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"Gates was U.S. secretary of defense from 2006-2011, serving in the
cabinets of both George W. Bush and Barack Obama two presidents who had
little else in common. Gates's confirmation was a repudiation of his
predecessor, Donald Rumsfeld, and his initial mission was to reverse a
looming defeat in Iraq. As Gates, in this richly textured memoir, tells
it, the Department of Defense had "alienated just about everyone in
town" and the new secretary "had a lot of fences to mend." This involved
overcoming resistance to maintaining the military's "nontraditional
capabilities" developed in Iraq and Afghanistan. Meanwhile his efforts
on behalf of Gen. David Petraeus and the Iraqi surge only exposed other
intractable regional flash points. Gates "did not enjoy being secretary
of defense," and his focus shifted from Iraq to Afghanistan, where "the
foreign-policy team was splintering"; an agitated Israel; and an
ever-difficult Iran. He also faced hot-button domestic issues like Don't
Ask, Don't Tell. Gates frequently presents himself as the only adult in
the room, but given his accounts of administration "micromanagement and
operational meddling," a Congress that "up close... is truly ugly,"
frequent insider leaks, and a government suffering "paralytic
polarization," his call for restoring "civility and mutual respect" is a
cry from the heart." (Publishers Weekly)
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