TY - BOOK AU - Mann,Jim TI - The great rift: Dick Cheney, Colin Powell, and the broken friendship that defined an era SN - 9781627797559 PY - 2020/// CY - New York PB - Henry Holt and Company KW - Cheney, Richard B. KW - Powell, Colin L. KW - United States KW - Department of State KW - Biography KW - Department of Defense KW - Officials and employees KW - Vice-Presidents KW - Cabinet officers KW - Statesmen KW - Generals KW - Politics and government KW - 1989- N1 - Includes bibliographical references and index; Part One INDISPENSABLE -- Useful Young Men -- The Quiet Conservative -- Climbing the Ladder -- "Your Buddy, Colin" -- Part Two FORTY-ONE -- Appointments -- The First Invasion -- A Much Bigger War -- Deciding Not to Go to Baghdad -- The Soviet Collapse -- Cheney's Blueprint -- Departures -- Part Three INTERREGNUM -- On the Outside -- The Returns -- Part Four FORTY-THREE -- From the Very Start -- September 11 and Its Aftermath -- The Two Tribes -- The Nondecision -- The Road to Baghdad -- Chaos -- Part Five DISPENSABLE -- Isolation -- Epilogue N2 - "A sweeping history of the intertwined careers of Dick Cheney and Colin Powell, whose rivalry and conflicting views of U.S. national security color our political debate to this day. Dick Cheney and Colin Powell emerged on the national scene more than thirty years ago, and it is easy to forget that they were once allies. It was Cheney who pressed for Powell's appointment as chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, over the initial skepticism of the White House. And the two men collaborated closely in the successful American wars in Panama and Iraq during the George H. W. Bush administration, riding together in joyous victory parades. But from that pinnacle, conflicts of ideology and sensibility drove Cheney and Powell apart. Under George W. Bush, they fell into ever-deepening conflict. Cheney personified the idea that America should use its unrivaled power to reorder the world, using military force and ignoring objections from its longstanding allies. Powell believed that the United States should operate through diplomacy as much as possible, relying on the alliances it had forged. In this wide-ranging and deeply researched reassessment of these two major figures, James Mann explores each man's biography and philosophical predispositions to show how and why this deep and permanent rupture occurred. Through dozens of original interviews and surprising revelations from presidential archives, he brings to life the very human story of how this influential friendship turned so sour and how their enmity colored the way America acts in the world."-- ER -