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by
Roland X, DMY Columnist |
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During the Cold War, the politics and rivalries within
the Soviet Union could seem so bizarre and arcane that an entire field
of "study" was developed to try and untangle it. Dubbed "Kremlinology,"
this study was as much guesswork and psychology as intelligence gathering.
It is at once telling and disturbing that our own executive
branch has become so secretive that some are comparing the job of discerning
its motives to Kremlinology.
At once the most amusing and disturbing aspect of this
is probably the question of who is really deciding policy. Obviously the
official answer is George W. Bush; equally obvious is that he makes his
decisions based almost entirely on the input of his staff. The President
has admitted outright that he does not use external sources of information,
but rather, he relies on a few trusted advisors to be "objective sources."
The two front runners for the perceived position of power
behind the throne are Vice-President Dick Cheney and chief strategist
Karl Rove. These two men, more than any others, reflect both the unity
and the division within the White House -- the complete loyalty to the
administration and discipline in staying "on message" on the one hand,
and the bitter struggles to influence policy on the other.
Dick Cheney, by any standards a highly intelligent man,
is almost certainly the most powerful Vice President of our time, and
possibly the most influential one in American history. For all his power,
influence, and name recognition, however, he's not seen publicly any more
than other recent vice presidents -- and possibly less. In many ways,
between his shadowy influence over energy policy and his questionable
involvement in gathering intelligence for the Iraq war, he personifies
the secrecy and autocratic tendencies of this administration.
For some, Cheney is the top suspect in the search for a
puppet master. His education and experience make him vitally important
to Bush in decision making, particularly in foreign policy. As we learn
more about his relationship with the CIA, it becomes more apparent that
his office was deeply involved with (if not directly responsible for)
the decisions regarding intelligence analysis and usage. Many of the usual
neocon suspects (Wolfowitz, Feith, Perle, et. al.) were and are strongly
connected to Cheney's alternative choices in intelligence gathering. Surprisingly,
the supposedly pragmatic Cheney was the most strident in defending the
particulars regarding the war when the facts began to prove damning to
many administration statements.
His approach to energy policy was interesting in other
ways: he met with major business leaders in the industry and essentially
overturned the FOIA to prevent the discussions from becoming public. It
may explain the current
energy bill, however, with a little help from Molly Ivins:
We would, of course, tell you who wrote this abomination,
except Dick Cheney, who headed the task force, doesn't think any of us
should know where this law came from, and the Republicans who have been
working on it in secret for months met in secret. Democrats were not even
admitted to the committee meetings.
On the other hand, we have Karl Rove -- not as well
educated formally, but education is not a mark of genius, only information.
And the term "genius" is used commonly to refer to Karl Rove. To his allies,
including George Bush himself, he is the Boy Genius. To his enemies, he
is the Evil Genius. (Curiously, DC Comics had Lex Luthor win the 2000 presidential
election in their fictional universe; for some of Rove's rivals, the differences
are not that enormous.) Either way, however, he is The Genius, the guy who
turns a man who left three limbs in Vietnam into a traitor, the operator
who corners the political market on the September 11th attacks, who juggles
tariffs and tax cuts and big government and faith-based policies without
cracking the Republicans' base. No mean trick, divided as it is between
business-oriented conservatives who distrust regulations on principle and
radical religious "conservatives" who want to make their morality the law
of the land.
Did he write any laws? Of course not. Does he have tremendous
influence on the process, the policy, and the perception of them, both
before and after they go through Congress? You bet. That's a lot of power
for a man whose actual position is in Bush's campaign rather than in his
Cabinet.
And then there's the man himself, George W. Bush, the puppet.
Or is he? It's a very strange thing to wonder just how much the power
the President of the United States really has. And it must be noted that,
though many on the left believe that the man's a joke at best and a dangerous
child at worst, this opinion is by no means universal. No less a White-Houseologist
than David Corn believes that Bush is really running
the show:
CORN: I do not think George W. Bush is a
puppet. I think he is in charge, particularly so in foreign policy. After
9/11, I think he saw himself as being placed in the office providentially
to lead the country at this point in time. He certainly is not a details
man, but he does give guidance and leadership to the people working for
him. To some degree he's controlled, in the sense that he can only make
decisions based on what information he gets. But he is indeed responsible
for whom he listens to and what he chooses to listen to.
A rather frightening prospect for those who see Bush
as a mediocre mind at best, true. Nevertheless, Corn's (very educated) opinion
is an example of the variety of theories surrounding the nature of power
within the current White House. While it is important to know who and what
we're dealing with, however, the primary issue raised by this uncertainty
is that we simply do not know something as basic as who wields
the functional power of the president in this country. We don't know what
they're doing, we don't know how they're doing it -- we can't even be entirely
sure who they are. All we know is what comes out of the end.
Somehow, asking who's on first doesn't seem as funny any
more. Fortunately, we'll have a chance to answer that question for ourselves
a year from now. Perhaps then, White-Houseology can join its predecessor
in the bin of history.
(/) Roland X
http://rolandx.blogspot.com
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