[Mb-civic] Buck Stops in the Voting Booth ROBERT SCHEER
Michael Butler
michael at michaelbutler.com
Tue Oct 5 11:58:18 PDT 2004
http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/la-oe-scheer5oct05.story
ROBERT SCHEER
Buck Stops in the Voting Booth
ROBERT SCHEER
October 5, 2004
It is difficult for members of the U.S. Senate, where even the best are
uncommonly proud, to admit that they are not always in the know. Perhaps
that explains why Sen. John Kerry did not object in the first presidential
debate when George W. Bush twice claimed that the two men had "looked at the
same intelligence" on Iraq before the war when, in fact, they hadn't.
The reality is that the Bush White House deceived Kerry and the rest of
Congress by exaggerating and distorting intelligence and by systematically
repressing analysis that contradicted its claim that Iraq posed a clear and
imminent danger to the American people especially regarding its most
alarming conclusion, that Iraq had restarted its nuclear weapons program.
The Iraqi nukes snow job, led by Vice President Dick Cheney, national
security advisor Condoleezza Rice and the president himself, was alarmingly
effective because it conflated highly technical jargon and teasing hints at
classified information with the most fearsome image in the modern psyche:
the mushroom cloud.
"We do know that there have been shipments into Iraq, for instance, of
aluminum tubes that really are only suited for nuclear weapons programs,"
Rice said on CNN on Sept. 8, 2002. Three days later, Bush said basically the
same thing to the U.N. General Assembly.
Now a detailed investigative article in Sunday's New York Times clarifies
and reinforces earlier reports that the administration knew this evidence
was being aggressively debunked by the country's leading experts but the
White House kept that criticism from Congress and the public by invoking
national security.
The administration knew the facts, even as it was energetically leaking a
raft of intelligence flotsam that buttressed its propaganda that Iraq posed
an immediate threat to the world.
It is crucial to remember that the tale of the tubes was once the
foundation of the "irrefutable evidence" Cheney cited when asserting that
Saddam Hussein was rebuilding a nuclear weapons program dismantled by a
decade of war, inspections and sanctions. He knew that the possibility of
Hussein having nukes was the key to elevating Iraq from being a mere
irritant to the United States to an actual threat, and this explains why the
administration was willing to put so much public faith in such astonishingly
weak intelligence.
For her part, Rice admitted Sunday on ABC-TV's "This Week" that, before
making her now-infamous remark in 2002 that "we don't want the smoking gun
to be a mushroom cloud," she knew there was a debate about the tubes between
the CIA and experts at the Energy Department. However, she admitted, "I
actually didn't really know the nature of the dispute."
And when then-CIA chief George Tenet was successfully pressured in the fall
of 2002 by a nervous White House to buck up congressional support for an
Iraq invasion by creating an unclassified summary of intelligence on the
Iraq threat, the agency flat-out lied: "All intelligence experts agree that
Iraq is seeking nuclear weapons and that these tubes could be used in a
centrifuge enrichment program."
In hindsight, as the New York Times makes clear, the opposite was true. The
Energy Department experts who formed what the Times refers to as
"unambiguously the A-Team of the intelligence community" on matters of
nuclear centrifuges took a close look at the frightening claims first made
by an aggressive junior CIA agent and declared them "unlikely," noting that
"a rocket production is the much more likely end use for these tubes."
That is exactly what the international inspectors found when they returned
to Iraq before a war-hungry Bush pulled the plug on their nearly completed
mission. "After three months of intrusive inspections, we have, to date,
found no evidence or plausible indication of the revival of a nuclear
weapons program in Iraq," stated the International Atomic Energy Agency on
March 7, 2003, just weeks before the U.S. and Britain bypassed the U.N. and
invaded Iraq. Yet, rather than admit that he bent the facts to fit the
narrative of fear he was pressing on the American people, the president now
blames the CIA, his predecessor, his opponents anybody but himself and his
national security team. He carps constantly that, because others were duped,
he shouldn't be blamed.
If the buck does not stop with the commander in chief, where does it stop?
With the American voters on Nov. 2.
If you want other stories on this topic, search the Archives at
latimes.com/archives.
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