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Robert Scheer

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Deceit of Shakespearean Proportions

Posted: 08/31/11 03:47 AM ET

Behold this unctuous knave, a disgrace to his nation as few before him, yet boasting unvarnished virtue. The deceit of Dick Cheney is indeed of Shakespearean proportions, as evidenced in his new memoir. For the former vice president, lying comes so easily that one must assume he takes the pursuit of truth to be nothing more than a reckless indulgence.

Here is a man who, more than anyone else in the Bush administration, trafficked in the campaign of deceit that caused tens of thousands to die, wasted trillions of dollars in resources and indelibly sullied the legacy of this nation through the practice of torture. Still this villain claims that, despite the overwhelming evidence to the contrary, the horrid methods he endorsed were a necessary response to the threat of Osama bin Laden. How convenient to ignore that it was Barack Obama, a resolutely anti-torture president, who made good on the promise of Cheney and the previous administration to take down the al-Qaida leader.

Not to mention that bin Laden was killed in his hiding place in Pakistan, a nation that the Bush administration had befriended after 9/11 by lifting the sanctions previously imposed in retaliation for Pakistan's nuclear weapons program, a program connected with the proliferation of nuclear weapons know-how and the sale of nuclear material to North Korea, Libya and Iran.

Pakistan joined with only two other nations, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, in granting diplomatic recognition to the Taliban government that provided a safe haven for al-Qaida as bin Laden orchestrated the 9/11 attack. But instead of focusing on the source of the problem, Cheney led the effort to overthrow Saddam Hussein, who had ruthlessly hounded any al-Qaida operatives who dared function in Iraq.

You don't have to slog too deeply through Dick Cheney's advertisement for himself to grasp not only the wicked cynicism of the man but also how shallow are his perceptions. He recalls his college years in the 1960s, when he was a draft-deferred young Republican during America's murderous adventure in Vietnam -- in which more than 3 million Indochinese and 59,000 Americans were killed -- as a time of career advancement through strategic Washington appointments.

The war that left Martin Luther King Jr. condemning his own government as "the greatest purveyor of violence in the world today" is regretted in Cheney's memoir only for the reactive violence that he attributes to anti-war student protesters. We are told, in a reminiscence of his days as a graduate student at the University of Wisconsin, that "in May 1969, students threw rocks and bottles at police trying to shut down a party on Mifflin Street," but there is nothing of napalmed Vietnamese or U.S. troops in body bags.

That same May, young Cheney's Republican contacts in Washington would pay off when he secured an appointment in the Nixon administration working for none other than Donald Rumsfeld. Cheney recalls that he didn't know he was "signing up for a forty-year career in politics and government -- but that was exactly the right call."

Those 40 years, interrupted by a lucrative stint at defense contractor Halliburton, saw Cheney rise to become secretary of defense and later vice president, presiding over wars that put him in considerable conflict with Colin Powell. It is Powell -- who was experiencing the reality of war in Vietnam at the time Cheney was winning bureaucratic battles in Washington -- who is scorned in Cheney's memoir as the hopeless dove.

It was the more cautious war veteran Powell who, as chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff during the first Iraq war, proved to be far more effective as a leader than Cheney, who was then secretary of defense. What is confirmed by Cheney's memoir is that he seized upon the second Iraq invasion as a way of settling scores with his adversary by assuming the role of an ultra-militarist.

Powell, who, inside the administration, clearly opposed the invasion of Iraq -- "If you break it, you own it" -- was cast as a puppet who in a dramatic appearance before the United Nations lied to the world about Iraq's possession of weapons of mass destruction. But despite Powell's woefully misplaced sense of loyalty to President George W. Bush, Cheney is merciless in condemning the general for allegedly undermining the administration. Powell has fired back at what he termed Cheney's "cheap shots" and reminds us that "Mr. Cheney and many of his colleagues did not prepare for what happened after the fall of Baghdad."

It is not clear that Cheney is a true believer in military mayhem as much as he is an uncontrollable careerist who finds war talk a convenient tool for advancement. He seems to have no real sense of the cost of the Iraq War beyond what it might have done to hurt his own legacy. If his memoir has any enduring value, it is not as another offering of hollow excuses for an unjustifiable war but rather as a study in what the famed historian of European fascism, Hannah Arendt, termed the "banality of evil."

 
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
acklebee
09:44 AM on 09/03/2011
excellent article, he should be tried - and put in jail. How we let these politicians get away with this, I will never understand. Now our planet needs us to protect it and the politicians are not listening, they are not listening to the people- but to the people with the most money.

