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The Dark Side
The Inside Story of How The War on Terror Turned into a War on American Ideals
by 
Jane Mayer
Richard McGonagle
  
Average rating: 
Publisher: Books on Tape
Pub Date: 7/29/2008
Subject(s):  Current Events
History
Nonfiction
Awards:  National Book Award Finalist
National Book Foundation
10 Best Books of 2008
New York Times
National Book Critics Circle Award Finalist
The National Book Critics Circle
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Available copies:  
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File size:   241416 KB
ISBN:   9780739375938
Release date:   Jul 29, 2008

Description

"We're going to have to work on the dark side." --Vice President Cheney

In the days immediately following September 11th, the most powerful people in the country were panic-stricken. The radical decisions about how to combat terrorists and strengthen national security were made in a state of utter chaos and fear, but the key players, Vice President Dick Cheney and his powerful, secretive adviser David Addington, used the crisis to further a long held agenda to restore Presidential powers to an all-time zenith, and obliterate Constitutional protections that define the very essence of the American experiment.

THE DARK SIDE is a dramatic, riveting, and definitive narrative account of how the United States made terrible decisions in the pursuit of terrorists around the world--decisions that not only violated the Constitution to which White House officials took an oath, but also hampered the pursuit of Al Qaeda. In gripping detail acclaimed New Yorker writer and bestselling author Jane Mayer relates how America, the world's most powerful democracy and leading voice for human rights, a country founded on the principle that all men are endowed by their creator with unalienable rights, came to embrace a policy based on the notion that the threat to the republic is so dire that our bedrock principles no longer matter. The book follows the impact of the decisions from the secretive offices of the White House to horrific hell-holes around the world, where U.S.-held prisoners--many of them completely innocent--were subjected to treatment more reminiscent of the Spanish Inquisition than the 21st century.

In all cases, whatever the short term gains, there were incalcuable losses in terms of moral standing, and our country's place in the world, and its sense of itself. THE DARK SIDE chronicles one of the most disturbing chapters in American history, one that will serve as the lasting legacy of the George W. Bush presidency..

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Excerpts

From the book

...

PANIC

America should go "not abroad in search of monsters to destroy. . . . She might become the dictatress of the world: she would be no longer the ruler of her own spirit." --John Quincy Adams, An Address . . . Celebrating the Anniversary of Independence, at the City of Washington on the Fourth of July 1821
If anyone in America should have been prepared to respond to the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, it ought to have been Vice President Dick Cheney. For decades before the planes hit the Pentagon and World Trade Center, Cheney had been secretly practicing for doomsday.

During the 1980s, while serving as a Republican congressman from Wyoming and a rising power in the conservative leadership in Congress, Cheney secretly participated in one of the most highly classified, top-secret programs of the Reagan Administration, a simulation of survival scenarios designed to ensure the smooth continuity of the U.S. government in the event of all-out nuclear war with the Soviet Union. Every year, usually during congressional recesses, Cheney would disappear in the dead of the night. He left without explanation to his wife, Lynne Vincent Cheney, who was given merely a phone number where he could be reached in the event of emergency. Along with some four or five dozen federal officials, Cheney would pretend for several weeks to be chief of staff to a designated substitute "president," bivouacked in some remote location in the United States.

As James Mann reveals in The Vulcans, his rich intellectual history of the neoconservative brain trust that has guided Bush foreign policy, the exercise tried to re-create some of the anticipated hardships of surviving a nuclear holocaust. Accommodations were Spartan and cuisine was barely adequate. Civilian communications systems were presumed destroyed. The challenge was to ensure civil order and control over the military in the event that the elected president and vice president, and much of the executive branch, were decimated. The Constitution, of course, spells out the line of succession. If the president and vice president are indisposed, then power passes first to the Speaker of the House, and next to the president pro tempore of the Senate. But in a secret executive order, President Reagan, who was deeply concerned about the Soviet threat, amended the process for speed and clarity. The secret order established a means of re-creating the executive branch without informing Congress that it had been sidestepped, or asking for legislation that would have made the new "continuity-of-government" plan legally legitimate. Cheney, a proponent of expansive presidential powers, was evidently unperturbed by this oversight.

