While the American people were not told about the intelligence which strongly, and in some cases indisputably, contradicted the pre-war Administration claims about the various Iraqi threats, Senate Democrats like Sen. Rockefeller were aware of it, and thus have no basis for blaming the Administration for their pro-war vote. The reality is that these now-recanting Senate Democrats voted for the war despite these doubts about WMD intelligence because -- in the intense climate of war and in the face of a highly popular President in 2002 -- they were simply afraid not to support Bush’s war.
Former Sen. Intelligence Committee Chairman Bob Graham, in his excellent Op-Ed in today’s Washington Post, provides the proof that both of these notions are true -- namely, that Sen. Rockefeller has no grounds for complaining that he was misled, but the American people have ample grounds for this complaint.
Entitled "What I Knew Before the Invasion," Graham explains that while he began with the premise that the Administration’s claims about the Iraqi threat should be trusted, his exposure to pre-war intelligence cast serious doubt on those claims, and these doubts caused him to ultimately vote against the war:
There were troubling aspects to this 90-page document [the National Intelligence Estimate produced by the CIA]. While slanted toward the conclusion that Hussein possessed weapons of mass destruction stored or produced at 550 sites, it contained vigorous dissents on key parts of the information, especially by the departments of State and Energy. Particular skepticism was raised about aluminum tubes that were offered as evidence Iraq was reconstituting its nuclear program. As to Hussein's will to use whatever weapons he might have, the estimate indicated he would not do so unless he was first attacked.
Under questioning, Tenet added that the information in the NIE had not been independently verified by an operative responsible to the United States. In fact, no such person was inside Iraq. Most of the alleged intelligence came from Iraqi exiles or third countries, all of which had an interest in the United States' removing Hussein, by force if necessary.
The American people needed to know these reservations, and I requested that an unclassified, public version of the NIE be prepared. On Oct. 4, Tenet presented a 25-page document titled "Iraq's Weapons of Mass Destruction Programs." It represented an unqualified case that Hussein possessed them, avoided a discussion of whether he had the will to use them and omitted the dissenting opinions contained in the classified version. Its conclusions, such as "If Baghdad acquired sufficient weapons-grade fissile material from abroad, it could make a nuclear weapon within a year," underscored the White House's claim that exactly such material was being provided from Africa to Iraq.
From my advantaged position, I had earlier concluded that a war with Iraq would be a distraction from the successful and expeditious completion of our aims in Afghanistan. Now I had come to question whether the White House was telling the truth -- or even had an interest in knowing the truth.
This is the case that needs to be made against the Administration, but this case cannot be made by Sen. Rockefeller or any other Senate Democrat with pre-war access to this intelligence. Graham's narrative shows that Senate Democrats who received the NIE were in a position to know that the Administration’s claims were exaggerated or false, but this information was kept from the American people as the result of the Administration's highly selective, and misleading, exploitation of its classification powers, whereby Bush officials publicly disclosed -- and hyped -- the intelligence supporting its alarmist claims, but kept classified (and therefore concealed from the American people) the intelligence which so strongly undermined those claims.
Sen. Graham used his access to this classified information to determine back then that the Administration was exaggerating the Iraqi threat. What is Sen. Rockefeller’s excuse for not having done the same? Sen. Rockefeller has admitted that he had the same NIE which contained these dissents as well as the underlying evidence which undermined the Administration’s pre-war claims, and yet he still voted to give the President authority to wage war. Now, Rockefeller wants to point to these same dissents and this same evidence – which, like Graham, he had before he voted – in order to claim that he was tricked by the Administration into supporting the war.
Sen. Rockefeller's duplicity is as breathtaking as it is self-evident, and for that reason, having him and those who had similar access be the public faces for the complaints about the Bush Administration's pre-war deceit is undermining the potency of that complaint. If Sen. Rockefeller regrets his vote and believes he erred in his judgment when he supported it, he should say so. And if he supported the war because he was intimidated to do so by the political climate at the time, or because he thought Americans should stand behind the President no matter what in the then-still-recent aftermath of 9/11, he should admit that, too.
