Fed Page   |  Column Archive  |    RSS   |   Daily Politics Q&A
Page 2 of 2   <      

What a Lovely Non-Answer, Ms. Rice

Discussion Policy
Comments that include profanity or personal attacks or other inappropriate comments or material will be removed from the site. Additionally, entries that are unsigned or contain "signatures" by someone other than the actual author will be removed. Finally, we will take steps to block users who violate any of our posting standards, terms of use or privacy policies or any other policies governing this site. Please review the full rules governing commentaries and discussions. You are fully responsible for the content that you post.

Sure, millionaire businessman Thomas C. Foley of Greenwich, Conn., tapped last week for the job, raised and contributed boatloads of money to Republicans over the years. And he was a top fundraiser and co-chairman of the Connecticut Bush reelection effort.

Of course, it didn't hurt that he was a longtime friend of Bush's. His late brother was a classmate of Bush's at Harvard Business School. But Ireland might require more. And Foley has done much more. Bush recruited Foley in the summer of 2003 to go to Iraq and run the private-sector development program under the disastrous Coalition Provisional Authority headed by former Iraq viceroy L. Paul "Jerry" Bremer.

More than anything, it may be his boundless optimism about Iraq -- and his analysis of the situation there after his return to the United States in 2004 -- that ensured a fine job was his if he wanted it.

For example, in April 2004, Foley spoke of his experience at the annual conference of the Ex-Im Bank here.

"The Iraq I came to know is a place where most Iraqis are going about their business," he said, according to the Hartford Courant. "It's a place where all the Iraqis I know are truly grateful that the U.S. came in and liberated them from a brutal tyrant."

Next Up for Interior: J. Peterman Catalogues

Top political and career officials at the Department of the Interior have been working flat out these days, trying to come up with an agenda for new Secretary Dirk Kempthorne . Dozens of them retreated June 8 and 9 to a federal training center in West Virginia to brainstorm. Kempthorne may have a limited time to do something meaningful, a source said, so the idea was to come up with things he might consider.

Interior's White House liaison, Christopher Marston , followed up with an e-mail memo last week to "Fellow Retreat Participants."

"Doug, Russ and I have been charged with adding factoids and poetry to the attached list prepared by 'the Julie Team,' [ Julie Jacobson , a deputy assistant secretary in the Bureau of Land Management] which the team presented to us Friday morning.

"We would appreciate it if you could help us with our task," Marston wrote. "We're particularly eager for information in the Hammacher-Schlemmer mail-order catalog model (for those of you who don't get . . . this great catalog, almost all descriptions start with 'the best, the biggest, the newest, the greatest).'

"For example," something poetic such as "the Department of Interior leads the most robust methane hydrates research program in the world."

Not bad. Kinda catchy. Keats would be proud.


<       2


© 2006 The Washington Post Company