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mylanta
04-12-2006, 08:10 PM
Now Powell Tells Us
By Robert Scheer
Creators Syndicate
Wednesday 12 April 2006
The president played the scoundrel - even the best of his minions went along with the lies - and when a former ambassador dared to tell the truth, the White House initiated what Special Prosecutor Patrick J. Fitzgerald calls "a plan to discredit, punish or seek revenge against Mr. Wilson." That is the important story line.
If not for the whistle-blower, former Ambassador Joseph Wilson, President Bush's falsehoods about the Iraq nuclear threat likely would never have been exposed.
On Monday, former Secretary of State Colin Powell told me that he and his department's top experts never believed that Iraq posed an imminent nuclear threat, but that the president followed the misleading adv?ce of Vice President Dick Cheney and the CIA in making the claim. Now he tells us.
The harsh truth is that this president cherry-picked the intelligence data in making his case for invading Iraq and deliberately kept the public in the dark as to the countervailing analysis at the highest level of the intelligence community. While the president and his top Cabinet officials were fear-mongering with stark images of a "mushroom cloud" over American cities, the leading experts on nuclear weaponry at the Department of Energy (the agency in charge of the U.S. nuclear-weapons program) and the State Department thought the claim of a near-term Iraqi nuclear threat was absurd.
"The activities we have detected do not, however, add up to a compelling case that Iraq is currently pursuing what INR would consider to be an integrated and comprehensive approach to acquire nuclear weapons," said a dissenting analysis from an assistant secretary of state for intelligence and research (INR) in the now infamous 2002 National Intelligence Estimate on Iraq, which was cobbled together for the White House before the war. "Iraq may be doing so but INR considers the available evidence inadequate to support such a judgment."
The specter of the Iraqi nuclear threat was primarily based on an already-discredited claim that Iraq had purchased aluminum tubes for the purpose of making nuclear weapons. In fact, at the time, the INR wrote in the National Intelligence Estimate that it "accepts the judgment of technical experts at the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) who have concluded that the tubes Iraq seeks to acquire are poorly suited for use in gas centrifuges to be used for uranium enrichment and finds unpersuasive the arguments advanced by others to make the case that they are intended for that purpose."
The other major evidence President Bush gave Americans for a revitalized Iraq nuclear program, of course, was his 2003 State of the Union claim - later found to be based on forged documents - that a deal had been made to obtain uranium from Niger. This deal was exposed within the administration as bogus before the president's speech in January by Ambassador Wilson, who traveled to Niger for the CIA. Wilson only went public with his criticisms in an op-ed piece in the New York Times a half year later in response to what he charged were the administration's continued distortion of the evidence. In excerpts later made available to the public, it is clear that the Niger claim doesn't even appear as a key finding in the October 2002 National Intelligence Estimate, while the INR dissent in that document dismisses it curtly: "[T]he claims of Iraqi pursuit of natural uranium in Africa are, in INR's assessment highly dubious."
I queried Powell at a reception following a talk he gave in Los Angeles on Monday. Pointing out that the October 2002 National Intelligence Estimate showed that his State Department had gotten it right on the nonexistent Iraq nuclear threat, I asked why did the president ignore that wisdom in his stated case for the invasion?
"The CIA was pushing the aluminum tube argument heavily and Cheney went with that instead of what our guys wrote," Powell said. And the Niger reference in Bush's State of the Union speech? "That was a big mistake," he said. "It should never have been in the speech. I didn't need Wilson to tell me that there wasn't a Niger connection. He didn't tell us anything we didn't already know. I never believed it."
When I pressed further as to why the president played up the Iraq nuclear threat, Powell said it wasn't the president: "That was all Cheney." A convenient response for a Bush family loyalist, perhaps, but it begs the question of how the president came to be a captive of his vice president's fantasies.
More important: Why was this doubt, on the part of the secretary of state and others, about the salient facts justifying the invasion of Iraq kept from the public until we heard the truth from whistle-blower Wilson, whose credibility the president then sough? to destroy?
In matters of national security, when a president leaks, he lies.
By selectively releasing classified information to suit his political purposes, as President Bush did in this case, he is denying that there was a valid basis for keeping the intelligence findings secret in the first place. "We ought to get to the bottom of it, so it can be evaluated by the American people," said Sen. Arlen Specter, the Republican chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee. I couldn't have put it any better.

RAK
04-13-2006, 10:11 PM
Colin Powell deserves a place in the Pantheon of American Patriotism right next to Benidict Arnold(though to be fair with Arnold, he was a true and couragious warrior who got screwed by jealous generals and shifty politicians). If he had resigned instead of going to the UN with what he knew were a pack of lies, there may not have been an Iraq War. No Profiles in Courage from this "Yes Man".

mommalina
04-14-2006, 12:59 PM
Colin Powell deserves a place in the Pantheon of American Patriotism right next to Benidict Arnold(though to be fair with Arnold, he was a true and couragious warrior who got screwed by jealous generals and shiftypoliticians). If he had resigned instead of going to the UN with what he knew were a pack of lies, there may not have been an Iraq War. No Profiles in Courage from this "Yes Man".

I, too, have lost all respect for General Colin Powell. He was obligated to refuse to obey an illegal order and did not have the guts to do so. I expected more of him than I did of the grunts who thought they were following orders in Abu Ghraib.

The military of any rank can be so brainwashed that they instintively obey orders without question. But Powell is not dumb; I think he was intimidated and perhaps even blackmailed into towing the line.

Reminds me of why I chose not to make a career out of the military.

Lina

Terry Hanushek
04-14-2006, 02:19 PM
Lina

The military of any rank can be so brainwashed that they instintively obey orders without question. But Powell is not dumb; I think he was intimidated and perhaps even blackmailed into towing the line.

There is an interesting debate going on about the growing number of generals calling for Rumsfeld's resignation (NY Times front page, 4/1/4). There are some who think that these officers should have spoken up before the war in Iraq. To me there is a delicate balance between being vocal and getting fired / transferred as opposed to holding your opinion and trying to effect change from within. I'm not sure about these generals but Colin Powell seems to have been showing signs of Stockholm Syndrome when he went to the UN.

As Ron suggested, there won't be any new chapters in Profiles in Courage from our Iraq affair.

Reminds me of why I chose not to make a career out of the military.

What she said :)

Terry

mommalina
04-14-2006, 03:18 PM
One more thing. Enlisted members of the armed forces swear their oath to those appointed over them; an officer swears an oath not to a person but to the Constitution. The distinction is important and has been forgotten or ignored. This was pointed out by a former Marine Corps lieutenant general and director of operations for the Joint Chiefs of Staff. http://forums.military.com/groupee/forums/a/tpc/f/672198221/m/784007
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Prior to retirement, the now-dissenting generals owed their allegiance to The Constitution, not to Bush or Rumsfeld. Too little, too late.

Lina