From Bush to Trump, the Hard
Left-Deep State Alliance Endures
Afuture American history exam
will ask students to recall a U.S. president who relied heavily on the
political intelligence-gathering and counsel of one or more of his adult
children. This president bypassed the foreign policy and diplomatic bureaucracy
and practiced a notably personal style of international dealmaking. He also
invested what some considered an inordinate amount of trust in his direct
relationship with a controversial Saudi Arabian sheikh and the strategic
importance of the Desert Kingdom’s oil resources.
One acceptable answer would be Franklin Roosevelt. The White House
during his era had no one styled “chief of staff.” Jefferson’s White House with
Meriwether Lewis, and Lincoln’s with John Hay, had top aides known as “private
secretary” or a similar title. For part of FDR’s presidency, his de
facto chief of staff was his eldest son James, snarkily described by
Henry Luce’s Time magazine in 1938 as the “Assistant President
of the United States.”
FDR famously conducted direct diplomacy with Churchill and Stalin
to guide the Allies to victory over Imperial Japan and Nazi Germany. His
personal chemistry and understandings with the British statesman and the Soviet
dictator were essential both to the war’s success and to negotiating the tragic
era of Soviet domination of Eastern Europe following the war.
After the fateful February 1945 summit with Churchill and Stalin
in Yalta, Roosevelt flew from the Crimea to the Suez Canal, where the
Navy’s U.S.S. Quincy served as his floating Oval Office. There
he met with the founder of the current Saudi Arabian dynasty, King Abdulaziz
ibn Saud. The Saudi monarch and FDR made an agreement—still in force
today—providing U.S. security assurances to Saudi Arabia in exchange for access
to the kingdom’s abundant oil resources.
Of course, FDR was probably not the president most readers had in
mind. The answer that probably came first to mind is Donald Trump. Anyone who
knows anything about the politics of the moment is familiar with the diplomatic
and White House staff preeminence of Jared Kushner and his wife Ivanka Trump.
The first son-in-law, a New York City real estate magnate in his own right, was
indispensable in negotiating a new United States-Mexico-Canada agreement on
trade. He also is the principal interlocutor between the Trump Administration
and Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman bin Abdulaziz, a grandson
of FDR’s counterpart.
Yet another correct answer, and a timely one this week, is George
Herbert Walker Bush.
Fascinating Parallels—and a Story Never Before Told
As much as the Republican NeverTrump faction, in concert with the Democrats, wants us to think otherwise, there are important similarities between the context, goals, and methods of the Bush 41 White House and those of Donald Trump’s administration.
As much as the Republican NeverTrump faction, in concert with the Democrats, wants us to think otherwise, there are important similarities between the context, goals, and methods of the Bush 41 White House and those of Donald Trump’s administration.
Like Trump, the Bushes trust blood relatives above all others.
During the 1988 and 1992 campaigns, Jeb Bush led the family’s Florida
organization. He also was an essential advisor to his father on many matters of
policy, notably U.S.-Latin American relations.
And speaking of the Bush family, during the 1988 campaign I paid a
brief visit to a tiny, closet-sized office with army-surplus or worse
furnishings in the then-decrepit old Woodward Building on Washington’s 15th
street—low-budget real estate rented to house the Bush presidential campaign
headquarters. There I had a direct interaction with an intense, scowling
42-year-old entrusted with what might be called the counterintelligence
function of the Bush operation. This is a story I’ve never made public before,
but now that all of the older generation of protagonists have died, I’ll do so.
A Republican fundraiser of my acquaintance arranged and brought me
to the meeting. At the time I was working as a Reagan appointee in the State
Department for that building’s strongest advocate of President Reagan’s
Strategic Defense Initiative, retired General Edward Rowny. Like Lincoln,
Reagan had a national security cabinet of rivals. Rowny’s principal rival was
the wealthy, urbane Paul Nitze, a Cold War Democrat who had been an architect
of the reorganization of the U.S. national security bureaucracy and the
containment strategy under President Truman. He was the crème de la
crème of Washington High Society.
A Cold War Democrat critic of President Jimmy Carter’s failed SALT
II arms control treaty with the Soviets, Nitze accepted an appointment at the
beginning of the Reagan Administration, in parallel with Rowny, as a senior
negotiator and advisor.
By 1988, Nitze was constantly to the left of Rowny’s policy
positions, which were in line with those of Defense Secretary Caspar
Weinberger. Nitze wanted to make more concessions to the Soviets, and he
disconcerted missile defense stalwarts with hints he kept dropping that SDI
perhaps could be negotiated away as a bargaining chip.
