DAVID BROOKS, Columnist, New York Times: [M]y main point is that the policy that George Bush had in the second term is very, very, very close to the policy Barack Obama has right now. We have a bipartisan policy on terror these days.
If you look at the individual issues of rendition, habeas corpus, the secret prisons, Obama has taken the Bush policy, made some adjustments, mostly minor, and then co-opted it. We have a bipartisan policy. My problem is nobody could admit that fact.
Barack Obama can't admit to the Democratic Party that he took George Bush's policy, and Dick Cheney wants to pretend that Barack Obama has made this vast departure so he can pretend that somehow we're less safe.
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DAVID BROOKS: But we stopped torturing people -- we stopped waterboarding people in -- I think it's March or certainly winter 2003. That's a long time ago.
What happened was, in the first years of the Bush administration, right after 9/11, they did a lot of stuff, but those policies were morally offensive and unsustainable. And people like Steve Hadley and Condoleezza Rice reined them in.
And you had an evolution over 2003, '04, '05, '06, '07, and '08 moving away from the policies that Dick Cheney now celebrates to a whole set of different policies, which are close to what Obama celebrates.
And I talked to some Bush people yesterday, and they said that the Cheney speech was very familiar to them. He's been making all those arguments within the Bush White House, while he was losing the arguments, and now he made them publicly.
And so I do think what Obama did -- very politically astutely, I guess, though not quite honestly -- was to pretend 2002, 2003, the Bush-Cheney era, was the entire Bush era, and it wasn't. And so he sort of had a little political sleight of hand.
But the good news is -- and this is Obama's major accomplishment -- and Mark did mention this -- is that, first of all, he took some sensible policies the professionals in the field really believe in. And he did something George Bush would never do, which is, A, to build a framework around them so they're sustainable and coherent and then, most importantly, to explain them to people.
The Bush had this vast evolution in policy, but Bush didn't care what people thought so he never explained them to people, would never admit he was changing course. Obama explained them and made them credible, and that's a big improvement.
MARK SHIELDS: ... Now, the president has also said -- and I think with some validity -- that Vice President Cheney was driven to speak -- and I think David's right, he's not speaking for the Republicans -- he was speaking as much against the policies that changed in the Bush administration in the second -- in defense of those that he had argued and for which he ultimately paid a certain price socially and powerfully in the administration itself.
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