| Plan of Attack (B. Woodward) |
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| Tuesday, 29 January 2008 | |
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It's been a while that I wanted to read the Bush trilogy that Bob Woodward put together. In three volumes, the celebrated co-reporter of the Watergate affair describes the inner workings of the Bush administration with the kind of depth that only a journalist with access to the original sources can have.
It sounds like President Bush was eager to have this reporting going on. Maybe he was trying to ensure that there was a full account of what had been going on, so that history could judge on its own with full disclosure, instead of relying on opinions of the uninformed. In any case, the trilogy has been heralded as the definitive account of Bush at War, its tag line. I chose to start with Plan of Attack because it handled the most controversial topic: the decision by the Bush administration to go to war against Saddam Hussein's Iraq. Being able to interview the main players directly would certainly allow you to create a picture of what happened that would explain not only why the nation went to war, but how and based on whose input. From the perspective of the casual reader, Plan of Attack has one major downside: it's too detailed. The core information is conveyed in just a hundred pages, and the rest is simply the underlying background material. So if you read the book, get ready to a lot of repetition of core themes. Of course, this level of detail is exactly what you'd expect from a serious reporter, and Plan of Attack is a book of outstanding journalism. From the perspective of the reader interested in knowing how the nation went to war, Plan of Attack gives you two pieces of information you wouldn't otherwise have access to:
If I may add my summary, Bob Woodward's core thesis on the two points above seems to be:
Regardless of whether you supported the war or were against it, you'll find interesting facts in the book. In particular, the tension between the "Veep" and Colin Powell stands out: everybody else is caught in it, and the entire dynamic that led to war can be summarized in the relationship between the two. Woodward points out that for mysterious reasons General Powell always found himself reporting (reluctantly?) to Mr. Cheney, and this fact more than anything else seems to explain why the nation went to war. So, if the book has a hero, it's Colin Powell; if the book has a villain, it's Dick Cheney. All the other players come across as more nuanced. In particular, Bob Woodward portrays a President Bush that is able to put the needs of the Nation ahead of his own ego, that can make decisions based on advice, without being a slave to anyone's opinion. Going to war was evidently a hard choice for President Bush, who had to include into his calculations a lot more than was visible to the eye. Ultimately, Plan of Attack's opinion seems to be that the decision to go to war was made quite early on, and that by the time there were serious doubts about the casus belli, it was too late to give up and let Saddam Hussein have his way. All in all, Plan of Attack is an outstandingly researched, extremely well-written work of journalism - probably the definitive resource for any historian trying to understand what the Iraq War was all about. I recommend it wholeheartedly for its lack of visible bias. |
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