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- <text id=94TT0102>
- <title>
- Jan. 31, 1994: Bowing Out With A Bang
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Jan. 31, 1994 California:State of Shock
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- DEFENSE, Page 84
- Bowing Out With A Bang
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Inman's angry assault on the press manages to make him sound
- more paranoid than persecuted
- </p>
- <p>By George J. Church--Reported by Hilary Hylton/Austin and Julie Johnson and Elaine
- Shannon/Washington
- </p>
- <p> Many likened him to Ross Perot. Pop-fiction addicts recalled
- Captain Queeg of The Caine Mutiny. Others believed Admiral Bobby
- Ray Inman to be an intelligence expert who had lived so long
- in the hidden world of spies that he now saw plots everywhere.
- But these were mere nuances to the majority opinion: Inman,
- explaining why he was withdrawing as nominee to be Secretary
- of Defense, produced a bizarre TV classic--an utterly convincing,
- because utterly unintentional, portrayal of himself as paranoid.
- </p>
- <p> How else could one explain his insistence that he was a target
- of a "new McCarthyism" by the press? Inman named only three
- columnist critics, just one of whom had been harsh. Most press
- reaction to his appointment had in fact been admiring, even
- excessively so.
- </p>
- <p> And what was one to make of his contention that New York Times
- columnist William Safire and Senate Republican leader Bob Dole
- had cooked up a deal: Safire would "turn up the heat" on the
- Whitewater scandal if Dole would take a "partisan look" at the
- nominee? Inman says he heard that from two Senators, but hardly
- anyone in Washington believed there was any conspiracy. "I think
- he was given bad information," says Arizona Republican Senator
- John McCain, a close friend. Others speculated that Inman had
- read implications of hostility into one of Dole's wisecracks.
- The admiral has never disclosed his party affiliation. Dole
- quipped that he seemed to be a "Gergen Republican"--and Inman
- cited that remark on TV.
- </p>
- <p> There were other explanations for Inman's behavior--in particular,
- speculation that he bowed out because he feared disclosure of
- some damaging secret. But what could it be? Whispers have been
- going around Washington that Inman is a closet gay. Inman, however,
- has met them head on. He told the ABC-TV affiliate back home
- in Austin, Texas, that he is not homosexual, but "I have gay
- friends. I deliberately [sought them out] to try to understand
- them...If that starts rumors, so be it."
- </p>
- <p> Commentators raised three other matters: Inman's failure to
- pay taxes on wages of a housekeeper; the 1988 bankruptcy of
- Tracor, a major defense manufacturer, after an investment group
- headed by Inman bought it out; and a letter to a judge defending
- the patriotism of James Guerin, a businessman who had been convicted
- of illegal sales of weapons technology to South Africa.
- </p>
- <p> Safire opines that "Inman was protecting himself" against disclosures
- about "his defense-related business activities over the last
- 10 years" and that his fulminations against the press were "a
- smoke screen." But it is not at all certain that anything remains
- to be discovered. The basic facts, and Inman's responses, have
- long been a matter of public record. In an interview with TIME,
- Inman stressed his extreme reluctance to take the job in the
- first place--which helps explain his hypersensitivity to criticism
- that someone avid for Cabinet rank might shrug off. He says
- he became so tense and grouchy in intelligence work that it
- took the first 10 of his 12 years in private life for him to
- relax. His wife Nancy had begun to make a career for herself
- as a photographer and dreaded returning to Washington. On Dec.
- 14, says Inman, he called the White House to refuse the job
- offer; it took 15 hours of argument by Secretary of State Warren
- Christopher, an old friend, and two White House aides to change
- his mind.
- </p>
- <p> Inman then packed the family--Nancy, two grown sons and a
- daughter-in-law--off to Vail, Colorado, for some skiing. Over
- the kitchen table in their vacation home, the family perused
- daily copies of the Early Bird, a Pentagon summary of press
- clippings that was faxed to them. Inman thought he heard a drum
- roll of growing criticism that might not have stopped confirmation
- but could have aborted his major project: instituting reforms
- in procurement that would save enough billions so the Pentagon's
- budgets could be stretched far enough to cover its weapons-buying
- plans. On Jan. 8 he wrote a letter of withdrawal, though he
- delayed the announcement until after President Clinton's European
- trip.
