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Politics | 05/29/2008 2:57 pm

Monica Crowley to Scott McClellan: 'Not Cool' to Kiss 'n' Tell With Bush Still in Office

Editor’s Note: Monica Crowley, Ph.D., is a panelist on The McLaughlin Group, the host of the nationally syndicated radio program, "The Monica Crowley Show," and a member of the Council on Foreign Relations.

It used to be, back in the day, that those who served their country in high positions — positions of authority and importance — would honor their offices and the office they ultimately served: the presidency. Even when they may have acted dishonorably in office, they kept the dirty linens to themselves. That’s what was expected of them, and that’s what they did.

They didn’t write kiss ‘n’ tells. They didn’t spill the beans. They didn’t tell tales out of school.

They kept their counsel, and went to their graves with the stories that gentlemen simply did not tell.

Good-bye to all that.

The unspoken rule of political memoirs once was: you can write what you’d like, and you can express disagreements and even once-confidential conversations (provided enough time had elapsed so as not to imperil national security secrets or anyone’s reputation), but you must only do it once the presidency in which you had served had ended. There was to be no memoir writing while the president for whom you had worked was still in office.

George Stephanopoulos was the first high-ranking White House official to publish a tell-all while his president was still in office. All Too Human was a scathing look inside the highly dysfunctional Clinton White House, published nine months before Bill and Hillary backed up the moving van and made off with the White House furniture.

Was it salacious? Yup. Was it delightful? You bet. Was it proper? Not really.

Now a new memoir is hitting the bookshelves, written by former Bush press secretary Scott McClellan. In it, he blasts the president for relying on "propaganda" to sell the Iraq war, which he now deems "unnecessary." He attacks the vice president and Secretary Condi Rice for incompetence and arrogance, and goes after the president for being stubbornly attached to certain positions.

Some of these criticisms may have merit. The events we are in the midst of now will one day be history, and the history of the administration will be looked at from many angles and with many sets of eyes.

But for someone who was once the president’s confidante, someone he knew and trusted, someone who gave him the opportunity of a lifetime, to write a tell-all while that history is still being made is not cool. There will be plenty of memoirs coming out of the Bush administration. Most will be cover-your-tushy affairs, as memoirs often are. Some will paint a glossy picture. Some will be critical. But their timing is crucial.

McClellan could have published this book in eight months, when Bush was on his way out the door. But then, he wouldn’t have sold as many books. Publishing now may make him a bit wealthier, but it’s simply not cool to do to your former boss and your president. Not cool at all.

