Bush White House Slammed by Insider
Former White House Press Secretary Scott McClellan Slams Bush


Former White House Press Secretary Scott McClellan tells all in his new memoir, including that President Bush often cast the truth aside in favor of relying on an aggressive “political propaganda campaign” in order to to sell the Iraq war to the American people. McClellan writes that the president relied on “propaganda” to sell the public on the Iraq war.
It is reported that Bush’s White House consciously made a “decision to turn away from candor and honesty when those qualities were most needed” — at the critical time when the nation was knocking on the door of war. McClellan’s book is titled What Happened: Inside the Bush White House and Washington’s Culture of Deception.
The manner in which Bush managed the Iraq debacle almost guaranteed that the use of force would become the only feasible option. In the permanent campaign era, it was all about manipulating sources of public opinion to the president’s advantage.
Scott McClellan
Former White House Press Secretary
Current Bush press secretary Dana Perino issued a statement that was highly critical of their former colleague. She and other White House aides seemed stunned by the revelations in the book.
“Scott, we now know, is disgruntled about his experience at the White House,” she said. “For those of us who fully supported him, before, during and after he was press secretary, we are puzzled. It is sad – this is not the Scott we knew.” The book provoked strong reactions from former staffers as well.
Another former counter-terrorism adviser who also came out with a book critical of administration policy, Richard Clarke, said he could understand McClellan’s thinking, however.
Iraq: A Serious Strategic Blunder
McClellan states that the Iraq war was and is a “serious strategic blunder,” and that “the Iraq war was not necessary”.
His criticisms are a quite harsh assessment from the man who was at that time the loyal public voice of the White House. McClellan admits that some of his own words from the podium in the White House briefing room turned out to be “badly misguided.” But he says he was sincere at the time. “I fell far short of living up to the kind of public servant I wanted to be.” He calls the media “complicit enablers” in the White House campaign to manipulate public opinion toward the need for war. He harshly criticizes the press for going easy on the administration in the months leading up to the 2003 invasion.
Bush: “Lack of Inquisitiveness”
Of Bush as a boss, McClellan says he was charming and politically skilled, but unwilling to admit mistakes. He also faults Bush for a “lack of inquisitiveness.” Worse yet, Bush was susceptible to his own spin-doctoring. According to McClellan, Bush “convinces himself to believe what suits his needs at the moment.” He also accuses President Bush of not being “open and forthright” about Iraq and of taking a “permanent campaign approach” to governing.
Hurricane Katrina: A Botch Job on Bush’s Watch
The former press secretary also blasted the handling of Hurricane Katrina, saying the White House “spent most of the first week in a state of denial” after the 2005 disaster. “Katrina and the botched federal response to it would largely come to define Bush’s second term,” McClellan wrote.
The Outing of CIA Operative Valerie Plame
The book also addresses the scandal involving the leak of CIA operative Valerie Plame’s identity. McClellan says Karl Rove, President Bush’s senior political adviser, and I. Lewis “Scooter” Libby, the vice president’s chief of staff, weren’t honest with him about their roles in the case. McClellan said he defended Libby and Rove to the press after both men assured him that they weren’t involved in the leak. But testimony from Libby’s trial showed the pair had spoken to reporters about Plame. “I had allowed myself to be deceived into unknowingly passing along a falsehood,” McClellan wrote.
What Happened:
Inside the Bush White House and Washington’s Culture of Deception.
On Sale June 1, 2008
Comments
3 Responses to “Bush White House Slammed by Insider”
Leave a Reply
You must be logged in to post a comment.






What Scott says is what almost all of us, and definitely the world at large (the press forgets this), felt for many years. The news was slanted to favour the rape of Iraq, even the oil we were supposed to steal, went to oil/Bush/Arab supporters. Americans paid from .77 to $4.50 a gallon
How much were the supporters of the nuke Iraq, nuke Iran, nuke Korea, nuke all, red-neck slogan, benefiting from these increases? We must take it back in taxes and windfall profit taxes (as it was intended) and via price fixing laws. But no one in politics has the guts to do it.
Even the present group trying to gain control has no plans to tax all this money and bring it back. Hillary maybe, but will she change? The blacks all abandoned her (with a few token exceptions) making it a black vs. the rest of America issue (not seen by the blind, yet).
And oil will be the prostitute, and people still do not see, energy is not oil, its time is gone. Let us build nukes, with Iran and the rest of the world, and forget oil, go for diesel and all other alternatives, not in 40 yrs. (after the Arab 1970 coup) but immediately ration the oil, force the payment of windfall taxes, and other measures, show that politicians are not all, and always gutless liars, but some have a trace of morality and ethics, left, somewhere in them, and maybe able to flash it now (not just flash themselves into another scandal for Fox news, grace, e news, garbage to get more ratings).
Apparently, upon learning that his trusted aide, former Bush press secretary Scott McClellan had declared the Iraq war as an “unnecessary war”, the cut went deep! You can tell how deep the wound goes just by witnessing the brutal attacks on McClellan as turncoat from the right wing factions.
What Scott McClellen has done is confirm to the president’s war critics, from within Bush’s secretive, nefarious inner circle, that the Bush Administration’s motive in going to war was NOT a clear and present danger of attack on the USA by Iraq (with their incredible, disappearing weapons of mass destruction), but rather to advance Bush’s crusade to foist democracy upon the Middle East, by any means necessary. Actually not bringing “democracy” at all. I really don’t think they give a damn about *that*… What they DO care about is big business. Oil business. Profit over people. Power over us. Control and conquer.
McClellan drew blood, that’s for sure.
Good!
It’s about time these war mongering, mass-murdering assholes bled.
Indeed, we live in interesting times…
seeing both bush’s in the white house was an absolute disaster and 50 years from now we will look back at them and ask ourselves why we let the country get this way.