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Getting the old, failed gang back together

Several prominent officials from the Bush/Cheney era have been in the news lately, largely as a result of ongoing controversies, but many of them -- Robert
Getting the old, failed gang back together
Getting the old, failed gang back together

Several prominent officials from the Bush/Cheney era have been in the news lately, largely as a result of ongoing controversies, but many of them -- Robert Gates, retired Adm. Mike Mullen, retired Gen. David Petraeus -- are under fire from the right for not toeing the party's anti-Obama line.

There are, however, plenty of loyal Bushies stepping up to launch rhetorical attacks. Indeed, they seem happy to pretend they still have credibility and are compelling messengers to express their party's contempt for the president.

Former Attorney General Mike Mukasey was on Fox News this morning accusing Obama of abusing the power of the executive branch (no, seriously); former Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld is making the rounds on conservative talk radio; and former Vice President Dick Cheney is, well, doing what Dick Cheney does.

"They lied. They claimed it was because of a demonstration video, that they wouldn't have to admit it was really all about their incompetence," Cheney told Fox News's Sean Hannity on Monday. "They ignored repeated warnings from the CIA about the threat. They ignored messages from their own people on the ground that they needed more security.""I think it's one of the worst incidences, frankly, that I can recall in my career ... if they told the truth about Benghazi, that it was a terrorist attack by an Al Qaeda-led group, it would destroy the confidence that was the basis of his campaign for reelection," Cheney added. "They tried to cover it up by constructing a false story."

As a substantive matter, much of what Cheney said is ridiculous and wrong, as is often the case. If the failed former V.P. has proof of White House lies and a cover-up, he's welcome to share it, but the fact that preliminary intelligence out of Benghazi was wrong isn't evidence of either.

But more to the point, does Dick Cheney, of all people, really want to have a conversation about national security lies, ignored warnings about terrorist threats, and covering things up by constructing false stories? Because that's largely a summary of his eight years of spectacular failures and unprecedented abuses in office. Indeed, I'm not sure whether to find it funny or sad that he, Rumsfeld, and Mukasey feel comfortable showing their faces in public again.

As for Cheney seeing Benghazi as "one of the worst incidences" that he "can recall," I'm not going to play a game of ranking the seriousness of terrorist attacks, but I'm curious if Cheney recalls 9/11. If he doesn't think that counts -- and there's some evidence to suggest he doesn't -- and he only wants to focus on attacks on American outposts abroad, I wonder if Cheney might also recall the 1983 bombing of a Marine barracks in Beirut that left 241 American servicemen dead, right before Reagan cut and ran.

Any of this ring a bell, Dick?