273 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment

Everyone--into the Rose Garden
Susan McDougal went to jail for 18 months because she refused to lie about the Clintons and Ken Starr abused his power like a modern-day Torquemada, threw her in jail for ‘contempt’ trying to psychologically break her including locking her in a glass cell devoid of any sound, lit 24/7, and under guard, with her view onto the mental ward where the inmates are housed worse than animals. She wrote about her experience in “The Woman Who Refused to Talk” —-an impossible to believe story except that she has total credibility. The GREAT Helen Thomas wrote the forward to her book. Here’s is the description of her captivity FOR REFUSING TO LIE FOR KEN STARR who she said regarded her as ‘road kill’ in his quest to ruin Clinton because he hated everything he stands for and saw McDoughal as a way to bring him down: “It was complete glass, lit 24 hours a day. And there’s a single guard tower that looks over all the cells. And so no one ever comes by, but the guard can see everything from the tower. And most of the people on that block were there for being mentally ill. And the things that you could see were just unimaginable, unbelievable. It’s one reason that I am really — you can’t say glad, but you can say fortunate — that I was able to see that, because that’s one of the things I really talk about when I go around the country is how the mentally ill are treated in prison.” “They throw a sheet over their heads and knock them into the wall and knock them unconscious, or spray them with gas, because they’re mentally ill and they don’t follow orders and do what they’re told. And these people are just held in the most horrible conditions — naked, starving; they don’t feed themselves. The prison staff goes in with these rubber suits and hoses and washes the feces and urine out of the cells, where these people are housed like animals.” Here’s her entire interview on GOP “justice” at work: http://www.buzzflash.com/interviews/03/02/14_McDougal.html BUZZFLASH: And that’s basically all you had to do.”
By Everyone--into the Rose Garden on 06/01/2008 2:20 pm
Buh- Bye
I don’t really care who was and is lying about private sexual matters. That’s salacious, invasive nosiness and none of anybody’s dang business. I care about elected leaders who lie about yellow cake and centrifuges and provide false reasons to invade a sovereign nation, killing thousands of innocent citizens of that land and thousands of our brave soldiers. Those are the lies worth caring about. Not who did who and when and where and how and in which dress and whether it betrayed a marriage. That’s all an opportunistic smoke screen to stir up busybodies and deflect attention from the bigger picture - the more important world and life changing events. Outing a CIA operative as payback for voicing disagreement with an administration’s policies to fabricate justification for war is downright treason IMHO. Certainly not worthy of a Presidential pardon. The Nixon administration (which unsurprisingly Cheney and Rumsfeld were also involved with) had a trail of dirty tricks leading right up to the highest levels… just like this administration, according to recent revelations.
By Buh- Bye on 06/01/2008 8:30 pm
Everyone--into the Rose Garden
The Nixon administration (which unsurprisingly Cheney and Rumsfeld were also involved with.” Yes, and so was, Karl Rove, learning his dirty tricks from the master, Lee Attwater, and Richard Armitage. Those found guilty of Watergate crimes (including the Attorney General John Mitchell) were Nixon’s campaign aide Herbert Porter. Nixon’s personal lawyer Herbert Kalmbach. Haldeman, Ehrlichman, Charles Colson, Gordon C. Strachan, Robert Mardian, Kenneth Parkinson, WH Counsel John Dean, Jeb Magruder and others. The grand jury also secretly named Nixon as an unindicted co-conspirator. The CIA was also implicated. At the time Dick Cheney was a Congressman—livid that his hero Nixon was forced to resign. And Hillary Clinton was one of the attorneys working for the prosecution. In 2004, Nixon White House Counsel, John Dean, wrote a book about the current Bush-Cheney Administration, “Worse than Watergate,” stating they should be impeached. In the earlier Reagan-Bush administrations (and many directly or tangentially involved in GWB’s) were Dick Cheney, Rumsfeld, Poindexter, Andrew Card, James Baker, Colin Powell , George Schultz; and those indicted for the Iran Contra crimes, DoD Sec. Caspar Weinberger, National Security Adviser Robert C. McFarlane, former Assistant Secretary of State Elliott Abrams; and Alan D. Fiers, Jr., Clair E. George, Duane R. Clarridge, Felix Rodriguez [all CIA] plus Oliver North, were pardoned on Christmas Eve, 1992, before Weinberger was scheduled to stand trial and George Bush, Sr. would turn over the presidency to Bill Clinton. William Casey, CIA director and former Reagan campaign manager died of a brain tumor before he could reveal much, but Oliver North testified he took most of his orders from Casey. The special counsel, Lawrence Walsh, stated that Reagan and Bush, Sr. had broken laws but he was reluctant to indict them. Against the laws of the US Constitution, International Laws, and Congress, the Reagan administration conspired to sell arms to our enemy Iran [that Reagan called a terrorist country] in its 7-year war against Iraq [we also armed Iraq]. Funds from the arms sales to our enemy funded Reagan-Bush’s secret illegal war to overthrow the democratic Nicaragua government for the benefit of US corporate interests. Iran-Contra: In 1981, days after taking office, Reagan ended aid to Nicaragua, and committed to regrouping the Nicaraguan National Guard and the CIA backed and funded ‘Contras’ to fight against the democratically elected Sandinista government that’d rid their country of the generations of Somoza family dictatorship installed and supported by the US since the 1930s. Except for the US, most countries in the Americas and Europe cut ties with the Somoa regime. The US-backed Contra wars against the Nicaraguan people was to protect the economic interests of US oil, sugar and fruit cartels to rape Nicaraguan resources continued. 