| 7-16-2004 |
|
 |
 |
Time to apologize
to Bush
|
|
Earlier this week, Americans learned from the Senate Intelligence
Committee (SIC) report that the Bush administration did not
lie about or manipulate intelligence in the run-up
to the Iraq invasion. To reiterate, the report found "no
evidence that the [intelligence community's] mischaracterization
or exaggeration of [Iraq's] weapons of mass destruction capabilities
was the result of political pressure ... The Committee did
not find any evidence that Administration officials attempted
to coerce, influence or pressure analysts to change their
judgments related to Iraq's weapons of mass destruction."
Yesterday, a British inquiry exonerated the Blair government
of exactly the same charge. "We should record in particular that we have found no evidence of
deliberate distortion or of culpable negligence [on the part of the Blair administration].
We found no evidence of [Joint Intelligence Committee] assessments and the judgments
inside them being pulled in any particular direction to meet the policy concerns
of senior officials on the JIC," the report said.
The British report also agreed with the SIC about the nature of Iraq's weapons
programs. In short, intelligence on Iraq's weapons programs on both sides of
the Atlantic was flawed, but no one "lied" about it. Both President
Bush and Prime Minister Tony Blair acted in good faith given the intelligence
provided by their respective agencies. This is the nature of leadership.
But a funny thing happened on the way to the 2004 elections. Soon after the
fall of Baghdad, it started to become clear that Saddam Hussein did not have
the weapons programs everyone believed he had. Urged along by one dissembling
former ambassador, the Democrats soon lost control and began to accuse the
president of the United States of lying to, or at least misleading, the American
people.
To name only a few, the Democratic National Committee (DNC), in a television
ad, mentioned the "yellowcake" reference in the president's 2003
State of the Union, adding "the administration knew it wasn't true ...
It's time to tell the truth." (No, it was true, then as now.) The DNC
Web site also informed readers about the administration's "year-long campaign
of deception involving a bogus intelligence report on Iraq's nuclear program." DNC
Chairman Terry McAuliffe huffed, "This may be the first time in recent
memory that a president knowingly misled the American people during the State
of the Union address." According to John Kerry, Mr. Bush "misled
every one of us." Sen. Joseph Biden believed the administration "hyped
[the intelligence] ... to create a sense of urgency and a threat." Sen.
Carl Levin said, "The statement that Iraq was attempting to acquire African
uranium was not an inadvertent mistake. It was negotiated between CIA and National
Security Council officials, and it was highly misleading."
We agree with the Wall Street Journal on this matter: Apologies are in order.
Email:
moun@moun.com |