, not by appointment from Congress proportionally nationwide. USCGA still succeeds in reflecting all of America and in fact has a slightly higher proportion of women admitted than the other four academies.

Fifth, Ricks does a thing that shows complete unfamiliarity with the heartbeat and life of the Academies: he tries to separate the Graduates from their Academies by saying the Grads are "crackerjack" but the schools are "community colleges" -- meant to mean, "second or third rate." So he insults Community Colleges too :) Most Academy grads strive to embody the values of their Academy in their lives. Ricks, unaware of this, shows a kind of insulting ignorance.

Sixth, Ricks in his article holds up ROTC as a paradigm without noting that no O-10 in active service has faced Peer War -- WW II kind of like war -- meaning that in 2009 the military does not know if ROTC programs steel grads adequately for Peer War. Meanwhile, Academies are proved in steeling grads for Peer War. He does not address the known un-evenness and disparities and inadequacies reported on many ROTC programs nationwide. He shows ignorance of his subject matter, in short. He goes on to say that Academy grads are too expensive therefore, but with no foundation of fact and analysis. Some or many or all ROTC programs may in fact be significantly underfunded.

Seventh, Ricks in his piece uses some alleged hearsay about some commanders who prefer non-West Pointers, he says. That is fine -- West Point is not perfect and not nearly perfect :) But anecdotal hearsay proves nothing. An editor of merit would have deleted, and pressed for real substantiation.

Eighth, Ricks omits to say that more than any other Americans, many Academy grads believe that their Academies have to earn their keep anew in each generation. I have written this myself. It is a reason that I participated in and supported the work of author Rick Atkinson in his writing the book, "The Long Gray Line" about West Point and the class of 1966. I told Rick, "We owe an accounting, to say to Americans, this is what you gave to us, and this is our Report." The book shows my own foibles, blunders and errors :) The point is, Accountabilty and Transparency :)

Ninth, Ricks omits mention of women and the gateway that the Academies provide to women for contributing to the defense and life of our Country. In 2005 the 10,000th woman graduated from the Five Federal Academies (I did the research); America is now on the way to 15,000 women grads of the Academies. This is a powerful and culturally and militarily important cohort. Ricks seems oblivious to this aspect, the aspect of bringing women so quickly and fully into mainstream Military and (as vets) Community Leadership. This exhibits again the genius of Washington and Jefferson. They made this possible.

Tenth, the piece Ricks wrote is so journalistically irresponsible that it unforgivably wounded folks who Can't Fight Back. That is, he rattled the morale and feelings of parents of prospective cadets and midshipmen and the prospects themselves, and many cadets and midshipmen, and widows and NOK of Academy grads killed in battle, and he insulted the brave dead from Academies. Hal Moore USMA 1945 of "We Were Soldiers" is an overpriced product of a third-rate college? Some would disagree. His steel in saving his battalion is seen by many as Proof of West Point's Value as Founded by Presidents Washington and Jefferson. Paul W. "Buddy" Bucha USMA 1965 is an overpriced grad of a third rate school? Congress and the President probably thought otherwise in citing Buddy for the Medal of Honor for saving the 89 men in his surrounded and cut-off Company in the 101st Abn. My dad John Wheeler USMA Jan 1943 at Normandy and the Ardennes and the Bridge at Remagen and the Liberation of the Nordhausen Death Camps was the overpriced grad of a third rate school? Ricks can go to Arlington and speak that at my Dad's grave :)

Eleventh, Ricks rabbit-punches Dave Petraeus USMA 1974. He insults him. He calls Dave's school third rate but says Dave somehow got into Princeton for graduate school. Dave had been kind and gracious to Ricks. Ricks is rather insulting to the Commanding General who trusts him. He does owe an apology for that. Ricks ignores that Dave himself by his life and work strives to embody West Point.

Twelfth, Ricks clings to an unmanly quality of Never Own up to an Error. There are better men and women at the Washington Post than that. Dave Broder, for example. Ann Scott Tyson, for example. Henry Allen, for example. Don Graham, for example. Ricks instead has done the unmanly thing of hiding behind a few editors at the Post who hew to the "Never Apologize, Never Explain" doctrine that infects some Journalists. The ombudsman of the Post says he only does news, not opinion pieces. Ricks' editor at the Outlook Section has never explained why he let the journalistically weak piece get published in a Fine Newspaper. The Editorial Page editor still does not "get" the flaws of the Ricks writing. The topic -- Accountability for the Academies -- is superb and timely. The actual article is journalistically unprofessional and failed.

Ricks instead drifts along at stall-speed, so to speak, in denial -- unattractive in anyone but especially a journalist and author. Instead Ricks this week points out that the West Point class of 1976 with Raymond Odierno, Dave Rodriguez, and Stanley McChrystal had the travail of an Honor scandal -- a periodic event at USMA; but without mention that at West Point Honor is Real and the human condition means that humans fall short. The point is, West Point stands for and hews faithfully to Honor. And to Accountabilty and Transparency.

The Washington Post and Tom Ricks want the Military and the Academies to be Transparent and Accountable. But in this egregious case of awful journalism the Washington Post and Tom Ricks do not hold themselves to anything close to that Noble Standard.

The Editorial Page Editor and Outlook Editor of the Post and Ricks can Man-Up and apologize, at least to the young and innocent and good folks they wounded.

John Wheeler
USMA 66
wheelerusa@usa.net

 

Thomas E. Ricks covered the U.S. military for the Washington Post from 2000 through 2008.

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