Must Reading: President Bush and Dick Cheney’s Final Days
What must it be like to see Darth Vader up close when he is snarling?
Time Magazine has a great article on the Libby pardon idea, and the division it made between President Bush and Dick Cheney.
With one day to go before both men left office, Bush informed Cheney that Libby would not get a pardon. On Inauguration Day, the outgoing Vice President gave a warm tribute to Bush in a private ceremony as the President prepared to leave Andrews Air Force Base for Texas. A day later, Cheney gave an interview to a conservative magazine, saying he disagreed with the President’s decision on the Libby pardon. Other Libby backers were quoted in the article, calling Bush “dishonorable” and saying he had left a soldier on the battlefield, language Cheney had used throughout the debate over the pardon. Bush believes that his Vice President was “probably blinded by his personal loyalty to Scooter,” a White House aide says. Cheney had pressed the issue as far as he could but finally conceded. “The Vice President knew there was a line out there that he was getting very close to but couldn’t cross,” says a former senior official. “The President knew that he needed to help make sure that Cheney didn’t cross that line either.”
Bush and Cheney remain friends but have gone in different directions since leaving office. Bush returned to Texas, where he is raising millions for his presidential library and writing a book about his most pivotal decisions as President. Bush believes he put the war on terrorism and the war in Iraq on solid footings and will let history speak for his presidency. And Barack Obama? He “deserves my silence,” Bush has said.


















