Is Condoleezza Rice’s staunch support of George W. Bush’s foreign
policy a matter of political opportunism or something else, asked
Anthony Lewis in the
New York Times.
Kessler on campus in November. Frank Mullin
Reviewing
The Confidant by Washington Post correspondent
Glenn Kessler
’81, Lewis found ”an alternative explanation: her change could be
religious in origin, a reaction to 9/11 by a person who is a Calvinist
with ‘a deeply religious, moralistic streak.’ ” The Economist was
harsher on Rice: “Mr. Kessler pays due credit to Ms. Rice’s
intelligence and energy. But his clear conclusion is that most of the
problems she has tried to solve have been beyond her. He is excoriating
about the limits of what Ms. Rice’s team calls ‘practical idealism’; to
Mr. Kessler the term is “nonsensical.”