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A Tragic Comedy of Errors
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16272 |
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BOOK WORLD
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3 / 1989 |
2,073 Words |
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Juliana Geran Pilon Juliana Geran Pilon is executive director of the National
Forum Foundation. |
PERILOUS STATECRAFT
An Insider's Account of the Iran-Contra Affair
Michael Ledeen
New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1988
307 pp., $19.95
Michael Ledeen was not allowed his day in court as a witness in the congressional Iran-Contra hearings. After his appearance was announced, he was "forgotten," and later refused a hearing. Thus he was unable to refute charges by more than one witness that he had allegedly "taken money" for his involvement in the arms-for-hostages deal, unable to explain that he had been called upon simply to set up political and intelligence channels to Iran. What is more, Ledeen was also unable to explain that while he had attempted on several occasions to brief George Shultz on his initial contacts with Iranian officials who seemed eager for genuine openings to the United States, Shultz--astonishingly enough for a secretary of state--never responded.
Ledeen then wrote a book "telling it all." As a historian and expert on East-West relations, intelligence, and terrorism, and, most importantly, as an observer of human nature with a sense of humor, he ended up writing what amounts to a comedy of errors, sometimes actually amusing, were the implications not so tragic.
It is rather preciously entitled Perilous Statecraft and is, indeed, about statecraft--specifically about the making of foreign policy during the Reagan years. As for its perils, Ledeen convinces us that they reached monumental proportions, not the least of which was the
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