Tag: George W. Bush

  • How Dick Cheney made Donald Trump

    How Dick Cheney made Donald Trump

    Former vice president Dick Cheney, who died on Monday at age 84, loathed Donald Trump. In a 2022 election campaign ad for his daughter, Liz, a congresswoman from Wyoming, he declared: “In our nation’s 246-year history, there has never been an individual who is a greater threat to our republic than Donald Trump.” Yet Cheney was more responsible for Trump’s rise than almost anyone else in the Republican establishment. He helped to mastermind the calamitous Iraq War and preached the unitary executive theory of the presidency. Instead of vilifying Cheney, MAGA-world should offer him a bouquet of appreciation.

    Recall that it was during the 2016 South Carolina primary that Trump first showed his real independence from the folderol surrounding the Iraq War. Trump created shock and awe by denouncing it. “The war in Iraq,” he said, “was a big, fat mistake.” Until then, Republicans had marched in lockstep beneath the George W. Bush banner.

    After Trump’s abortive attempt to overturn the 2020 election, Liz Cheney headed a commission to expose his machinations. But it blew up in her face. The Cheney brood now became heroes to Democrats. During the 2024 election Kamala Harris was endorsed by Dick Cheney. Harris said that she was “honored” to have the backing of the “well-respected” Cheney. Well-respected? Harris was in essence effacing the true legacy of Cheney and the Iraq War. Writing in the New York Review of Books, Fintan O’Toole acutely notes that Trump had recognized that Americans had “soured on the extended occupations of Iraq and Afghanistan… It is quite extraordinary that the Democrats allowed Trump a virtual monopoly on the exploitation of this profound disillusionment, and that Harris never stopped to ask who, exactly, Dick Cheney remains “well-respected” by.

    Who indeed? The Cheney era has become synonymous with imperial overreach and disdain for constitutional safeguards. Cheney’s hubris had its sources in Watergate, when he served as a young aide in the Nixon administration. He rose seamlessly in Republican ranks, entering Congress in the 1978 election as a representative from Wyoming. His highpoint was serving as Secretary of Defense under George H.W. Bush during the 1991 Gulf War when America repelled Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein from Kuwait.

    But Cheney and his aides, including Paul Wolfowitz, became obsessed with the idea of toppling Saddam himself from power. This idee fixe led Cheney to empower the neocons after 9/11, when America failed to capture Osama bin Laden in Tora Bora and instead focused its effort on concocting a fictitious case for war in Iraq. Cheney and his cohort succumbed to paranoia, seeking to tie Saddam by whatever means necessary to the attack on the Twin Towers. This was fantasy. But it issued in a war that turned into a debacle. At the summit of their power and influence the neocons were discredited by a bungled crusade to implant democracy in the arid soil of the Middle East.

    It wasn’t until the 2006 midterm elections, when the GOP suffered a brutal buffeting, that George W. Bush began to follow a more pragmatic approach, ousting Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld. Cheney’s influence had passed its high-water mark. Bush started to realize that he had been conned by the neocons. “Am I the evil genius in the corner that nobody ever sees come out of his hole?” Cheney once remarked. “It’s a nice way to operate, actually.” It was indeed. But the consequences of Cheney’s decisions continue to reverberate in insalubrious ways.

  • Dick Cheney dies at 84

    Dick Cheney dies at 84

    Former vice president Dick Cheney died last night aged 84. He arrived in Washington as a congressman for Wyoming, then became secretary for defense under George H.W. Bush and served for eight years as George W. Bush’s vice president. He was considered by many to have pulled the strings behind the Bush administration.

    What is perhaps his most lasting legacy is the “Cheney Doctrine,” which influenced America’s decision to engage in wars in the Middle East. He campaigned for a military response to the 9/11 terrorist attacks, which drove his conviction that any country, organization or individual that posed a threat to the US, or that might in the future, needed to be taken out. 

    Cheney had something of an imperial mind, a belief that presidential power had to be restored after it had been curbed following the executive crises of the 20th century, like the Vietnam war and Watergate. His will to power earned him comparisons with the Star Wars villain Darth Vader – critically by the left, and admiringly by Steve Bannon: “Darkness is good. Dick Cheney. Darth Vader. Satan. That’s power.”

    Cheney was critical of Donald Trump, especially after the 2021 election. He called Trump a “threat to the republic” and a “coward” who tried to steal the election using “lies and violence.” Yet it could also be said that the Cheney years paved the way for a powerful executive like Trump. Where one president acted in the shadows, the other craves the limelight.