One day a fellow staff member of mine reported he had attended,
not as a partisan but as a foreign policy professional, a public speech in
Washington on national security policy by Democratic nominee Michael Dukakis.
He reported that Nitze—once and always a Democrat—was at the front of the
audience applauding Dukakis enthusiastically. Nitze was at that time a serving
ambassador-at-large in the Reagan-Bush administration.
With Rowny’s permission, I looked for a way to get this piece of
information to the Bush campaign. Within very short order, I was escorted into
the cramped little office in the Woodward Building. There sat a not very
friendly young man who, maybe just because the room was so small, did not rise
from his chair. His name was George W. Bush. I stood there for a moment and
passed along my tidbit. His eyes, already intense, narrowed.
“Is that right?” he glowered.
“Yes, sir,” I said.
He thanked me and I walked back out to 15th Street.
A few months later, following Bush’s election victory over
Dukakis, Rowny was one of the few Reagan arms control experts asked to remain
in post under the new president. Nitze was not. (It came to pass that Rowny’s
counsel was never valued by President Bush or Secretary of State Baker as it
had been by President Reagan, and Rowny resigned out of frustration after a
year and a half of trying to make the relationship work.)
The point of the story, anyway, is to show how remarkably similar
have been the roles of Jimmy Roosevelt, “George Junior” Bush, and Jared
Kushner. Resented by the career bureaucracy as well as by political people who
had not been chosen by God to be born or married into presidential families,
each of these men has been a vital, implicitly trustworthy advisor to his paterfamilias.
Administrations Come and Go—Deep State Enmity Lasts Forever
Today it is especially timely to consider some parallels between the presidencies of George H. W. Bush and Donald Trump.
Today it is especially timely to consider some parallels between the presidencies of George H. W. Bush and Donald Trump.
While the genteel elder Bush is rightly remembered for a much
closer affinity with the elite “Establishment” than the bombastic, purposefully
disruptive Trump, it’s almost uncanny how similar were some of their
confrontations against elements of what now might be called the “hard left” and
the “deep state.”
Trump today is undermined by the collaboration of criminal leakers
from within the intelligence and law enforcement agencies. The Steele dossier
and the roles in that of McCabe, Strzok, Lisa Page, et al., is a prominent
example. Another is the selective leaking of CIA reports on the killing of a
Saudi intelligence agent/sometime writer and broadcaster for Saudi
state-controlled media, Jamal
Khashoggi. Trump and his defenders are rightly outraged by the illegal
leaks and the twisted political purposes to which they have been employed.
What perhaps is forgotten is how besieged President George H. W.
Bush was by leaks and politicized efforts to bring about his impeachment at the
behest of some of his foreign policy foes. As one who worked on the White House
staff in 1991 and 1992, I can state that the president’s top lawyers at that
time were extremely concerned about a deep state effort to impeach President
George Bush for his role as vice president in the Reagan administration’s
Iran-Contra affair. Reagan-era special prosecutor Lawrence Walsh was still at
work as Bush’s presidential term came to a close—shades of Donald Trump’s
remark to the New York Post last week about the probe he is
facing, “Mueller would like it to go for the rest of his life.”
Senior Bush aides were deathly afraid he might face impeachment
proceedings had he been re-elected in 1992. Lawrence Walsh really did want his
investigation to go on for the rest of his life.
Then as now, an ironclad alliance of the Washington Post,
New York Times and other establishment media with leftist Democrats on
Capitol Hill and eager leakers and collaborators within the national security
agencies was gunning to destroy the presidency of a Republican president.
So nefarious is this cabal that not even Bush’s own sterling
establishment and deep state credentials—including Yale, Skull and Bones, and
former directorship of the CIA—immunized him from their vendetta. Bush had
committed the unforgivable sin of serving as Reagan’s vice president and
supporting Reagan’s efforts to roll back Marxist regimes and guerrilla
movements in Latin America.
Deep State Eats Its Own
When the deep state cross-breeds with the hard left, the deep state devours its own—unless their loyalty is to the hard left.
When the deep state cross-breeds with the hard left, the deep state devours its own—unless their loyalty is to the hard left.
One of the speeches I wrote for President Bush during my time on
the White House staff was for the annual dinner of Veterans of the Office of
Strategic Services, the World War II predecessor to the CIA. The president
added some very strong, personal words to the draft I had prepared.
I never would have dared to draft language as forceful as the
words the president added to the speech; such words never would have been
cleared by the bureaucracy.
