Former State and Defense Secretaries Discuss Iraq with Bush
This article is from the archive of The New York Sun before the launch of its new website in 2022. The Sun has neither altered nor updated such articles but will seek to correct any errors, mis-categorizations or other problems introduced during transfer.

WASHINGTON – President Bush brought foreign policy heavyweights from yesteryear to the White House yesterday, including Democrats who have opposed his Iraq strategy. He got support for the mission – along with a few concerns – and a right to claim he was reaching out.
Mr. Bush has been campaigning to win the public over to his argument that he has a successful strategy for stabilizing Iraq and bringing American troops home. As part of that effort, Mr. Bush brought to the White House more than a dozen former secretaries of state and defense, split almost evenly between Republican and Democratic administrations, for a detailed briefing and give-and-take.
He gambled that one-time high-level public officials, when personally summoned by the president, would resist temptation to be too critical.
He was right.
“When you are in the presence of the president of the United States, I don’t care if you’ve been a devout Democrat for the last hundred years, you’re likely to pull your punches to some degree,” a secretary of state under former President George H.W. Bush, Lawrence Eagleburger, said as he left the White House. “Now, there was some criticism. But it was basically, ‘You haven’t talked to the American people enough.’ And it was very mild.”
The unusual gathering in the Roosevelt Room began with an update by General George Casey, the top American commander in Iraq, and Zalmay Khalilzad, the American ambassador in Baghdad. But speaking to reporters afterward, Mr. Bush emphasized the portion of the meeting in which he asked the former secretaries to offer “their concerns, their suggestions.”
“Not everybody around this table agreed with my decision to go into Iraq. I fully understand that,” the president said, his guests arrayed silently around him. “But these are good solid Americans who understand that we’ve got to succeed now that we’re there. I’m most grateful for the suggestions they’ve given.”
Madeleine Albright, a secretary of state under President Clinton and a critic of Mr. Bush’s decision to invade Iraq, praised Mr. Bush for holding the meeting.
She told him she believes “Iraq is a war of choice, not of necessity, but getting it right now is a necessity, not a choice.” She advocated against any permanent American military bases in Iraq and said there should be a formal venue to draw in more regional participation.
“He didn’t agree with me, but he was very gracious,” Ms. Albright said in an interview. “There was a sense of respect.”
None of the other participants who spoke to reporters outside the White House afterward would discuss any advice in detail.
“He heard some things he did not like. He heard some things he did like,” a Pentagon chief for President Nixon, Melvin Laird, who declined to be more specific, said. “That’s the kind of meeting you want.”