50,000 Nicaraguans were disappeared, brutally tortured, raped, and killed, another 50,000 made refugees. Reagan constructed bases for Contras in Honduras and Costa Rica. The civil war between the Contras and Sandinistas intensified after Daniel Ortega (current Nicaraguan President, reelected in 2006) won fair elections in 1984. In 1985, the US implemented a full economic blockade, including food and medicine. Tens of thousands of civilians died. Ortega called for elections to be held in 1990, and Violete Barrios de Chamorro became the first woman head of state in Central America in 1990. The US ended the embargo, but the country was demolished. Chamorro’s replacement was a Arnoldo Aleman, voted one of the world’s 10 most corrupt politicians by the UN Human Rights Subcommission. Aleman stole $100 million from the government. Enrique Bolanos took office in 2001 and put Aleman in jail. In 2006 Daniel Ortega was re-elected. The nation of just 5.6 million (3M less that NYC) and with a GNP of $15.8B (little more annually than what the US is wasting each month in Iraq) is still struggling from the devastation of (mostly US-backed) civil wars, Hurricaine Mitch that killed 4,000 and wrecked 70% of the infrastructure, plus the rampant thefts under Aleman.
By Everyone--into the Rose Garden on 06/02/2008 3:26 am
Everyone--into the Rose Garden
Here’s Obama speeching in 2002 in several venues saying, he isn’t necessarily opposed to war in some situations—he opposes a DUMB WAR. HE COULDN”T HAVE BEEN ANY CLEARERANY MORE PUBLICAND HE WAS RIGHT ON THE MOST IMPORTANT ISSUE OF OUR TIME. SENATOR CHUCK HAGEL (R) said the IRAQ DEBACLE IS ONE OF THE 5 GREATEST BLUNDERS IN HISTORY—- http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VtDJqa16-G8&feature=related So has the Pentagon Institute in its report. All things we all predicted in 2002/3. HERE IS THE GREAT (AND ONLY ONE LEFT) REPUBLICAN SENATOR CHUCK HAGEL: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2ZCeUhLkGto&feature=related http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QDUfmG8St2s Can’t wait to read his book…and wish Obama would pick him, or Wesley Clark as VP. Here’s Chuck Hagel again being smart and putting together thoughts and words that the entire Bush cabal can’t: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FIVqyrPrikw&feature=related Here’s Chuck Hagel going after Condi Rice about what the Bush owe our troops and their families…and that what the Bush Admin is doing is morally and tactically WRONG. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3wlMxxyKztw&feature=related Rice is the only Sec of State with her name on a Chevron oil tanker and she was on the board. No conflict of interests there. She should stick with the piano playing instead of screwing up the world. As former asst Sec of Treasury Paul Craig Roberts (R) said, having sat in many cabinet meetings, she’s as dumb as they get.
By Everyone--into the Rose Garden on 05/31/2008 4:29 pm
Elizabeth Bennett
Slightly off topic, but Barack Obama just resigned from his church! I guess he was tired of the pastors there invading his campaign. Just as well, as that church is too far from the White House for a decent weekly commute.
By Elizabeth Bennett on 05/31/2008 6:30 pm
eleanor roche
Elizabeth— Enjoyed our exchange today—you are a class act! I was working in the office all day and now have to get back to my kids—and rescue the cats! Have a great weekend! Eleanor
By eleanor roche on 05/31/2008 7:07 pm
Elizabeth Bennett
I enjoyed it too! You have a great weekend yourself! Elizabeth
By Elizabeth Bennett on 05/31/2008 7:24 pm
Buh- Bye
lol
By Buh- Bye on 06/01/2008 8:40 pm
beth willis
Now that’s the way to end a heated, informative political exchange. Brava, Eleanor and Elizabeth. Perhaps some of us do know what courage is and what it is not. Peace and grace
By beth willis on 05/31/2008 8:33 pm
Liza D 08 .... beta
Three hours to read this blog and posts …. countless links and many, many, many wonderful exchanges and couple of not so wonderful posts. Thank you! :)
By Liza D 08 .... beta on 05/31/2008 10:19 pm
Everyone--into the Rose Garden
And some of us are NOT interested in flat earthers who think there is no global warming and support mass murdering dimwits. So save your sanctimony on how to behave. “Perhaps some of us do know what courage is and what it is not.” Really? Well let’s see your list of courageous actions you’ve taken over the last seven years to prevent the illegal, immoral invasion of Iraq based on lies to profit Halliburton et al, and what you’ve done persistently to get the perpetrators punished, and the troops home. Because unless it is a VERY substantial list, I am not interested in your persistent Ms Manners preaching…very tiresome.
By Everyone--into the Rose Garden on 05/31/2008 10:31 pm
Liza D 08 .... beta
Ms. Rose, I am sure that my list of front line activities would pale in comparison to your noble efforts. I pick my battles too …. autism, failing school system, my day to day existence dealing with poverty and low paying jobs amidst high cost of food and gas prices, raising a quality daughter in the midst of sub par socio and economic conditions … just to name a few of little hobbies. You know Rosie, I am sure you are in distinguished company being the former neighbor of Aianna Huffington. I don’t think anyone over in your neck of the woods is worried about “whats for dinner?”. And another thing … where I come from name dropping is ever so rude. Well, then again, you clearly are not interested in manners. Also, I am very worried about you Rose, maybe you need to give it a rest.
By Liza D 08 .... beta on 06/01/2008 12:29 am
Everyone--into the Rose Garden
Liza-My post wasn’t directed to you so you know….back to the jujubees….and you know what they say about become who ass—-ume.
By Everyone--into the Rose Garden on 06/01/2008 3:33 am
Everyone--into the Rose Garden
that’s people who assume….
By Everyone--into the Rose Garden on 06/01/2008 3:36 am
beth willis
Have a wonderful weekend, all. Being able to express one’s ideas and innermost question about the moral integrity of our country in both the distant past and the immediate future without concern for judgmental thoughts or verbal retribution by fellow posters is such an empowering and transforming exercise. You know, to do otherwise would be like stifling one another in a closed environment rampant with fear and condescension, almost like, well, the present administration. Peace and grace
By beth willis on 05/31/2008 10:54 pm