[Mb-civic] Talking Points Memo: by Joshua Micah Marshall November
12, 2005 02:27 PM
William Swiggard
swiggard at comcast.net
Sun Nov 13 06:59:00 PST 2005
Talking Points - Josh Mitchell
November 12, 2005 -- 02:27 PM EDT
What a sorry, sorry, unfortunate president -- caught in his lies, his
half-truths, his reckless disregard ... caught with, well ... caught
with time. Time has finally caught up to him. And now he doesn't have
the popularity to beat back all the people trying to call him to
account. He could; but now he can't. So he's caught. And his best play
is to accuse his critics of rewriting history, of playing fast and loose
with the truth -- a sad, pathetic man.
Chronicling the full measure of the Bush administration's mendacity with
regards to the war is a difficult task -- not because of a dearth of
evidence for it but because of its so many layers, all its
multidimensionality. It's almost like one of those Russian egg novelties
in which each layer opened reveals another layer beneath it. Hard as it
may be, in the interests of getting Mr. Bush past the phases of denial
and anger, let's just hit on some of the main themes.
1. Longstanding effort to convince the American people that Iraq
maintained ties to al Qaida and may have played a role in 9/11. This was
always just a plain old lie. (And if you want to see where the real
fights with the Intelligence Community came up, it was always on the
terror tie angle and much less on WMD.) The president and his chief
advisors tried to leverage Americans' horror over 9/11 to gain support
for attacking Iraq. Simple: lying to the public the president was sworn
to protect.
2. Repeated efforts to jam purported evidence about an Iraqi nuclear
weapons program (the Niger canard) into major presidential speeches
despite the fact the CIA believed the claim was not credible and tried
to prevent the president from doing so. What's the explanation for that?
At best a reckless disregard for the truth in making the case war to the
American public.
3. Consistent and longstanding effort to elide the distinction between
chem-bio-weapons (which are terrible but no immediate threat to American
security) and nuclear weapons (which are). For better or worse, there
was a strong consensus within the foreign policy establishmnet that Iraq
continued to stockpile WMDs. Nor was it an improbable assumption since
Saddam had stockpiled and used such weapons before and, by 2002, had
been free of on-site weapons inspections for almost four years. But what
most observers meant by this was chemical and possibly biological
weapons, not nuclear weapons. Big difference! The White House knew that
this wasn't enough to get the country into war, so they pushed the
threat of a nuclear-armed Saddam for which there was much, much less
evidence.
4. The fact that the administration's push for war wasn't even about WMD
in the first place. Scarcely a week goes by when I don't get an email
from a reader who writes, "I always knew that Saddam didn't have WMDs.
How is that you, with all your access and reporting, didn't know that
too?" Good question. They were right. And I was wrong. But like many
things in this reality-based universe of ours, this was a question
subject to empirical inquiry. No one really knew what Saddam was doing
between 1998 and 2002. And US intelligence made a lot of very poor
assumptions based on sketchy hints and clues. But the solution, at least
the first part of it, was to get inspectors in on the ground and
actually find out. That is what President Bush's very credible threat of
force had done by the Fall of 2002. But once there the inspectors began
making pretty steady progress in showing that many of our suspicions
about reconstituted WMD programs didn't bear out, the White House
response was to begin trying to discredit the inspectors themselves. By
early 2003, inspections had shown that there was no serious nuclear
weapons effort underway -- the only sort of operation which could have
represented a serious or imminent threat. From January of 2003 the
administration went to work trying to insure that the war could be
started before the rationale for war was entirely discredited. They
wanted to create fait accomplis, facts on the ground that no subsequent
information or developments could alter. The whole thing was a con. It
wasn't about WMD.
Beneath these top-line points of dishonesty, there were second order
ones, to be sure -- claims that the entire war would cost a mere $50
billion, insistence that the whole operation could be managed by only a
fraction of the number of troops most experts believed it would take. Of
course, these may be categorized as willful self-deceptions or gross
irresponsibiity. And thus they are properly assigned to different
sections of the Bush-Iraq Lies and Deceptions (BILD) bestiary than the
cynical exploitation of lies and attempts to confuse proper.
In the president's new angle that his critics are trying to 'rewrite
history', those critics might want to point out that his charge would be
more timely after he stopped putting so much effort into obstructing any
independent inquiry that could allow an accurate first draft of the
history to be written. In any case, he must sense now that he's blowing
into a fierce wind. The judgement of history hangs over this guy like a
sharp, heavy knife. His desperation betrays him. He knows it too.
-- Josh Marshall
http://www.talkingpointsmemo.com/archives/006989.php
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