In President Bush’s own words: “…we will show no tolerance for
those who leak secrets that protect our intelligence professionals’ lives. I
was only out at Langley a short time. I want to relate something to you because
few moments for me have been more painful than the occasion I had just before I
became DCI, to meet with the son of Richard Welch, a CIA station chief who had
been murdered by left-wing terrorists after his name and position had been
disclosed to the press. What was I to say to this young man? Why has his father
died? So that a reckless ideologue could sell more books, Philip Agee’s Counterspy having
blown Richard Welch’s cover? I don’t care how long I live, I will never forgive
Philip Agee and those like him who wantonly sacrifice the lives of intelligence
officers who loyally serve their country.”
Reflect upon the phrase from the last sentence: “. . . and
those like him.”
Those like Philip Agee and his publishers are, today, the CIA
leakers and their friends at the Washington Postwho propagate their
version of how the killing of Jamal Khashoggi came about. Their pretense of
sorrow over Khashoggi’s death is phony and cynical. How many covers have they
blown? Just imagine the “sources and methods” compromised, and the human beings
whose names we’ll never know who will be tortured to death in the exquisite
Middle Eastern fashion, because of these comfortable, criminal Langley leakers.
The enduring presence of Saudi Arabia near the center of U.S.
national security concerns is another thread connecting the late President Bush
with President Trump, and both of them with Franklin Roosevelt.
Bush was committed to the Saudi security relationship; it was a
prime motive for America’s war to expel Saddam Hussein from Kuwait, because
without expulsion Saddam posed an imminent threat to invade Saudi Arabia. The
relationship was built upon careful and constant communication, face to face,
between Bush and the ostentatious Saudi Ambassador in Washington at the time,
Prince Bandar bin Sultan, a cousin of today’s Crown Prince Mohammed. That is
how one does business with Riyadh. It is not a government of civil servants.
A week before Bush’s speech in October 1991 to the OSS veterans,
the Senate confirmed Clarence Thomas as an associate justice of the Supreme
Court. The morning after the OSS veterans’ dinner, Bush spoke to a gathering of
the American
Society for Public Administration.
He devoted great attention in the latter speech to the deformation
of the Clarence Thomas hearings, through “outrageous” leaks of allegations of
sexual misconduct, from “what should have been a confidential investigation
into what many people who wrote me described as ‘a circus’ and ‘a travesty.’”
The president said, “The Senate should immediately appoint a
special counsel to find out who leaked what and for what reasons . . . .
Frankly, the American people just will not understand it if the Senate fails to
bring the leaker or leakers to justice.”
That was 27 years ago. The grinning Senate Democrat who chaired
the Clarence Thomas hearings, a man named Joe Biden, never brought the leakers
to justice. Nor, for those with shorter memories, has justice caught up with
leakers on Senator Dianne Feinstein’s team since a few months ago when they
leaked confidential, uncorroborated accusations of sexual misconduct by Brett
Kavanaugh.
An Opportunity for Grace and Illumination
Among ordinary citizens, there’s a great continuum from the coalition that elected the Reagan-Bush ticket in 1980 to the Trump-Pence ticket in 2016. Millions and millions of the same people—Republicans, independents and conservative-leaning Democrats—voted for the winning presidential candidates in 1980, 1984, 1988, 2000, 2004 and 2016.
Among ordinary citizens, there’s a great continuum from the coalition that elected the Reagan-Bush ticket in 1980 to the Trump-Pence ticket in 2016. Millions and millions of the same people—Republicans, independents and conservative-leaning Democrats—voted for the winning presidential candidates in 1980, 1984, 1988, 2000, 2004 and 2016.
There’s remarkable continuity of goals and tactics of the hard
left-deep state alliance over the past three decades.
A critical difference today is the existence of the NeverTrump
Republican faction. NeverTrump Republicans are few in number—insignificant at
the ballot box. But they have outsized power and prestige in Washington, D.C.’s
“permanent village.” Some Bushies, and most neoconservatives, are in the
NeverTrump camp.
It’s evident that Bushies and MAGA people disdain one another. For
true Bushies, this is something bred in the bone, but it is mostly a matter of
manners. Neoconservative NeverTrumpers are power-hungry ideologues. They make
extravagant displays of their supposed moral revulsion at Trump, without the
decency and sincerity of the always-in-good-taste Bushies.
I don’t hold out much hope for the power-hungry ideologues to have
a change of heart. But I do pray that the passing of George H.W. Bush might
become a moment of grace and illumination for those Bushies who now oppose
Trump.
