Sunday, March 1, 2026

Review of The Trial of Donald H. Rumsfeld by William Cooper

This book review was written by Eugene Kernes   

Book can be found in: 
Genre = Novel
Intriguing Connections = 1) When Intelligence Goes Wrong


Watch Short Review

Excerpts

“The experience taught Rummy a searing lesson he would internalize deeply: showing weakness strengthens one’s opponent.  He’d sharpened this formulation over the years into one of his most frequently uttered sentences: weakness is provocative.” – William Cooper, Chapter 5: September 22, 1975, Page 45

 

“A few blocks from Cheney’s office, Paul O’Neill was watching alone in his office in his luxurious Washington D.C. apartment.  The room was hazy with smoke from his cigar.  A tall glass of gin rested in his right hand.  Bush had fired O’Neill months earlier, on Cheney’s prodding.  As Cheney said to Rummy after he was canned, O’Neill’s brain only helped if he was on board, if their interests were aligned.  “We don’t want our adversaries to be smart and energetic.  We want them dumb and lazy.”” – William Cooper, Chapter 25: February 5, 2006, Page 132

 

“Rummy paused.  Again, about half the Republicans stood and clapped.  Everyone else remained seated.  Rummy made a mental note to have Jenkins create a list of all Republicans who weren’t standing during the ovations.  There would be consequences.  The Republicans needed to be unified behind their president or they would get walloped at the polls.  He knew there was disagreement within the party about going into Iran, but these disagreements were for behind closed doors.  He focused on not letting his face show his displeasure.” – William Cooper, Chapter 44: August 26, 2005, Page 180


Review

Is This An Overview?

Intelligence and intention do not necessarily produce quality decisions.  Intelligence and intention can also produce justifications for one’s own ideas, even to contradictory evidence.  This led Donald H. Rumsfeld, known as Rummy, to withhold information that had dire consequences.  Rummy’s often expressed view, is that weakness if provocative.  But the show of strength, creates antagonists.  To overcome a weakness, to cover up for weakness, decisions are made to compensate with a greater show of strength, which further exacerbates the situation. 

 

To defend America, Rummy needed America to go to war.  To justify the war, information was manipulated.  War that cost innocents their lives, while being told that that war is for the good of America.  A war meant to provide stability and democracy to the region attacked.  As opposition mounts, the international community learns that the war need not have happened, and use the International Court to make the case.  Rummy is put on trial.  What is the outcome of the trial?

 

Caveats?

This book uses a mix of real references, real events, real people, but with many fictional details and events.  Meant to make prominent certain political information, that can have dire consequences.  The difficulty is understanding what information is real, and which is fiction.  Some events are clearly identifiable, but others require background information.  The characters are based on real people, who made decisions that are detrimental to the American people, but are not turned into caricatures.


Questions to Consider while Reading the Book

•What is the raison d’etre of the book?  For what purpose did the author write the book?  Why do people read this book?
•What are some limitations of the book?
•To whom would you suggest this book?
•Who is the narrator? 
•Who is Donald H. Rumsfeld (Rummy)?
•Why is Rumsfeld on trial?
•Why did Rumsfeld not inform President Bush of the tape?
•What are the different epistemological categories? 
•How did Joyce effect Rumsfeld? 
•How did Rumsfeld and Nixon interact? 
•For Rumsfeld, why is weakness provocative? 
•What did Rumsfeld do with Searle?
•Why did Rumsfeld want to join Bush? 
•What was the conflict between Rumsfeld and the generals? 
•What did Rumsfeld think of reporters?
•Can there be proof of something that does not exist? 
•What measures does Rumsfeld take to find out if Iraq has WMD?
•What did Rumsfeld think of Clinton?
•What did Rumsfeld do during 9/11?
•What was Bush’s stance on Iraq?
•Why was Iraq chosen as the target? 
•Who is Richard B. Cheney?
•Who is Paul O’Neill?
•What did O’Neill give Suskind?
•What did Rumsfeld learn from Charles Darwin?
•What is catastrophic success?
•What happened in the war against Iraq?
•Who is Condoleezza Rice?
•Why was Rumsfeld interested in Iran? 
•Why did Cheney become President?
•Who Became president after Cheney? 
•How did Rumsfeld treat allies? 
•What happened with Iran? 
•What is the International Criminal Court and what power does it have?
•What did President Trump think of Rumsfeld? 

Book Details
This book was provided to the reviewer by the author
Publisher:               Laughing Nuisance Productions
Edition ISBN:         9798999902900
Pages to read:          281
Publication:             2025
1st Edition:              2025
Format:                    Paperback 

Ratings out of 5:
Readability    5
Content          4
Overall          4