How can we change this? our country's government is an embarrassment
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mlrlmsw
02:37 AM on 09/02/2011
It is a sad commentary on our current tstate of affairs when this man can get away with torture and killing over 4,000 Americans and many more Iraqi civilians just because he wanted to - now he gets to profit from his mis-deeds by publishing a book. If you're rich, you can get away with almost anything now.
01:50 PM on 09/01/2011
Cheney's memoir may be all that but the "willingness" of Colin Powell to be duped and used has all the makings of an Olympian tragedy. He is a man who could have been our first African American president. But more importantly than that he could have been a modern day "truth teller" who could have saved this nation grief, treasure and our real national "security", a healthier economy. His must be the heavier burden for I do believe that he, at least, is capable of introspection.
01:09 PM on 09/01/2011
If we're going Shakespeare, the character that comes immediately to mind is Iago. What he said about Othello reminds me of what Cheney must have thought about being Bush's VP: "In following him, I follow but myself."
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
coreten
11:25 AM on 09/01/2011
It is ironic that it was the WWII that got us hooked on war. That is what created the great American industrial war machine, which had brought us the fabulous '50"s. Eisenhower had warned about the monster that would swallow us, but we were so hooked on it's euphoria that we paid no attention. After many years and trillions later we are still hooked, and as any addiction it is hard to break. We have created a huge industry that depends on war as it's life blood, and if one thinks our economy is in the sewer now, imagine what it would be like if that industry suddenly ceased to exist. Chaney, with all his ugliness, is a product of our military industry. Even though he tries to paint a different picture, everything he did was directed to continuation and the success of it. Everything else was seconday. The military and the industry that supports it are so intertwined in our lives that it is at the point where one would have hard time surviving without the other. So, untill such time when we can come up with ways to slowly replace the monster, people like Chaney will always exist.
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acklebee
10:45 AM on 09/03/2011
we were always hooked on war, the machines of the industrial era made the war machine bigger and more profitable and capable of mass destruction..

look at american history - war war, take people's land, take people, bring them here to work for you- etc.
ChezMJ
Life is a shipwreck; sing in the lifeboats.
11:19 AM on 09/01/2011
"The evil that men do lives after them; the good is oft interred with their bones." -from Julius Caesar

Dick Cheney makes me want to rescind my organ donor card. Maybe I'll just make a note-- Anybody BUT Dick Cheney...
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10:38 AM on 09/01/2011
So Cheney is Shakespearean?

==>"Was ever nation in such manner wooed?
Was ever nation in such manner won?"

It doesn't say much for all of us that first he got elected,
second, he got reelected
and still he's among us,
healthy, prosperous, and on book tours,

among us, the no longer so brave,
and the no longer so free,
and the no longer so vigilant.

As for Obama, Bin Laden is no longer with us
but Middle East radicals very much still are.
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06:26 PM on 09/01/2011
The issue really should not be dealt with facetiously.

The frustration expressed is understandable, yet how dangerous for us to fall into thinking that Obama is even one's reluctant alternative. The man has done everything he could to legitimize Bush/Cheney's administration.