It’s in the Bushies’ interest—not to mention the nation’s—that
they overcome their heartburn about the indelicate New Yorker who currently occupies
their genteel hero’s old Oval Office. They should put aside their differences
with the Trump administration. They should recognize that the forces that
sought to destroy Clarence Thomas and Brett Kavanaugh are the same, and their
playbook is the same.
The deep state-hard left combination that aims to impeach Trump
also was implacable in its efforts to impeach George H.W. Bush, and, for that
matter, to impeach Ronald Reagan, Dick Cheney, and George W. Bush.
Those who revered George H.W. Bush, those who saw what was best in
that good, patriotic public servant and statesman, have a chance now to honor
his memory and complete some of his unfinished business. Would they like to
vindicate Bush’s deeply felt outrage regarding the leakers who caused Richard Welch’s
murder and tried to destroy Clarence Thomas? To do so they’ll need to make
common cause with Donald Trump and the rambunctious MAGA movement.
The deep state/hard left cabal is getting uglier and more powerful
by the day. Moderate-to-conservative America needs the brains, breeding, and
decency of the Bushies for the upcoming confrontations.
Democrats spit on Trump's
'end the shutdown' olive branch
Last month, House speaker Nancy Pelosi told reporters that President Trump had to re-open the
government before Democrats would engage in any negotiations over border
security. Subsequently, President Trump announced a three-week temporary end to the partial
government shutdown that did not include funding for a border
wall. In doing so, he put country over politics and put the onus on
the Democrats to negotiate in good faith. Despite the president's
good-faith effort to reach across the political aisle, congressional Democrats
failed miserably, acted in bad faith, and seriously undermined their
credibility.
When President Trump re-opened the
government, Democrats had the opportunity to work in a bi-partisan manner so as
to adequately fund (or at least negotiate) the president's border wall and
border security. Rather than doing so, "Senate Democrats
introduced legislation on Monday to prevent President
Trumpfrom using military
and disaster relief funds to construct the U.S.-Mexico border wall should
he declare a national emergency," according to The Hill.
In other words, not only did congressional
Democrats fail to negotiate funding for the border (and border security), as
Pelosi indicated, but they also blatantly (albeit poorly) attempted to
circumvent the president's power under the National Emergency
Act. For example, Section
2808 "permits
the Secretary of Defense to undertake military construction projects, and to
authorize the Secretaries of the military departments to undertake military
construction projects[.] ... [S]uch projects may be taken only within the total
amount of funds that have been appropriated for military
construction." Moreover, in an L.A. Times article, Elizabeth Goitein, a scholar at the Brennan Center
at NYU, stated:
[T]he federal
law that applies to the Defense Department includes a special provision on
"construction authority in the event of a declaration of war or national
emergency." It says that in the event of war or the "declaration
by the president of a national emergency ... that requires use of the armed
forces, the secretary of Defense, without regard to any other provision of law,
may undertake military construction projects ... not otherwise authorized by
law."
Therefore, assuming that this legislation
fails, which is highly likely, Senate Democrats will probably resort to the
courts to address this issue. (There is also the question of whether
the president's decision to declare a national emergency is a "political question,"
in which case the courts will not interfere.) Regardless of whether
they decide to involve the courts, it is outrageous and shameful that
congressional Democrats' offer to negotiate was seemingly nothing more than a
ruse to stymie the president by refusing to fund the wall and attempting
to deprive him of his rights under the National Emergency Act.
Additionally, this outrageous piece of
legislation and the bad-faith negotiation tactics utilized by some
congressional Democrats have further eroded their credibility. More
importantly, they have bolstered people's doubts about whether Democrats truly
want to work with the president (and Republicans) or whether their real goal is
to oppose, attack, and defeat the president at all costs.
Chuck Schumer's recent remarks about the
president and his State of the Union address perfectly exemplify this
point. According to The Hill, Schumer stated, "Knowing this president, he will then make
some bold new promises and not even make an attempt to fulfill
them." "The man has so little integrity that a promise
that he makes at the State of the Union means nothing the next
morning." Schumer made these critical and offensive remarks
before he had even seen the president's speech. Wouldn't it have
been more appropriate to comment after reviewing the speech?
President Trump showed true leadership
when he temporarily re-opened the government. In doing so, he left
congressional Democrats with two choices. They can either agree to
fund the wall or they can allow partisan politics, greed, and bad faith to
dictate their behavior. Sadly, it appears that congressional
Democrats have chosen the latter path. Time will tell what impact
this will have on the country.
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