Bush at War by Bob Woodward

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(Paperback - Reprint)

  • Pub. Date: July 2003
  • 416pp
  • Sales Rank: 69,721
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    Reader Rating: (33 ratings)

    Detailed Rating: "Absorbing" See All

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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: July 2003
    • Publisher: Simon & Schuster Adult Publishing Group
    • Format: Paperback, 416pp
    • Sales Rank: 69,721

    Synopsis

    Adopting a largely uncritical and almost gossipy tone, Washington Post editor Woodward offers a "behind-the-scenes" narrative of the beginnings of George W. Bush's war making in Afghanistan and elsewhere. Woodward does appear to have been granted unprecedented access to what many consider to be the most secretive administration in American history, but that might leave one wondering how much the author was being managed by his subjects, Bush, Cheney, Powell, Rumsfeld, Rice, and Tenet. Annotation (c)2003 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR

    Publishers Weekly

    Quoting liberally from transcripts of National Security Council meetings and hundreds of interviews with those in the presidential inner circle, including four hours of interviews with Bush himself, the Washington Post assistant managing editor, best-selling author and Watergate muckraker manages to provide a nonpartisan account of the first 100 days of the post September 11 war on terror. While Condoleezza Rice, Colin Powell, President Bush and CIA Director George Tenet are impressive, Donald Rumsfeld and Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz come off as hawkish and reactionary, repeatedly calling for a strike against Iraq in the first days of the conflict while pushing for a more widespread, global war. Woodward does an excellent job of exposing the seat-of-their-pants planning sessions conducted at the highest levels of power and the hectic diplomacy practiced by Powell and Bush in trying to get the air war against Afghanistan off the ground. He also brings to light the divisions among the planners concerning the bombing in Afghanistan, which made little impact until late in the game, when the Taliban lines were finally hit. In addition to recounting the heated arguments about when and how to retaliate against Al Qaeda, Woodward also follows Special Ops agents flown into Afghanistan with millions in payoff money weeks in advance of any other American presence. Living in harsh conditions with little to no support, these "110 CIA officers and 316 Special Forces personnel," in this account, ran the show, and effectively won the war with their intelligence gathering operations. While at times relying a bit too heavily on transcribed conversations, Woodward nonetheless offers one of the first truly insightful and informative accounts of the decision making process in the war on terror. 16 pages of b&w photos. ( Nov.) Copyright 2003 Cahners Business Information.

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    Biography

    A rookie reporter at The Washington Post when he got the call about a break-in at the Watergate in 1972, Bob Woodward has become synonymous with the term "investigative reporter."

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    Customer Reviews

    As Usual Woodward Deliversby Anonymous

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    October 03, 2008: Woodward delivers a spellbounding account of the first days on the War on Terror that was fought with much anticipation and bungling from the White House, CIA, NSA, military on down. I read this book when it first came out and didn't understand the full implications of this books' meanings because of its reporting on the divisions between Powells' State Department and Rusmfeld's DoD. It was remarkable, like wine, that after reading you can tell that time is the only real indicator of truth. In time, we realize these two inevitably conflictual personalities will bungle the worst foreign policy disaster in American history--the Iraq War, and like children, accuse the other of the misfortune on the ground. As the ground war in Afghanistan seemed to be going so miracuously well, we clearly lost our concentration very quickly on this most critical of geopolitical regions who has a way of throwing out foreigners--such as the Soviets, Pakistanis, Mongols, Persians, the list goes on. And it seems we might be next as ISI, that most corrupt of foreign intelligence agencies, will ultimately be the nail in the coffin for the American empire, as they were for the Soviets.

    A Sycophantic Hagiographyby Anonymous

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    April 08, 2006: It's sad to see Bob Woodward sink so low, from honest reporter to sycophant of the rich and powerful. His book is a glorification of a group of inglorious zealots lead by a narcissistic mental lightweight. Woodward?s whitewash is especially ironic given how badly Bush?s ill-conceived war has turned out. Most painful is knowing that the president?s mindless egotism has cost thousands of innocent lives and hundreds of billions of dollars. Worse is the fact that all of this tragic waste could have been avoided had the president ever bothered to pick up a book in his life or at least listen to his own experts. The book entertains like so many trite and wholly fictionalized television dramas, only it?s painful to read when one knows the terrible truth of what has actually unfolded.


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