All over the conservative
blogosphere, people are
ripping into former White House Press Secretary Scott
McClellan, who was markedly ineffective in his job, for his new
book taking all sorts of nasty shots at President Bush and others
in the White House.
Those criticisms are valid: It really does show a decided lack
of class for McClellan to knife Bush in the back like that when
Bush did so much for him, etc.
But there is a point at which one must separate the issue of
McClellan's classiness from that of his truthfulness and the
accuracy of his observations and analysis. And here, at very first
glance, McClellan actually fares well and does a service for
history, because, unfortunately, much of what he writes rings true.
I am basing this ONLY on the
account in today's Washington Post, so I reserve the right to
revise and extend these remarks, but every one of the following
parts of the Post summation of McClellan's book confirms very much
of what seem to be highly justifiable criticisms of the president.
To wit: "He describes Bush as demonstrating a 'lack of
inquisitiveness.'"
"Bush is depicted as an out-of-touch leader, operating in a
political bubble, who has stubbornly refused to admit mistakes.
McClellan defends the president's intellect...but casts him as
unwilling or unable to be reflective about his job. 'A more
self-confident executive would be more willing to acknowledge
failure, to trust people's ability to forgive, those who seek
redemption for mistakes and show a readiness to change.'"
"'...never explaining, never apologizing, never retreating.
Unfortunately, that strategy also had less justifiable
repercussions: never reflecting, never reconsidering, never
compromising.'"
"He says the White House's reaction to Katrina was more than
just a public relations disaster, calling it 'a failure of
imagination and initiative' and the result of an administration
that 'let events control us.'"
I repeat, every one of these observations, both within the
direct quotes from McClellan's book and the portions summed up and
paraphrased by the Post, absolutely match observations that I and
many others have made for the past eight years.
After all, a backstabbing SOB can be right even in the course of
his backstabbing.