Former President George H. W. Bush has ignited Republican infighting by alleging in an upcoming biography that former Vice President Dick Cheney formed his “own empire” within the White House and evolved into an “iron-ass” on foreign policy while serving in George W. Bush’s administration.
According to The New York Times, the 41st president is highly critical of Cheney and former Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld in the book, with the elder Bush slamming both men for having “served the president badly.” Bush has particularly harsh words for Cheney, who he says for the past 15 years has barely resembled the man who once served as his secretary of defense.
“He just became very hard-line and very different from the Dick Cheney I knew and worked with,” Bush told his biographer, Jon Meacham. “Just iron-ass. His seeming knuckling under to the real hard-charging guys who want to fight about everything, use force to get our way in the Middle East.”
Cheney told Meacham that the former president’s comments were “fascinating,” the Times reports, adding that he “never heard any for this from 41. He would sometimes stick his head in and we’rd talk, but he never indicated anything like this.”
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Rumsfeld was far less tactful with his take on the analysis. “Bush 41 is getting up in years and misjudges Bush 43, who I found made his own decisions,” the former defense secretary told NBC News. In the book, the elder Bush says Rumsfeld has a “lack of humility” and is “arrogant,” statements Sen. John McCain agreed with during an appearance on MSNBC with Andrea Mitchell on Thursday.
McCain called Rumsfeld’s reference to Bush’s age “very regrettable” and said that “one thing about Bush 41 as we — time passes, we appreciate him and more, not only for — as president of United States, but being such a wonderful, decent man. A 19-year-old who was shot down in — just a lovely, lovely man. And to say that of course, is — frankly authenticates the comments are made [in the book] about Donald Rumsfeld.”
There’s long been no love lost between McCain and Rumsfeld. The Arizona Republican was highly critical of Rumsfeld’s leadership during the height of the Iraq War and in 2007 said he would “go down in history as one of the worst secretaries of defense in history.”
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Bush’s critiques come amid numerous reports of frayed relations, both privately and publicly, between the Bush and Cheney camps. In the waning days of his administration, George W. Bush clashed with Cheney over whether or not to pardon his friend Scooter Libby in the Valerie Plame leak case. Since leaving the White House in 2009, the younger Bush has said his relationship with Cheney is “cordial” but that he doesn’t see him much anymore.
“There were a lot of differences of opinion” when Cheney and George W. Bush served together, an unidentified former White House official told Politico in 2009. “The president prevailed, because he was president. The vice president sat back and was dutiful and loyal. But that is a different situation than you have now.”