Mann and others have suggested that these doomsday drills were a dress rehearsal for Cheney's calm, commanding performance on 9/11. It was not the first time he had stared into the abyss. One eyewitness, who kept a diary, said that inside the Presidential Emergency Operations Command, or PEOC, a hardened command center several hundred feet under the by-then-evacuated White House, Cheney never broke a sweat as he juggled orders to shoot down any additional incoming hijacked planes, coordinated efforts with other cabinet members, most particularly the Directors of the FBI and CIA, and resolved issues such as how to avoid charges of taking hostage two visiting foreign heads of state, from Australia and Lithuania, after all air traffic had been shut down.

Six weeks after the attacks on New York and Washington, the Bush Administration had successfully restored calm, reassured the financial markets, and rallied...

 

Reviews

AudioFile Magazine...
Journalist Mayer gives an account of the Bush administration's legal prosecution of the "War on Terror." Her impassioned account lays much of the blame for condoning torture and other abuses at the feet of Vice President Cheney and others in his circle. Mayer, who seems to see the law enforcement paradigm as the best way to deal with terrorism, views the treatment of detainees by the Bush administration as one of this country's blackest moments. Richard McGonagle performs this unabridged production superbly. His deep, rich voice is a perfect match of voice and text. He reads as one making an oral argument before the bench of public opinion--passionate about the matter he is presenting, but restrained, so as to make each point hit home. M.T.F. (c) AudioFile 2008, Portland, Maine
 
Alan Brinkley, New York Times Book Review...

"A powerful, brilliantly researched and deeply unsettling book....extraordinary and invaluable"

 
Los Angeles Times...
"If you intend to vote in November and read only one book between now and then, this should be it."
 
Frank Rich, New York Times...
"Some of "The Dark Side" seems right out of "The Final Days," minus Nixon's operatic boozing and weeping.... Nixon parallels take us only so far, however. "The Dark Side" is scarier than "The Final Days" because these final days aren't over yet and because the stakes are much higher."
 
Parameters Magazine, the United States Army's Senior Professional Journal...
"The Dark Side is a gripping, meticuously researched and deeply disturbing book that vindicates the observation of the great Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis that 'the greatest dangers to liberty lurk in insidious encroachment by men of zeal, well-meaning but without understanding.' Mayer notes that the Bush Administration was repeatedly warned by experts in military and the FBI as well as by loyal Republican lawyers inside the Administration that 'the short-term benefits of its extralegal apporach to fighting terrorism would have tragically destructive long-term consequences for both the rule of law and America's interests in the world.' Instead of heeding thi well-intentioned advvice, the Administration 'invoked the fear flowing from the [9/11] attacks' and 'sanctioned coerced confessions, extrajuidicial detention, and other violations of individuals' liberties that had been prohibited since the country's founding.' Provoking governments to overreact is a common objective of terrorist organizations. If that was what al Qaeda sought to do on 9/11, it hit the jackpot."
 
Washington Post Book World...
"In The Dark Side, Jane Mayer, a staff writer for the New Yorker, documents some of the ugliest allegations of wrongdoing charged against the Bush administration. To dismiss these as wild, anti-American ravings will not do. They are facts, which Mayer substantiates in persuasive detail, citing the testimony not of noted liberals like Noam Chomsky or Keith Olbermann but of military officers, intelligence professionals, "hard-line law-and-order stalwarts in the criminal justice system" and impeccably conservative Bush appointees who resisted the conspiracy from within the administration."
 
Salon.com ...
"Whatever it takes to get those bastards. The true nature of our Faustian bargain would not become clear until later, and maybe it needed a journalist as steely and tenacious as Jane Mayer to give us the full picture. "The Dark Side" is about how the war on terror became "a war on American ideals," and Mayer gives this story all the weight and sorrow it deserves. Many books get tagged with the word "essential"; hers actually is."
 
Bloomberg...
"In Jane Mayer's angry and important book ''The Dark Side,'' the tenacious New Yorker reporter takes us, step by step, through the process by which practices and methods we associate with tyrannies became official U.S. policy."
 
New York Observer...
"(In) The Dark Side, Jane Mayer's riveting and shocking new book, and not the least of the themes to emerge from it is that we've witnessed something new in American history: the imperial vice presidency."
 
Bob Herbert, New York Times...
"Essential reading for those who think they can stand the truth."
 
San Diego Tribune
...
"Like a good suspense novel....potent and disturbing stuff."
 

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