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“She came into my office, sat down in the chair next to my desk and
tearfully admitted I had been right,” he wrote.
The book opens with an account of Mr. Cheney’s experiences during
the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, when he essentially
commanded the government’s response from a bunker beneath the
White House while Mr. Bush — who was away from Washington
and hampered by communications breakdowns — played a peripheral
role. But Mr. Cheney wrote that he did not want to make any formal
statement to the nation that day.
“My past government experience,” he wrote, “had prepared me to
manage the crisis during those first few hours on 9/11, but I knew
that if I went out and spoke to the press, it would undermine the
president, and that would be bad for him and for the country.
“We were at war. Our commander in chief needed to be seen as in
charge, strong, and resolute — as George W. Bush was.”
Mr. Cheney appears to relish much of the criticism heaped on him by
liberals, but reveals that he had offered to resign several times as
President Bush prepared for his re-election in 2004 because he was
afraid of becoming a burden on the Republican ticket. After a few
days, however, Mr. Cheney said that Mr. Bush said he wanted him to
Stay.
But in the Bush administration’s second term, Mr. Cheney’s
influence waned. When Mr. Bush decided to replace Donald H.
Rumsfeld as secretary of defense after the 2006 midterm elections,
Mr. Cheney said he was not given a chance to object.
Mr. Cheney praised Barack Obama’s support, as a senator from
Illinois, for passing a bank bailout bill at the height of the financial
crisis, shortly before the 2008 election. But he criticizes Mr. Obama’s
decision to withdraw the 33,000 additional troops he sent to
Afghanistan in 2009 by September 2012, and writes that he has been
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