We need a third alternative. Rather than worry about "another Cheney", can we afford another round of Obama?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mlrlmsw
02:40 AM on 09/02/2011
Can we afford any of the radical republican lot running against him? It can get worse. Use your vote thoughtfully.
10:09 AM on 09/01/2011
Well said. Another historical note. Dick Cheney was the "accidental Secretary of Defense;" there was ann unfortunate scandalous episode involving "the intended," and a scantily clad woman in some fountain of DC and he was inebriated. Thus Cheney having "had better things to do than Vietnam." To bolser his "macho," however, he fired a distinguished General Officer of The United States Air Force for his astute recommendation for reliance upon "Surgical Strikes" in the first Gulf War. After which Cheney reached DOWN the ranks of Army Officers and pulled up Colin Powell then named Chairman of The Joint Chiefs of Staff with little experience but a reputation as "political." Apparently General Powell was not the one to be a pawn afterall as you reveal, but it did look that way. Similarly Donald Rumsfeld was so banal as to be incredible and an unbelievable lapse of President George W Bush said by another source as having no experience to apply but for having managed a "sports club."
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
IowaGirl
08:59 AM on 09/01/2011
Not shocked, pretty much knew it all, but thrilling all the same to see it written up with such damning gusto! Thank you, Robert Scheer. Without reporters like you, fewer Americans still would realize the truth.
07:27 AM on 09/01/2011
The fact is that if you say a lie long enough and in enough places eventually the lie becomes the truth.
That is why 70% of Americans were convinced that Sadaam was involved in 9/11. That is why 20% of Americans today believe President Obama was born in Kenya and is a secret Muslim. The American Indians used to say, and with good reason, that the white man spoke with Forked Tongue. What is amazing today is that with all of the proof available to discern the truth, large numbers of us are still entranced by the lie.
01:56 PM on 09/01/2011
Precisely. The old adage used to be variations of "the victors write the histories" and "sometimes the only thing that remains is the written record". Richard Viguerie promoted variations of the "big lie" tactic to great success in building up to this century's GOP and they are masters of propagdanda. That's why their wordsmithing is so nefarious....they speak first and loudest and co opt terms, "patriot", "responsibility", "job creators", "job killing regulations" that become mantras when in reality they are neither patriotic or responsible, and the "job creators" would love to finish off this country by removing all "safeguards" , i.e. regulations.
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FoxIslander
Fox Island...no relation to Fox News
02:08 PM on 09/01/2011
The Republican Party advances it's agenda with this exact method...tell the lie enough times until it becomes truth.
06:38 AM on 09/01/2011
Nothing new here - the ones who talk tough are the gutless wimps who run away at a hundred miles an hour when really threatened.
Cheney is the classic bully - big-mouth and gutless.
The real issue is why did america allow hin to do what he did?
10:24 AM on 09/01/2011
It seems so long ago but the moving clout within the GOP of the period was the emerging power and influence of Neo Cons. They wanted to remake the entire planet. And unfortunately this was made possible by ranks of "the media," napping on the job of "Watchdogs," content to caravan throughout the ciruitry of "power" over substantive and incisive and grueling investigative reporting.
01:57 PM on 09/01/2011
Consolidation of the media and the evisceration of the fairness doctrine....
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GrumpyOldGeek
My micro-bio is empty
04:12 AM on 09/01/2011
The Bard was deceptive?
Who knew?
11:08 PM on 08/31/2011
The problem is the power of the office - it attracts the wrong type of Character. Decentrali­ze... localize..­. Rise up!
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09:03 AM on 09/01/2011
If the office were less powerful, it would simply create a vacuum for another office equally odious.
The offices below need somewhere to pass the buck.
02:01 PM on 09/01/2011
The fault, dear Brutus, is not in our stars,
But in ourselves, that we are underlings."


Julius Caesar (I, ii, 140-141)

We allowed President Bush to be "selected" by the Supreme Court and then stood by during the rigged elections of 2004 when the complicity of Ohio's little black boxes were so instrumental. Shakespearean indeed.
zinxeb
Empathy ends cruelty
10:51 PM on 08/31/2011
King George and his "kingmaker and stringpuller" Tricky Dicky should have been held accountable for getting us into a protracted and unnecessary war with Iraq and also for running our own country into the ground for eight years. Since they weren't prosecuted for their criminal actions, they now feel emboldened to come out from under their rocks and get plenty of media attention with their "poison". Both Bush and Cheney's books would make good toilet paper if they didn't cost so much.
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
Chris1962
NYC
02:05 AM on 09/01/2011
>>>unnecessar­y war with Iraq>>>

Sanctioned by Congress and the U.N.
02:36 AM on 09/01/2011
That Bush and Cheney did a real good job of selling their lies is no justification.
10:32 AM on 09/01/2011
"Since they were not prosecuted......" Why not? How did The Founding Fathers not see the flaw in their structure of "branches of government." True there is The House of Representatives and The Senate and The Presidency, all filled by ELECTIONS at established period of time, TERM LIMITS. When the Justice Department is headed by a presidential appointment, there is an inherent conflict of interest. This president hauled his neighbors from the"hood" of Chicago and installed them throughout his administration now markedly the most incompetent of history. Is it likely the Holder is going to "turn on his own?" The same with the administrations of GW Bush and his Attorney General. Back in history, "The Watergate," which in retrospect was as tame as a "parlor game," it was Martha Mitchell, the wife of US Attorney Mitchell, among the friends, confidants and supporters and defenders of President Nixon that went furiously to "the media;" it was reported he had her rounded up and housed in a hotel with security to keep her there, apparently assisted by "medication."
zinxeb
Empathy ends cruelty
12:35 PM on 09/01/2011
Since I wasn't around when the Founding Fathers "flawed" the structure of "branches of government", I can't give you an answer to that, but each administration has been appointing their own Supreme Court Judges all along. The problem arises when political parties become more radicalized and polarized, and take advantage of an opening in the court to appoint judges that will further their own idealistic agendas, as we saw in the Bush administration.
02:02 PM on 09/01/2011
ANY system can be gamed. But ours has more safeguards than most if we, as active and informed citizens, will make it our business to be vigilant....and therein hangs the tale.
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09:55 PM on 08/31/2011
I have wondered if the plummeting presidential polls in 2002 and 2003, after the 9/11 and 2001 Afghan War opinion spike, caused a group-think-like mentality to start the Iraq War. Action is considered by many humans to be beneficial to inaction, particularly when security is at stake.
http://online.wsj.com/public/resources/documents/info-presapp0605-31.html