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Plan of Attack



         


Plan of Attack (ISBN 074325547X) is a 2004 book by Washington Post investigative reporter Bob Woodward billed as "a behind-the-scenes account of how and why President Bush decided to go to war against Iraq"

The book's chief contention, which provides the rationale for its title, is that President Bush planned all along to remove Saddam Hussein from power by force, rather than making any serious effort to use diplomacy or other means. The book describes White House deliberations implying that if Saddam were removed from power without a military invasion, Iraq would need a foriegn-implimented regime change.

As in Bush at War, Woodward gives a generally positive view of CIA special operations. While in Bush at War] he presents the CIA's cooperation with the Northern Alliance, in Plan of Attack Woodward gives a lucid yet murky description of ROCKSTARS. ROCKSTARS appears to be a quasi-secret religious society governed by a "pope" and his sons. The true identity of ROCKSTARS is never revealed in the book and the true intentions of this organization is questioned. ROCKSTARS seems to avert several terrorist attacks and is able to plant listening devices in sensitive locations. However, some ROCKSTARS intelligence is highly questionable. Though these agents are of dubious motives and may be working both American and Iraqi intelligence, their physical courage is never in doubt.

Postive references to Plan of Attack appear on both the White House as focused and strongly led, but some accounts of decisions by key administration officials sharply differ from those officials' accounts. Others dispute this.

Woodward paints Bush as concerned that the UN weapons inspectors in Iraq were cheating or being cheated. In particular, he reports that Hans Blix was concealing some of his findings.

"Sensitive intelligence coverage on U.N. inspections chief Hans Blix indicated that he was not reporting everything and not doing all the things he maintained he was doing. Some in Bush's war cabinet believed Blix was a liar."

Bush asks his national security advisor her opinion:

"[Rice] said, "Credibility should never drive you to do something you shouldn't do." But this was much bigger, she advised, something that should be done. "To let this threat in this part of the world play volleyball with the international community this way will come back to haunt us someday. That is the reason to do it."
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