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Wed 31 Mar, 2004 11:18 am
If Bush thinks he's had trouble with Richard Clarke's book, wait until Bob Woodward's new book comes out next month. Bush ain't seen nothing yet!
---BBB
The New Republic - 3/31/04
BOB WOODWARD'S SECRET PLAN TO SAVE THE COUNTRY:
For years Bob Woodward has looked to the journalistic community like a professional shill--buying incredible access to top officials with the implicit promise of hagiographic treatment in his prose. But it turns out that Woodward was a step ahead of us all along--executing a long-planned strategy of maximizing his influence over American politics, at which point he would cash in his chits for the sake of the republic.
What I have in mind here is Woodward's forthcoming book on the war on terror, which will apparently be highly critical of George W. Bush at a time when Bush can least afford it. Here's how Lloyd Grove sums it up today:
I hear that "Plan of Attack," supersleuth Bob Woodward's still-secret study of President Bush's war on terrorism, will be very bad for the Bush reelection campaign - which is still reeling from gun-toting former terrorism chief Richard A. Clarke's critique of Bush, National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice and other administration figures in "Against All Enemies."
Woodward's book, to be released next month, will receive not only a multipart series in The Washington Post, but also the Mike Wallace treatment on "60 Minutes" April 18 - when I am absolutely confident that the common corporate ownership of CBS and Woodward's publisher, Simon & Schuster, will be mentioned.
Wow. Maybe all those Commanders and Maestros and Bush-at-Wars were worth it after all...
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Plan of Attack
by Bob Woodward (Author)
Amazon.com: Availability: This item has not yet been released. You may order it now and we will ship it to you when it arrives.
The good news just keeps getting better!
Just as a sidenote, BBB please stop typing the topics in ALL-CAPS, like Titus has an unfortunate habit of doing.
It's the title of the article. It's all caps as well. I am guilty of the same.
New word - hagiographic - idealizing its subject, said of a biography.
Bob Woodward is supposedly a "staunch conservative," so the book may not be as anti-Bush as some people might hope. Check out how he admired Bob Dole in this
PBS interview.
Like Clarke, his agenda could be completely reversed today.