Reckless
charges of deceit
July 16, 2003
If there is not an
orchestrated effort among Democratic leaders and the mainstream
press to discredit President Bush concerning Iraq, there might
as well be. The irony is that the president's accusers are damaging
U.S. credibility far more than he has.
Democratic Party Chairman
Terry McAuliffe charged, "This may be the first time in recent
history that a president knowingly misled the American people
during the State of the Union address."
McAuliffe was referring
to a 16-word statement contained in President Bush's address:
"The British government has learned that Saddam Hussein recently
sought significant quantities of uranium from Africa."
It was later learned
that part of the basis of this "intelligence" was a
forged document. The British, notably, still insist their intelligence
is accurate. Nevertheless, the administration has conceded that
the statement should not have been included in the president's
speech, though there is confusion about who caused the mistake.
The CIA has taken responsibility for it, but some believe CIA
Director George Tenet is just covering for the president.
Democrats and many
in the press have been hammering this issue for months, and it's
finally getting some traction. It was the primary subject of the
network and cable Sunday shows, the subject of a rant by Senator
John Kerry and fodder for any number of newspapers.
The Wall Street Journal's
Al Hunt wrote: "The phony Iraq-Niger deal may be the smoking
gun in what was a pervasive pattern of exaggeration and distortion
to justify the war against the Iraqi dictator."
A Los Angeles Times
editorial unquestioningly accepted as true Terry McAuliffe's allegation
that President Bush "knowingly misled the American people."
The editorial mentioned the claim without examining its veracity,
then went on to discuss the pattern of "White House manipulation
of intelligence" that has gone on since Theodore Roosevelt.
The writers conclude, "Given the historical record of the
presidents who came before, it would have been more surprising
if Bush had not manipulated the evidence." Talk about manipulating
evidence. This august paper cites allegations of deceit by previous
presidents as evidence of Bush's deceit.
On ABC's "This
Week," George Stephanopoulos did his best to trip up Defense
Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, as did Tim Russert on NBC's "Meet
the Press." It appeared as if they were reading from the
same script in an attempt to undermine our war against Iraq, and
thus Bush's credibility, on multiple fronts. They rehashed every
conceivable criticism from "we're bogged down in a quagmire"
and "we haven't captured Saddam," to the administration
lied about the existence of WMDs, the number of troops necessary
to secure the peace and the cost of the war.
Rumsfeld took both
interviewers to school, pointing out that 10 weeks is no quagmire,
the administration was careful never to predict the "unknowable"
cost of the war and that Saddam obviously had WMD programs or
he would not have repeatedly violated U.N. resolutions.
Though Rumsfeld admitted
the statement should not have been in the president's speech,
he emphasized that it was a mistake and there was no deception
involved. More importantly, Rumsfeld told Russert that this one
item was a minor tile in the entire mosaic of evidence against
Iraq and "it wasn't even of the five or six things that the
intelligence community listed in their National Intelligence Estimate
with respect to the Iraqi nuclear program."
National Security
adviser Condoleezza Rice backed up Rumsfeld on CBS's "Face
the Nation," saying the "notion" that President
Bush went to war over this "one sentence about whether Saddam
Hussein sought uranium in Africa" is "ludicrous."
I am not excusing
the inclusion of this disputed allegation in the president's speech,
but I firmly believe there was no intent to deceive and that the
administration did not materially rely on the allegation in its
decision to attack Iraq.
I also believe the
deliberate effort to paint President Bush as a deceiver will damage
our nation far more than this lone sentence. Those responsible
for charging Bush with deceit and those repeating it endlessly
in the media have to know that the next time the administration
accuses another rogue nation, based on intelligence data, of engaging
in a vigorous program to produce WMDs, many may well believe the
information has been hyped. Perhaps those responsible for such
a diminution of the credibility of the president and our intelligence
agencies will delight in this outcome -- as they are inclined
to oppose military interventions in such circumstances anyway.
"Oh what tangled
webs we weave, when first we practice to" paint others as
deceivers.
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