Difference between revisions of "Elizabeth Cheney"

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(added links, expanded narrative)
(added links, expanded narrative)
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==Bush's Democracy Tzarina==
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"[[Aaron Friedberg]], who served as [Dick] Cheney’s director of policy planning for three years, ... says that he worked on issues of '[[terrorism]], Asia, Europe, Russia, [[North Korea]], [[Iran]], just about everything outside of [[Iraq]],' suggested that the biggest issue on which Cheney had to confront the bureaucracy was over the administration’s push for democracy, especially in the Middle East. That program’s overseer is his daughter Liz Cheney, a top State Department official," Robert Dreyfuss [http://www.prospect.org/web/page.ww?section=root&name=ViewWeb&articleId=11423 wrote] April 17, 2006, in ''The American Prospect''.
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==Office of Near East and South Asian Affairs (NEA)==
 
==Office of Near East and South Asian Affairs (NEA)==
 
"Contrary to prevailing wisdom, members of the Bush team contend that what the press took to be [then Secretary of State Colin] [[Colin L. Powell|Powell]]'s defiance was as often as not the defiance of a bureaucracy only nominally under his supervision," Lawrence F. Kaplan [http://www.tnr.com/doc.mhtml?i=20041213&s=kaplan121304 reported] in ''The New Republic Onine'', December 7, 2004. "In this telling, instances of Powell flouting official policy tended to be exceptions to the norm. The Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty, [[Kyoto Protocol|Kyoto]], direct negotiations with [[North Korea]], the [[war in Iraq]], the [[Israel]]i-[[Palestinian]] conflict--in each of these cases, Powell lost the policy arguments and, without skipping a beat, went on to implement the very policies he had just lobbied against.  
 
"Contrary to prevailing wisdom, members of the Bush team contend that what the press took to be [then Secretary of State Colin] [[Colin L. Powell|Powell]]'s defiance was as often as not the defiance of a bureaucracy only nominally under his supervision," Lawrence F. Kaplan [http://www.tnr.com/doc.mhtml?i=20041213&s=kaplan121304 reported] in ''The New Republic Onine'', December 7, 2004. "In this telling, instances of Powell flouting official policy tended to be exceptions to the norm. The Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty, [[Kyoto Protocol|Kyoto]], direct negotiations with [[North Korea]], the [[war in Iraq]], the [[Israel]]i-[[Palestinian]] conflict--in each of these cases, Powell lost the policy arguments and, without skipping a beat, went on to implement the very policies he had just lobbied against.  
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*Sarah Baxter, [http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2089-2070419,00.html "Cheney daughter leads 'cold war' on mullahs,"] ''Times Online'' (UK), March 5, 2006.
 
*Sarah Baxter, [http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2089-2070419,00.html "Cheney daughter leads 'cold war' on mullahs,"] ''Times Online'' (UK), March 5, 2006.
 
*Steven R. Weisman, [http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article12748.htm "U.S. Program Is Directed at Altering Iran's Politics,"] ''New York Times'' (Information Clearing House), April 15, 2006.
 
*Steven R. Weisman, [http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article12748.htm "U.S. Program Is Directed at Altering Iran's Politics,"] ''New York Times'' (Information Clearing House), April 15, 2006.
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*Robert Dreyfuss, [http://www.prospect.org/web/page.ww?section=root&name=ViewWeb&articleId=11423 "Vice Squad,"] ''The American Prospect'', April 17, 2006.
 
*Juliette Kayyem, [http://www.tpmcafe.com/node/28916 "All in the Family: Cheney and Iran,"] ''TPM Cafe'', April 17, 2006.
 
*Juliette Kayyem, [http://www.tpmcafe.com/node/28916 "All in the Family: Cheney and Iran,"] ''TPM Cafe'', April 17, 2006.
 
*Gary Leupp, [http://www.dissidentvoice.org/May06/Leupp29.htm "'Echoes of Germany Under Hitler'. The Office of Iranian Affairs, Embedded Journalism, and the Disinformation Campaign for War on Iran,"] ''Dissident Voice'', May 29, 2006; [http://www.counterpunch.org/leupp05302006.html ''CounterPunch''], May 30, 2006.
 
*Gary Leupp, [http://www.dissidentvoice.org/May06/Leupp29.htm "'Echoes of Germany Under Hitler'. The Office of Iranian Affairs, Embedded Journalism, and the Disinformation Campaign for War on Iran,"] ''Dissident Voice'', May 29, 2006; [http://www.counterpunch.org/leupp05302006.html ''CounterPunch''], May 30, 2006.

Revision as of 15:38, 16 November 2006

Elizabeth "Liz" Cheney, the Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern Affairs and Coordinator for Broader Middle East and North Africa Initiatives, currently heads the Iran-Syria Operations Group.

Previously, Liz Cheney ran the Office of Iranian Affairs, the reincarnation of the Office of Special Plans, "apparently housed in the same Pentagon offices inhabited by its predecessor and involving some of the same slimy personnel," Gary Leupp wrote May 29, 2006, in Dissident Voice. In Spring 2006, Cheney left the State Department to have her fifth child.

Cheney is the daughter of Vice President Dick Cheney and Lynne Cheney of the American Enterprise Institute.


Bush's Democracy Tzarina

"Aaron Friedberg, who served as [Dick] Cheney’s director of policy planning for three years, ... says that he worked on issues of 'terrorism, Asia, Europe, Russia, North Korea, Iran, just about everything outside of Iraq,' suggested that the biggest issue on which Cheney had to confront the bureaucracy was over the administration’s push for democracy, especially in the Middle East. That program’s overseer is his daughter Liz Cheney, a top State Department official," Robert Dreyfuss wrote April 17, 2006, in The American Prospect.

Office of Near East and South Asian Affairs (NEA)

"Contrary to prevailing wisdom, members of the Bush team contend that what the press took to be [then Secretary of State Colin] Powell's defiance was as often as not the defiance of a bureaucracy only nominally under his supervision," Lawrence F. Kaplan reported in The New Republic Onine, December 7, 2004. "In this telling, instances of Powell flouting official policy tended to be exceptions to the norm. The Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty, Kyoto, direct negotiations with North Korea, the war in Iraq, the Israeli-Palestinian conflict--in each of these cases, Powell lost the policy arguments and, without skipping a beat, went on to implement the very policies he had just lobbied against.

"The only problem was, the bureaucracy continued to lobby," Kaplan wrote. "The bureau that most concerns [Condoleezza] Rice and her colleagues in this regard is NEA. When, for instance, [President George W.] Bush proposed an ambitious and concrete plan to promote democracy in the Middle East [in 2004] (a plan that Powell enthusiastically supported), NEA, responding to the objections of Arab leaders, watered down the eventual proposals beyond recognition--contributing to, among other things, the departure of Liz Cheney, the project's driving force."

Note: Powell resigned November 15, 2004.

Profiles

In May 2005, Liz Cheney left "her senior-level post at the State Department to have a baby," CNN reported May 19, 2005.

"Cheney, 39, has served as the principal deputy assistant secretary for Near Eastern affairs since February 2005. In that role, she launched the Middle East Partnership Initiative, an effort to provide funding for programs to advance political and educational reform and women's rights in the region.

"She also worked in the State Department from 2002 to 2003, before leaving to work on her father's re-election campaign.

"Cheney and her husband, Philip Perry, the general counsel at the Department of Homeland Security, have four other children, including a son born in the middle of the 2004 campaign," CNN wrote.

External Links

Profiles

Speeches, Comments by Liz Cheney

Articles & Commentary

2004

2005

2006