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- DATE: JAN. 24, 1991 18:45 REPORT: 2
- TO: SPL
- FOR: BIRNBAUM
- CC:
- BUREAU: WASHINGTON
- BY: BRUCE VAN VOORST
- IN:
- SLUG: THE GENERAL
-
- Pete Williams, Dick Cheney's eye to the world, says of
- the overall strategy in the Gulf war that in Cheney's
- view "It's basically Norm's plan. It's fundamentally
- Norm's to execute." Williams has heard Cheney say this,
- but needs formal approval. He says it's safe to expect
- Cheney will say okay.
-
- ---O---
-
- Schwarzkopf is the youngster of the family, with two
- older sisters. We talked to Sally, who understandably
- adores "Norman" and gushes over with family gossip. Best
- of the lot is a tale focusing on the picture for the
- annual yearbook when Norman was a student at Bordentown
- Military Institute near Trenton, New Jersey. Norman had
- been placed there when his father was assigned overseas
- "so that he didn't hav to be home with three females."
-
- Norman was ten years old. The photo session produced two
- versions--one smiling, one grim. Norman's mother
- preferred the smiling version. Not Norman. He insisted on
- printing the grim version. His explanation--aged
- ten:"Someday when I become a general I want people to
- know that I'm serious."
-
- Sally corrected misinformation on the "Herbert" which
- had been provided by Mrs. LeHardy. The "H" is for
- nothing! "As with Harry S. Truman," says Sally. Turns out
- his father was indeed "Herbert," and hated the name so
- much that when he named his son it was just "H." And Jr.,
- of course. Sally, by the way, says that Norman adored his
- father, and she's peeved with a quote somewhere from an
- alleged friend to the effect that Norman wanted to outdo
- the old man. May be family sensitivities, but she seemed
- genuine on this point.
-
- Another nice clarification: As chief of the West Point
- choir Schwarzkopf was in fact the //conductor.// There's
- a photo (which she's loaned to somebody else) showing the
- future general waving a baton.
-
- His love of music is genuine, though it centers on the
- mid- sophisticated range of Tschaikovsky and Wagner,
- rather than the really heavies. Sally's the source of the
- "Willie Nelson" information, but says she just used it as
- an example that he likes a broad range of music.
-
- Sally claims his French and German are actually good.
- (I'm a constant doubter on peoples' alleged language
- ability.) "He's got a good ear for music, and that
- translates to an instinct for languages."
-
- His football career was short-lived. He banged up a knee
- skiing in Switzerland.
-
- Is he an intellectual? What's an intellectual, asks
- sister Sally (who, by the way, asks--for terrorism
- reasons--that we not mention where she lives). In his
- field he reads widely. He's thought through basic,
- complex issues of strategy, matters such as the
- military's role in a democratic society. He's not the
- type to discuss philosophy or religion.
-
- Which doesn't mean he doesn't think about human issues.
- "He went off to Vietnam as the heroic captain," says
- Sally,"he came back having lost his youth."
-
- It's a close family. Sally talks to him regularly, and
- sends him cookies--an exclusive sort called "Sand Tart"
- cookies--a concoction of cinnamon and almonds. His
- favorite, she says, and they're cut to shape. Which
- shape? After Norman was quoted in the NYTS times as being
- neither a hawk or a dove, but an owl-- somebody who tries
- not to go to war but does if necessary--she began cutting
- the cookies in the shape of owls and--what else-- bears.
-
- Sally says Norman fully expected the Central Command to
- become an important assignment. "He's always believed
- that the big eruption would come in the Mideast. He took
- the job (Centcom) with the idea that he might well have
- to fight."
-
-