But Senators like Sen. Rockefeller are in exactly the worst position possible to blame the Administration for their pro-war votes because they actually did – to use the Bush defenders’ favorite phrase – have access to essentially the same intelligence on Iraq as the Administration did and yet reached the same conclusion as the Administration did, i.e., that war against Iraq was necessary. By stark contrast, Sen. Graham was able, by virtue of his access to this same intelligence, to conclude that there were serious grounds for doubting the accuracy of the Administration’s pre-war claims on Iraq. Sen. Rockefeller could have, and should have, done the same thing.
Particularly in times of national security crises, Americans look to their President for leadership and they trust that what they are told is truthful and accurate. But Americans now realize that this trust in the Administration’s pre-war claims was misplaced -- not necessarily because the White House knew with certainty that the WMD claims it was making were false, but because the White House pretended that they knew these things for certain while concealing the ample evidence casting grave doubt on their accuracy, thus depriving Americans of making an informed choice as to whether the supposed threat posed by Iraq really did justify war. It is for that reason that Americans thus have every right to be angry that they were misled by the Bush Administration with regard to the nature and magnitude of the threat posed by Saddam’s regime.
But now-recanting pro-war Senate Democrats, having access to classified information that American citizens outside the Senate did not, do not have this same ground for complaint. They failed in their duty to serve as a loyal but vigorous opposition to the Administration, as they were too afraid to stand up to the President’s war desires. And in order to excuse their mistakes, they are now seeking to pretend that they were victimized by a deceitful Administration in the same way the American people were.
This is what is allowing Bush defenders the easy out against complaints about the accuracy of the Administration’s pre-war WMD claims. Republicans focus on the hypocrisy and duplicity of this complaint when it is voiced by previously pro-war Senate Democrats by pointing out -- correctly -- that these Senate Democrats had access to much of (not all, but much of) the same intelligence back then. But while the Senate Democrats did have such access, the American people did not, and for that reason, these Senate Democrats should not be the spokespersons for the complaint that the Administration misled the nation into war.
As Sen. Graham’s Op-Ed shows, Senate Democrats such as Sen. Rockefeller failed in their duty to stand up to the Administration prior to the war, and their failures are partially responsible for the fact that the Administration was able to mislead Americans with respect to the Iraqi threat. It is the American people, not Senate Democrats looking for an excuse for their vote, who should be voicing this plainly justifiable complaint that they were misled by the Administration.
Good points all, but where are you going with all these attacks on Dems who shoulda-woulda-coulda been "in the loop"?
ReplyDeleteThe real problem is the DNC. Democrats are no less beholden than Republicans to the Likudnik cabal who are only interested in blurring the distinction between the interests of the United States and the interests of Israel. The corporations which comprise the American Likudnik faction have the same interest as the Christian fundamentalists on the right - bending federal policies to the will of their religious agenda.
Follow the money. Who convinced Al Gore that Joe Lieberman would make a good running mate? Where is the money coming from for Hillary's 2008 war chest?
The answer is the DNC. During the 2004 democratic primary debates Lieberman used the anti-Semite leather strap on Howard Dean for saying that the United States ought to function as an "honest broker" to all the parties in the Middle East. We all saw what happened to Howard and his anti-war platform. Howard was immediately swift-boated by the DNC via the media companies they control. Do you think Democrat Senators didn't see exactly why that happened to Howard? Do you think any one of them could stand alone against such a well coordinated Pro-Israel lobby?
If we're truly interested in finding origin of losing Democrat rhetorical strategies, let's look at our own fundamentalist wing. The Republicans have to deal with Intelligent Design fundamentalists. The Democrats have to deal with the Israel fundamentalists.
The reason the Democratic leadership didn't come out against the war from the beginning is because their pay masters where the ones who wanted George Bush to start the war that would fight Israel's battles for them.
It's because of idiots like "Servant" that the Republicans have been, and will continue to, maintain total control of the federal government. The legitimate voices of dissent are drowned out by the self-loathing anti-Americanism and transparently anti-Semitic hard-core Left. A platform that melds Hugo Chavez with Patrick Buchanan is hardly the remedy to fix the Democratic woes.
ReplyDeleteWhat ailes the Democratic party is that we cannot articulate an alternative vision for the United States to the one forwarded by fascists in the PNAC and the AIPAC. A vision, by the way, which was specifically crafted to attract morons like David.
