Elusive Victories_ The American Presidency at War-Oxford University Press (2012)

(Axel Boer) #1

414 notes to pages 277‒281



  1. Rose, How Wars End , 242. On the early warnings to the incoming Bush
    administration of the al-Qaeda threat, see Woodward, Bush at War , 34–35.

  2. Ricks, Fiasco , 27–28.

  3. Gordon and Trainor, Cobra II , 13; Rose, How Wars End , 257.

  4. Gordon and Trainor, Cobra II , 16; Ricks, Fiasco , 30–31; Woodward, Bush
    at War , 60, 83–85.

  5. Woodward, Bush at War , 99.

  6. For a full account from the administration’s perspective, see Woodward,
    Bush at War.

  7. Rose, How Wars End , 268–69.

  8. Rose, How Wars End , 270.

  9. Ricks, Fiasco , 32–33; Rose, How Wars End , 243.

  10. As journalist Th omas Ricks puts it, the decision to go to war with Iraq
    was made “more through drift than through any one meeting.” Ricks, Fi-
    asco , 58. See similarly John P. Burke, “Condoleezza Rice as NSC Advisor:
    A Case Study of the Honest Broker Role,” Presidential Studies Quarterly 35
    (3) (September 2005): 554–75, at 559 ; James P. Pfi ff ner, “Decision Making
    in the Bush White House,” Presidential Studies Quarterly 39 (2) (June
    2009): 363–84, at 375–76.

  11. Ricks, Fiasco , 48–49; Rose, How Wars End , 243.

  12. Burke, “Condoleezza Rice as NSC Advisor,” 560, 563.

  13. Even now, after multiple books and memoirs, the post-9/11 Bush
    administration fi xation on Iraq remains “a bit mysterious.” Rose, How
    Wars End , 252–53. On the heightened sensitivity to any and all possi-
    bilities of another terrorist attack, see Ron Suskind, Th e One Percent
    Doctrine: Deep Inside America’s Pursuit of Its Enemies Since 9/11
    (New York: Simon and Schuster, 2006).

  14. Gordon and Trainor, Cobra II , 72–73.

  15. Rose, How Wars End , 270–71. Even those within the administration
    who had earlier espoused a realist perspective, such as Rice and Cheney,
    adapted to the new, more permissive setting. Hess, Presidential Decisions
    for War , 2nd ed., 223; Ricks, Fiasco , 47–48.

  16. Peter W. Galbraith, Th e End of Iraq: How American Incompetence Created
    a War without End (New York: Simon and Schuster, 2006, 2007), 83–84.

  17. Gordon and Trainor, Cobra II , 64.

  18. James Dobbins, “Who Lost Iraq? Lessons from the Debacle,” Foreign
    Aff airs 86 (5) (September–October 2007): 61–74, at 66.

  19. Burke, “Condoleezza Rice as NSC Advisor,” 554–55, 560.

  20. Many have commented on Cheney’s important role and alleged he
    exercised undue infl uence over the president. It seems more reasonable to
    assume the vice president tended to echo and thus reinforce the presi-
    dent’s own views. David Mitchell and Tansa George Massoud, “Anatomy
    of Failure: Bush’s Decision-Making Process and the Iraq War,” Foreign
    Policy Analysis 5 (2009): 265–86, at 274.

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