
Which would be understandable considering he secretly helped craft it.
On Monday, The New York Times reported that, according to Bob Woodward's latest book, State of Denial, Zakaria, along with a gaggle of other journos, including former Newsweek (now Atlantic) scribe Robert D. Kaplan, formally advised saliva-slick then-Secretary of Defense Paul Wolfowitz on the administration's Iraq policy. Zakaria disputes Woodward's account and says he didn't know his advice would end up in a full-blown advisory report. But Kaplan says there's no way he couldn't have known.
Kaplan told the Times that the report ("A forceful summary of some of the best pro-war arguments at the time") was drafted and reworked in a meeting that Zakaria attended.
Zakaria defended himself to the Times by arguing that, as a columnist, it's his job to provide opinions. "If a senator calls me up and asks me what should we do in Iraq, I'm happy to talk to him," he said.
Which, of course, is a far cry from whispering in the ear of Bush by way of Wolfowitz then signing a non-disclosure agreement.
Zakaria announced his flip-flop this week:
"I understand the impulse of those who want to send in more forces to secure the country. I urged just such a policy from the first week of the occupation. But today we are where we are ... The Bush administration has actually been pursuing more-sensible policies for more than a year now, trying vainly to reverse many of its errors."
He would know.
Zakaria declined comment.