I do think that Bolten will bring a much more sort of a -- he's going to bring a freshness to that.
Well, Anderson, I think these are important changes, in the sense it's going to make the White House more efficient.
I just can't believe he will do it. So, I'm astonished by what they're saying.
I find the story that has emerged from the White House today absolutely extraordinary, even bizarre.
Very seriously.
I cannot remember a time when so many generals at high levels during a war have come out against the defense secretary.
As I have previously, I call for the resignation of the secretary of defense...
There's a drip, drip, drip that's occurred, that's worn away his -- his credibility for much of the public.
It's going to be harder to argue to the United States public and to the world at large that the intelligence we have in Iran makes them even...
We're not going to be a country that takes millions of families and splits them apart.
The American people will find that to be an unacceptable standard.
Iraq is a very, very, very strong issue for the Democrats. And to the extent that they argue, hey, look, the president has said he's against...
It's now clear we know less about the full story on this -- on this whole leak deal than we did -- than we thought we did.
A significant political problem. I think it's important today that, in a testy exchange with reporters, the White House press secretary did ...
But it does not solve their problem about having a message about where we grow from here, not only in Iraq, but in Iran and the Middle East,...
I think it has been a very shrewd move.
They have got to be more than a one-trick pony.
It is falling darn short of what the administration thought it was going to be, where we thought we were going to be, three years on.