Former Treasury Secretary Paul O’Neill today tried to pour some cold water on the political fires he set off in a new tell-all book about his two years in the Bush administration.
O’Neill now says the Bush administration was not wrong to begin “contingency planning” for Iraq, that he regretted any unflattering comments about President Bush, and that he did not give the book’s author, Ron Suskind, classified materials. But O’Neill’s sharp criticisms in “The Price of Loyalty” still have Washington rumbling.
Michael Duffy, Washington Bureau Chief for Time magazine, discusses the latest chapter in the O’Neill page turner.
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