"As violence in Iraq reaches unnerving levels
in 2006, a second front in the war rages at the highest levels of the
Bush administration. In his fourth book on President George W. Bush, Bob
Woodward takes readers deep inside the tensions, secret debates,
unofficial backchannels, distrust and determination within the White
House, the Pentagon, the State Department, the intelligence agencies and
the U.S. military headquarters in Iraq. With unparalleled intimacy and
detail, this gripping account of a president at war describes a period
of distress and uncertainty within the U.S. government from 2006 through
mid-2008." "The White House launches a secret strategy review that
excludes the military. General George Casey, the commander in Iraq,
believes that President Bush does not understand the war and eventually
concludes he has lost the president's confidence. The Joint Chiefs of
Staff also conduct a secret strategy review that goes nowhere. On the
verge of revolt, they worry that the military will be blamed for a
failure in Iraq." "Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice strongly opposes a
surge of additional U.S. forces and confronts the president, who
replies that her suggestions would lead to failure. The president keeps
his decision to fire Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld from Vice
President Dick Cheney until two days before he announces it. A retired
Army general uses his high-level contacts to shape decisions about the
war, as Bush and Cheney use him to deliver sensitive messages outside
the chain of command." "For months, the administration's strategy
reviews continue in secret, with no deadline and no hurry, in part
because public disclosure would harm Republicans in the November 2006
elections. National Security Adviser Stephen J. Hadley tells Rice,
"We've got to do it under the radar screen because the electoral season
is so hot."" "The War Within provides an exhaustive account of the
struggles of General David Petraeus, who takes over in Iraq during one
of the bleakest and most violent periods of the war. It reveals how
breakthroughs in military operations and surveillance account for much
of the progress as violence in Iraq plummets in the middle of 2007."
"Woodward interviewed key players, obtained dozens of
never-before-published documents, and had nearly three hours of
exclusive interviews with President Bush. The result is a stunning,
firsthand history of the years from mid-2006, when the White House
realizes the Iraq strategy is not working, through the decision to surge
another 30,000 U.S. troops in 2007, and into mid-2008, when the war
becomes a fault line in the presidential election." "The War Within
addresses head-on questions of leadership, not just in war but in how we
are governed and the dangers of unwarranted secrecy."--BOOK JACKET.
|