The author spoke extensively with officials from every level of the federal government.[1] He conducted 150 interviews, spending three hours with Bush in the Oval Office.[2]Politico called the Bush administration's cooperation with Woodward "remarkable".[1] Before its publication, Woodward posted key excerpts and points of synopsis on The Washington Post's website.[3]Press SecretaryAri Fleischer has said, "The message got down to everybody: 'Talk to him'".[4]
The book states that President Bush "rarely leveled with the public to explain what he was doing and what should be expected... The president was rarely the voice of realism on the Iraq war." It also calls him "the nation's most divisive figure" and described his foreign policy as a failure, saying "He had not rooted out terror wherever it existed... He had not achieved world peace. He had not attained victory in his two wars." At the same time, the book largely supports the 'surge' strategy and lauds the President for adopting it.[5]
The book describes Bush as largely leaving the management of the war to Generals George Casey and John Abizaid and deferring to their judgment based on Bush's perception of Lyndon Johnson's micromanagement during the Vietnam War.[6] As the generals' strategy of drawing down U.S. forces and transferring control to the Iraqis begins to fail, the book argues, Bush grows more disillusioned and sought other ideas.[6] The book alleges that, nevertheless, the President delayed serious investigation because of his fear that leaked reports would hurt the Republican Party's chances in the 2006 congressional elections.[2] It states that Defense SecretaryDonald Rumsfeld refused to consider resigning unless the Republicans lost control of either the House of Representatives or the Senate.[2]
The book reports that SenatorJohn McCain expressed frustration with the Bush administration's Iraq policy, at one point clenching his fists and screaming at Woodward that "Everything is fucking spin" coming out of the White House.[5]
Woodward asserts that the U.S. is implementing a secret killing program in Iraq targeting designated terrorists and that this program in large parts accounts for the significant drop in violence in the country. This program may have been being carried out by Task Force 77. The secrecy surrounding the program can, according to Woodward, in some ways be compared to the Manhattan Project during World War II in which the atomic bomb was developed amidst an unprecedented veil of secrecy. Following the publication of the book, U.S. National security adviserStephen Hadley acknowledged the existence of the described strategy.[7]
Response
According to Nielsen BookScan, The War Within sold just 159,000 copies as of June 2009. This is far below Woodward's earlier work State of Denial, which sold more than half a million. The New Republic reported that Woodward was "lamenting" this drop.[4]
Bush administration response
Initially, unofficial responses from members of the Bush administration's were very favorable as they saw the book as reflecting the success of the 'surge' strategy.[1] However, National Security AdviserStephen J. Hadley released an official statement on September 5 disputing some of Woodward's interpretations and opinions expressed in the book, though not with his record of the facts.[8]
Bloomberg L.P.'s media critic Craig Seligman wrote a scathing review of the book, calling Woodward far too deferential to President Bush and saying that "It must have been a challenge for him to walk so confidently with Woodward's lips attached to his backside."[10] In a mixed review, conservativemagazineNational Review labeled Woodward's leaking of the government's eavesdropping program "disgraceful" and stated that it "would be helpful for the United States to be in a position to know, and to do so without having the fact publicly advertised."[6]
Foreign Affairs praised the book's "focused" account and argued that it was the best out of Woodward's four books about President Bush.[11]The New York Times generally praised the book and referred to its reporting as "wonderfully illuminating".[12] Its review concluded:
Woodward's own judgment of the war and of Bush doesn't really matter. In the course of four books he has given readers the conversations and documents we need to reach our own judgments. He has also, however unevenly and imperfectly, supplied enough synthesis and analysis to make that judgment genuinely informed. Sure, these books can be a slog. But they stand as the fullest story yet of the Bush presidency and of the war that is likely to be its most important legacy.[12]
The New York Sun gave a critical review, stating that "Mr. Woodward so drowns the reader in clutter that few arguments, except the obvious, emerge."[13] As well, The New Republic alleged that the figures in the book were portrayed better if they had talked to Woodward beforehand.[4]