- </p>
- <p> To most other observers, the criticism amounted to popgun shots
- drowned out by a 21-gun salute from most of the press and the
- Washington establishment. During much of his government career--as head of Naval Intelligence and later of the supersecret
- National Security Agency, and finally, in 1980-81, as No. 2
- at the CIA--Inman had been a liaison between the intelligence
- community, the press and Congress. He was highly regarded by
- journalists--including Strobe Talbott, then a TIME correspondent,
- now Clinton's choice to be Deputy Secretary of State--and
- on Capitol Hill as a rare source who always returned phone calls
- and discussed intelligence matters with remarkable candor and
- accuracy. It was, in fact, the prospect of having a Pentagon
- chief who would win bipartisan applause in the press and Congress
- that led Clinton to accept the urgings of Christopher, Talbott,
- David Gergen and others to select Inman.
- </p>
- <p> Friends say, though, that Inman always had a thin skin. As an
- intelligence officer he managed to stay in the background, giving
- information to the press and Congress mostly on a not-for-attribution
- basis. But as a nominee for the Cabinet, he began reading criticisms
- of himself by name and went ballistic.
- </p>
- <p> Of the three columnists Inman named as engaging in personal
- attacks, however, Anthony Lewis of the New York Times and Ellen
- Goodman of the Boston Globe mainly questioned his judgment,
- and in not overly harsh language. After Inman's press conference,
- Goodman quipped that "maybe he was auditioning for the starring
- role in `The Prince and the Pea'"--an allusion to the fairy
- tale about a princess so sensitive that even a single pea under
- a pile of mattresses would keep her from sleeping.
- </p>
- <p> Safire, in a column Dec. 23, called Inman "manipulative and
- deceptive...a flop...arrogant" and accused him of telling
- one "transparent lie." There has been bad blood between the
- two for more than a decade. Inman says it began when, at the
- CIA, he canceled Israeli access to some U.S. intelligence data.
- Safire, he says, fruitlessly protested to Inman's boss, William
- Casey. Safire denies it. He says he aroused Inman's fury by
- fingering him as the source who told journalists falsely that
- Israel was trying to provoke the U.S. into an attack on Libya.
- Inman says he did no such thing.
- </p>
- <p> Safire is probably the most influential columnist in Washington,
- admired and feared as one of the few whose pieces reflect hard-digging
- reporting as well as strong personal views. But he denies conducting
- a vendetta against Inman. "I don't think I've written more than
- three columns about Inman in the last 10 years," he says. But
- outside the Beltway, many thought Inman's decision highlighted
- a growing personal nastiness in press and political discourse
- that might keep able and sensible people out of public office.
- </p>
- <p> After watching Inman's TV performance, a White House official
- voiced a common opinion: "Better now than in three months,"
- when Inman might have been confirmed and actually running the
- Pentagon. Clinton's aides turn aside any suggestions that they
- and the President misjudged Inman with an and-you're-another
- argument. Says an aide to the President: "It's pretty hard for
- the media, after heaping all that praise on him, to say the
- White House should have known." Nonetheless, the Inman debacle,
- coming after Zoe Baird, Kimba Wood, Lani Guinier and the present
- Defense Secretary, Les Aspin, cannot help casting new doubt
- on Clinton's ability to make selections he does not come to
- regret.
- </p>
- <p> Inman's self-immolation also leaves a gaping hole in the Cabinet.
- Already two of the President's prospective top choices have
- declined to be considered: Sam Nunn, chairman of the Senate
- Armed Services Committee, and Warren Rudman, a former Republican
- Senator from New Hampshire. (Their public refusals were also
- embarrassing to the White House, which countered by saying neither
- had been formally offered the job.) Much speculation now centers
- on William Perry, a Deputy Secretary of Defense who met with
- Clinton for an hour on Friday and is highly regarded both at
- the Pentagon and in Congress. Whoever is chosen had better be
- able to absorb sharp criticism. It would also be a relief if
- both the future Secretary and the critics would argue about
- policy and not only about personality.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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