    I grew up in the Bush-Cheney years, with a father who was frequently away from our family on deployments fighting in Middle Eastern conflicts. If circumstances had been slightly different, if my father had not come back, I might easily see Cheney as one of the great villains of American history. I would not be alone in thinking so. Cheney is one of the most unpopular figures in US politics of the 21st century, and the America First movement has arisen largely in reaction to his foreign wars.

    My instinct is still to be highly critical of entanglements abroad, but it is impossible to judge what the world would be like if America had not fought the war on terror. Throughout his life, Cheney held that what he had done was necessary. He believed at the time, and continued to believe, that invading Iraq was the right thing to do.

  • The Bush shoe-thrower is jacked now

    The Bush shoe-thrower is jacked now

    Muntadhar al-Zaidi, the man who once threw a shoe at George W. Bush during a press conference, posted a gym selfie on X the other day. Cockburn is here to tell you that the man is yoked. “Have a nice day” indeed, Muntadhar!

    “This is a farewell kiss from the Iraqi people, you dog,” al-Zaidi shouted at Bush in 2008, before throwing his shoe. He subsequently spent nine months behind bars. After a release for good behavior, he said he intended to start a foundation that would “build orphanages, a children’s hospital, and medical and orthopedic centers offering free treatment and manned by Iraqi doctors and medical staff.”

    That doesn’t appear to have happened. Al-Zaidi also ran, unsuccessfully, for public office in Iraq in 2018. He now works as a writer and broadcast journalist, but appears to be spending a lot of time and effort getting swole, perhaps doing the “Pete and Bobby Challenge.” Unsurprisingly, a lot of al-Zaidi’s “journalism” these days appears to be of the “free Palestine” variety, but he did post a surprising tweet approving of the death sentence for Iryna Zarutska’s killer.

    But al-Zaidi has never forgotten his roots. Shortly after his workout pic, he reposted a photo of a T-shirt that reads, “Mentally I Am On The Timeline Where Both Shoes Hit George Bush.” Aren’t we all?

    On our radar

    IN THE ROUGH President Trump is currently watching Team USA undergo a testing start to the Ryder Cup in Bethpage, New York. They trail Europe 3-1.

    COULD THIS HAVE BEEN AN EMAIL? Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has ordered hundreds of admirals and generals to attend a short-notice meeting in Virginia next week.

    JIM TIME Former FBI director James Comey posted a defiant video on social media after being indicted by a grand jury in Virginia.

    Get your ‘Stephen Miller, sexual matador’ poster here

    The Trump White House is notorious for producing its share of glorious quotes – but even by its high standards, this was a banner week. On Monday, when the President was alleging a connection between taking acetaminophen during pregnancy and autism, he said, “Nothing bad can happen, it can only good happen.” The next day at the United Nations, he dragged the organization for their technical difficulties: “These are the two things I got from the United Nations: a bad escalator and a bad teleprompter.” Then when President Erdoğan of Turkey visited the Oval Office, Trump couldn’t help a joke about the leader of the NATO “democracy”: “He knows about rigged elections better than anybody.”

    It takes a lot to top Trump. Step forward Katie Miller, wife of White House aide Stephen and a former aide to Elon Musk herself. Mrs. Miller has a new gig podcasting, and appeared with Jesse Watters on Fox News. If she was after a viral moment to boost her numbers, she bagged it. After Watters said that, being married to Stephen, she was the “envy of all women,” Katie quipped, “the sexual matador, right?”

    If you’re not scarred by the mental image of that, don’t worry: Cockburn asked Grok to depict Stephen Miller as a sexual matador (and then told it to “make him sexier” twice):

    Now you can print him out and put him on your bedroom wall.

    Moscow fools

    Top brass at the Telegraph, a British newspaper, are more red-faced than usual this week after issuing an apology for wrongly accusing a State Department official’s wife of having Kremlin ties.

    The article in question, by Benedict Smith “erroneously stated that Mr. Sergei Chernikov – and, by association, his niece, Ms. Yulia Kirillova – had current ties to the Kremlin and to President Putin personally. This is false,” the apology reads. “In fact, neither Mr. Chernikov nor Ms. Kirillova has any association with the Kremlin or Mr. Putin. Mr. Chernikov has lived away from Russia since 2008 and has not returned since 2020.”

    Kirillova is married to Darren Beattie, a senior State Department official who currently serves as the under secretary for public diplomacy and public affairs. Before his role in Foggy Bottom, Beattie was a speechwriter for the first Trump White House and for then-congressman Matt Gaetz – as well as founding the New Right-ish news site Revolver. Presumably that was enough for the British media to try to depict him as a Kremlin stooge. What is the charge? Having a wife, a beautiful Slavic wife?

    Cockburn hopes Team Telegraph won’t be Russian to conclusions quite so fast next time…

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