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The
Truth About the Lies About Iraq?
Misled by the lying accusers...
[by Roger Aronoff] 12/30/05
In defending
the decision to go to war in Iraq, Vice President Cheney quoted
Senator John McCain as saying that it was a lie to say that
President Bush lied. For those who want to understand the particulars
of the debate about who lied and about what, we suggest this comprehensive
article by Norman Podhoretz, the editor-at-large of Commentary magazine.
It is a great antidote to much of the misinformation put forth
by Democratic partisans such as Chris Matthews of MSNBC.
First is
the question of whether or not President George W. Bush was
lying when he warned of the dangers of Saddam Hussein's weapons
of mass destruction. For the momentary sake of argument, he
accepts the assertion that since we haven't found any stockpiles,
they hadn't been there for many years. Podhoretz walks us through
the process leading up to the war, and discovers that the belief
about Iraqi WMD was nearly unanimous. It was what the intelligence
told us, and it had convinced every member of the Clinton administration,
all of our intelligence agencies, and those of just about every
country in the world.
Joseph Wilson
is a particular target of Podhoretz's meticulous dissection
of what was actually said by the various parties, and it shows
Wilson to have been mendacious on numerous documented instances
as he became one of the leading critics of the war and a media
darling. Wilson was the former ambassador and Bush Administration
critic whose wife was disclosed as a CIA employee, leading
to an investigation of the White House and the indictment of
former Cheney chief of staff Lewis Libby.
Podhoretz
says that, on every count, Wilson's story falls apart. But
if you tune into a show like the Chris Matthews' Hardball show
on unraveling the CIA leak case, there is no mention that Joe
Wilson might have been lying about anything. He is still regarded
as a truth-teller.
The issue
is critical: if the administration knew he was lying and wanted
to discredit him, why didn't they have the right to do that?
There is no justification for breaking the law against revealing
secret CIA employees but no one has been charged with any such
violations. The charges brought against Libby all relate to
different recollections of the facts in the case. Libby's memory
is pitted against those of members of the Washington press
corps. The media want to believe themselves.
Podhoretz
shoots down another often repeated line. Namely, that in the
National Intelligence Estimate of 2002, the State Department's
Bureau of Intelligence and Research (INR) had dissented to
the intelligence agencies' belief that Saddam did possess WMD.
But according to former Colin Powell chief of staff Larry Wilkerson,
who has recently become a harsh critic of the administration
and the war, there was no such dissent. He says the INR only
took issue with the belief that Saddam had a nuclear weapons
program that was up and running. But INR accepted the prevailing
view that Saddam's chemical and biological weapons programs
were active.
There is
much more in this masterful article that should have the effect
of altering the debate on whether we were lied into this war.
The truth, as Cheney says, is that we are now being lied to
and misled—by those accusing Bush of lying.
Here is how
Podhoretz sums it up: "And so long as we are hunting
for liars in this area, let me suggest that we begin with the
Democrats now proclaiming that they were duped, and that we
then broaden out to all those who in their desperation to delegitimize
the larger policy being tested in Iraq—the policy of making
the Middle East safe for America by making it safe for democracy—have
consistently used distortion, misrepresentation, and selective
perception to vilify as immoral a bold and noble enterprise
and to brand as an ignominious defeat what is proving itself
more and more every day to be a victory of American arms and
a vindication of American ideals."
There are
some who will dismiss this as the "neo-con" view. But it strikes
us as the truth. America is standing for liberty in Iraq. That
is the position that Thomas Jefferson would have taken. -one-
copyright
2005 Accuracy in Media
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