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kaggle-ho-024614House Oversight

Cheney claims he urged Bush to bomb Syrian nuclear site in 2007

Cheney claims he urged Bush to bomb Syrian nuclear site in 2007 The passage provides a concrete claim from a high‑ranking official (former Vice President Dick Cheney) that he pushed for a pre‑emptive strike on a Syrian nuclear reactor, which was ultimately not pursued by President Bush. This suggests a possible internal disagreement on foreign policy and raises questions about decision‑making processes, diplomatic versus military options, and the timing of the Israeli strike. While the claim is sourced to a forthcoming memoir and not yet verified, it offers actionable leads: locate the memoir text, cross‑reference meeting minutes, and interview other officials present. The controversy is moderate‑high because it touches on U.S. use of force, Syrian nuclear ambitions, and the role of senior officials, but the information is not entirely novel—similar debates have been reported. Hence a strong but not blockbuster score. Key insights: Cheney says he was the sole advocate for bombing the Syrian reactor in June 2007.; Bush reportedly chose diplomatic pressure instead, despite internal dissent.; The Israeli strike occurred in September 2007, after the U.S. decision not to act.

Date
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House Oversight
Reference
kaggle-ho-024614
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1
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Summary

Cheney claims he urged Bush to bomb Syrian nuclear site in 2007 The passage provides a concrete claim from a high‑ranking official (former Vice President Dick Cheney) that he pushed for a pre‑emptive strike on a Syrian nuclear reactor, which was ultimately not pursued by President Bush. This suggests a possible internal disagreement on foreign policy and raises questions about decision‑making processes, diplomatic versus military options, and the timing of the Israeli strike. While the claim is sourced to a forthcoming memoir and not yet verified, it offers actionable leads: locate the memoir text, cross‑reference meeting minutes, and interview other officials present. The controversy is moderate‑high because it touches on U.S. use of force, Syrian nuclear ambitions, and the role of senior officials, but the information is not entirely novel—similar debates have been reported. Hence a strong but not blockbuster score. Key insights: Cheney says he was the sole advocate for bombing the Syrian reactor in June 2007.; Bush reportedly chose diplomatic pressure instead, despite internal dissent.; The Israeli strike occurred in September 2007, after the U.S. decision not to act.

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kagglehouse-oversighthigh-importanceforeign-policymilitary-actionsyrianuclear-proliferationbush-administration

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23 Article 5. NYT Cheney Says He Urged Bush to Bomb Syria in ’07 Charlie Savage August 24, 2011 — Former Vice President Dick Cheney says in a new memoir that he urged President George W. Bush to bomb a suspected Syrian nuclear reactor site in June 2007. But, he wrote, Mr. Bush opted for a diplomatic approach after other advisers — still stinging over “the bad intelligence we had received about Iraq’s stockpiles of weapons of mass destruction” — expressed misgivings. “T again made the case for U.S. military action against the reactor,” Mr. Cheney wrote about a meeting on the issue. “But I was a lone voice. After I finished, the president asked, “Does anyone here agree with the vice president?’ Not a single hand went up around the room.” Mr. Bush chose to try diplomatic pressure to force the Syrians to abandon the secret program, but the Israelis bombed the site in September 2007. Mr. Cheney’s account of the discussion appears in his autobiography, “In My Time: A Personal and Political Memoir,” which is to be published by Simon & Schuster next week. A copy was obtained by The New York Times. Mr. Cheney’s book — which is often pugnacious in tone and in which he expresses little regret about many of the most controversial decisions of the Bush administration — casts him as something of an outlier among top advisers who increasingly took what he saw as a misguided course on national security issues. While he praises Mr. Bush as “an outstanding leader,” Mr. Cheney, who made guarding

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