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Giuliani's fundamental argument is that 9/11 endowed him with special qualifications for the job he is seeking. "What they say in Washington is not going to affect the fact that there are terrorists around the world that are planning to come here and kill us," he told voters in Iowa. "It is something I understand better than anyone else running for president."
What exactly does he mean? If he is suggesting that he should be trusted to make critical judgments about national security and foreign policy, there is plenty of contrary evidence.
During the months and years leading up to 9/11 -- as reporters Wayne Barrett and Dan Collins proved in "Grand Illusion: The Untold Story of Rudy Giuliani and 9/11," their superb book debunking much of the "America's Mayor" mythology -- he made decisions as mayor that would later prove disastrous.
Against the advice of real experts, he stubbornly insisted on placing his immensely expensive emergency command center in a World Trade Center building, although terrorists had struck there already and were determined to do so again.
The command center went down with the rest of Ground Zero, leaving the mayor and his aides to wander downtown as the buildings fell.
Their frantic efforts to cope with the disaster were lethally hindered by faulty communications equipment purchased by the Giuliani administration -- also against the advice of experts who knew better. Such fateful errors are more troubling when viewed against the backdrop of political and financial influences that probably distorted the decision-making process.
Yet while Giuliani is often wrong, he is never uncertain. That same attitude prevailed in his promotion of the dubious Bernard Kerik to police commissioner. By the time Giuliani appointed him to head the New York Police Department in 2000, evidence of Kerik's ties with a mob-connected construction company had emerged in a background investigation. Kerik had obtained jobs for his brother and his best friend with that company, and interceded with city authorities on the firm's behalf. Moreover, federal prosecutors had indicted Kerik's friend, Lawrence Ray, along with a reputed Gambino crime-family figure.
In testimony before a Bronx grand jury investigating Kerik last year, Giuliani didn't deny that he had been briefed on those issues before promoting his former bodyguard to the office of police commissioner. But he insisted that he didn't remember that briefing -- and noted that his investigators had "cleared" Kerik.
No doubt Giuliani's dim recall allowed him to enthusiastically recommend Kerik to President Bush as a suitable candidate for secretary of Homeland Security in late 2004. That ruinous choice was averted only because New York newspapers published timely exposes of Kerik's embarrassing past. Giuliani now says he "assumed responsibility" for the "mistake" of recommending his old friend and business partner.
There is a persistent flaw in Giuliani that makes such errors inevitable. He promoted Kerik because he preferred the loyal sycophant to William Bratton, the smart, independent and competent police commissioner whom he had fired. He ignored the threat of terrorism until it was too late, and arrogantly rejected the advice of those who knew more than he did.
Over the past six years, this brand of leadership has become all too familiar. We don't need it anymore. In fact, we never did.
© Creators Syndicate
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