Reidblog [The Reid Report blog]

Think at your own risk.
Monday, November 28, 2005
Well, vacation's over... how are things going in Iraq?
Update: The Saddam Hussein & Friends trial is off again...

Original post 12:02 a.m.: Four Western aid workers kidnapped in Iraq... British peace activist among those abducted...
Sy Hersh is reporting that the U.S. may substitute air power for ground troops and that the generals are 'worried' about the plan ...
Saddam Hussein's trial will resume after the killing of two defense lawyers sparked delays ... (former AG and war critic Ramsay Clark is joining the defense team...)
Eight people were nabbed in an alleged plot to kill the Saddam trial judge.
Two U.S. politicians were injured after their vehicle flipped over...
Private security crews have become the latest 'feared element' in Iraq.
Ex-Iraqi P.M. Iyad Allawi claims that human rights abuses in Iraq are as bad now as they were under Saddam ... althought the current president begs to differ ...
The family of a military ethicist who apparently commited suicide after volunteering to go to Iraq are raising questions about his death ... .

Damn... how about inside the White House?

All disquiet on West Wing front
Aides: W must right ship

By THOMAS M. DeFRANK
and KENNETH R. BAZINET
DAILY NEWS WASHINGTON BUREAU

WASHINGTON - Embattled White House aides have begun to believe President Bush must take the reins personally if his evaporating agenda and credibility are to be salvaged.

"We're just plodding along," admitted a senior Bush aide from deep within the West Wing bunker. "It's up to the President to turn things around now."

Even as his poll numbers tank, however, Bush is described by aides as still determined to stay the course. He resists advice from Republicans who fear disaster in next year's congressional elections, and rejects criticism from a media establishment he disdains.

"The President has always been willing to make changes," the senior aide said, "but not because someone in this town tells him to - NEVER!"

For the moment, Bush has dismissed discreetly offered advice from friends and loyalists to fire Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld and bring back longtime confidant Karen Hughes from the State Department to shore up his personal White House staff.

"He thinks that would be an admission he's screwed up, and he can't bring himself to do that," a former senior staffer lamented.

So aides have circled the wagons as Bush's woes mount, partly hoping they can sell the President on a December blitz of media interviews to help turn the tide.

"The staff basically still has an unyielding belief in the wisdom of what they're doing," a close Bush confidant said. "They're talking to people who could help them, but they're not listening."

Two sources said Bush has not only lost some confidence in his top aides, as the Daily News has previously reported, but is furious with a stream of leaks about the mood within the West Wing.

"He's asking [friends] for opinions on who he can trust and who he can't," one knowledgeable source said.

If you caught MTP today you know that David Broder nailed it -- the president has to right his policy or continue to leave allies like Sen. Warner of Virginia to twist in the wind, defending indefensible policies on television... The NYDN add this zinger:
The problem for Bush, advisers admit, is that the ongoing leak probe reinforces allegations that the White House allegedly hyped prewar intelligence to justify a war most Americans no longer support.

So far Team Bush doesn't know how to separate the two issues, and compounding its woes is the fact that aides aren't talking to each other as much as they once did.

Gone from the schedule are weekly cholesterol-laden breakfasts at Rove's home where top Bush hands discussed strategy. Also missing are Sunday "message meetings" with outside thinkers like GOP Chairman Ken Mehlman, campaign pollster Matthew Dowd and superlobbyist Ed Gillespie.

A card-carrying member of the Washington GOP establishment with close ties to the White House recently encountered several senior presidential aides at a dinner and came away shaking his head at their "no problems here" mentality.

"There is just no introspection there at all," he said in exasperation. "It is everybody else's fault - the press, gutless Republicans on the Hill. They're still in denial."
And yes, it is a river in Egypt...

Tags: , Middle East, War, Terrorism, Foreign Policy, Media
posted by JReid @ 12:02 PM  
ReidBlog: The Obama Interview
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