ReplyDeleteAmerica right or wrong. Love it or leave it. Please update your rhetoric sir. If you can't run with the big dogs, stay on the porch.
Good strategy, Servant. I see you're a keen student of American history. Your prescription will ensure the Democrats lock up a solid 6% of the electorate. Excellent advice. Let the long and distiguished line of hard-Left electoral success continue!
ReplyDeleteAnd, now Servant and the rest of the hard Left adopts Buchanan as their hero. Thinly disguised anti-Semitism, the new credo of the Left. The original champions against racism have now become the mud-slinging demagogues they once deplored.
My guess is that the hard Left isn't interested in electoral success. More important to people like Servant is to wallow in self-loathing to satisfy some misplaced yet palpable sense of guilt and disconnectedness. For people like Servant, it's not about the U.S.; it's about him.
What it's not about/what it's about. We're hearing that rhetoric more and more these days from conservatives who seem to think they have a monopoly on "what it's really about".
ReplyDeleteEvery time you try to change the subject to "what it's really about" we see people running out the back door of the White House over to Fitzgerald's office to cop a plea in exchange for their testimony.
Look! A flock of turtles! Your own eyes are lying to you. Listen to what "it's really about."
They're subject matter experts on "what it's really about".
It's not about fascism. It's about patriotism.
It's not about the national debt. "Reagan proved deficits don't matter."
It's not about Osama Bin Laden. It's about Saddam Hussein.
It's not about Curve Ball. It's about liberals hate America.
It's not about American foriegn policy. It's about who we are. They just hate freedom.
It's not about how the administration decided to invade Iraq in the first 100 days of their second term, according to Paul O'Neill. It's about why liberals just can't follow orders.
If we thought you needed an opinion, we'd give you one.
It's not about that. It's about whatever we say it's about.
Look over there! Oh you missed it!
While I do agree that servant seems to have a jew problem which is quite unattractive, to put it mildly, the reality is that the biggest beneficiary of this war, really the ONLY beneficiary of this war so far, has been Israel, which got rid of their number one enemy and didnt' have to spend any of its money or lives to do it, they only spent ours.
ReplyDeleteGood deal for them. Not such a good deal for us.
>>>the reality is that the biggest beneficiary of this war, really the ONLY beneficiary of this war so far, has been Israel, which got rid of their number one enemy ...
ReplyDeleteNot really. I'd put the Iraqi people as the number one beneficiary, Kuwait second, Iran a close third and the other surrounding Middle Eastern countries, including Israel, thereafter.
Besides, it's logically false to assert that because Saddam's removal allegedly benefited Israel, ergo Israel was behind the decision, or that the U.S. did it to benefit Israel. Given the U.S.'s sordid history with Saddam, and most importantly, the 12 years of post-Gulf War dysfunction, those, like Servant and Buchanan, who make the logical fallacy of blaming Israel, are doing so wantonly and recklessly. Anti-Semitic? That's for them to answer.
Lastly, Israel's number one concern for the last fifteen years has been Iran, not Iraq. The Israeli defense establishment has not been all that concerned with Iraq since the end of the Gulf War. Their position the last ten years has been that Iraq's capabilities were significantly downgraded as the result of the Gulf War and they were content with the sanctions and no-fly zone regime. And, if the Iraq experiment fails? We're talking about a full-blown Middle East war. That's the last thing Israel wants. While Israel supported the Americans diplomatically before the war, they were not thumping on about Iraq during the 90s. Plus, in local politics and in the press, they were nervous and uncomfortable about it because: (i) Saddam may have lobbed missiles into Israel again and (ii) the unknowns of the post-invasion.
Somehow we can never understand the distinction between Jews and Israel. Is there a distinction?
ReplyDeleteYou authorities on anti-Semitism give me a working definition, with your politically correct approved terminology, we can use to talk intelligently about a country versus the members of the religion? How does one speak of Israel without conflating it with Jews? Is that it possible? Are they the same thing?
Bet you could think of a distinction if you put your mind to it. Further, I bet you could give us some examples of where the interests of the United States are unaligned with those of Israel.