Friday, June 29, 2007

CIA to Bush - No WMDs in Iraq


The CIA warned Bush of no WMDs in Iraq. But Bush ignored the warnings and launched his brain-dead war anyway. This is from CBS News, dateline April 22, 2006:
"Washington - The CIA had evidence Iraq possessed no weapons of mass destruction six months before the 2003 US-led invasion but was ignored by a White House intent on ousting Saddam Hussein, a former senior CIA official said according to CBS.

Tyler Drumheller, who headed CIA covert operations in Europe during the run-up to the Iraq war, said intelligence opposing administration claims of a WMD threat came from a top Iraqi official who provided the US spy agency with other credible information.

The source ''told us that there were no active weapons of mass destruction programs,'' Drumheller said in a CBS interview to be aired on Sunday on the network's news magazine, ''60 Minutes.''

''The (White House) group that was dealing with preparation for the Iraq war came back and said they were no longer interested,'' he was quoted as saying in interview excerpts released by CBS on Friday.

''We said: 'Well, what about the intel?' And they said: 'Well, this isn't about intel anymore. This is about regime change','' added Drumheller, whose CIA operation was assigned the task of debriefing the Iraqi official.

He was the latest former US official to accuse the White House of setting an early course toward war in Iraq and ignoring intelligence that conflicted with its aim.

CBS said the CIA's intelligence source was former Iraqi Foreign Minister Naji Sabri and that former CIA Director George Tenet delivered the information personally to President George W. Bush, Vice President Dick Cheney and other top White House officials in September 2002. They rebuffed the CIA three days later.

''The policy was set. The war in Iraq was coming and they were looking for intelligence to fit into the policy,'' the former CIA agent told CBS."
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CNN Poll - People Prefer the Democrats

A poll released today by CNN, shows that voters favor Demcocrats over republicans 51 to 36.
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Thursday, June 28, 2007

Rudy's Flip-flopping on Clinton

Rudy then:
"The idea of trying to cast blame on President Clinton is just wrong for many, many reasons, not the least of which is I don't think he deserves it."
Rudy now:
"Well, that’s the preeminent challenge of our generation that’s been imposed on us by the terrorists. I mean, they’ve been at war with us for a long time. Unfortunately, tragically, we didn’t recognize it until September 11th, or America didn’t, but now we do....

It’s a frustrating thing, and America needs leadership to remain on offense. We can fall back easily into what the Democrats are talking about. It sounds very appealing, you know? Don’t react, let things go, kind of act the way Clinton did in the ’90s."
Even Tucker Carlson noted Rudy's flip-flopping (special thanks to Talking Points Memo:

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Tuesday, June 26, 2007

Time's Up in Iraq Says GOP's Lugar

Thanks to the Washington Post for this piece.
"WASHINGTON -- Sen. Richard Lugar, a senior Republican and a reliable vote for President Bush on the war, said that Bush's Iraq strategy was not working and that the U.S. should downsize the military's role."
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Rove Associate Implicated in "Caging" Crimes

Thanks to TPM Muckrakers's Paul Kiel for this bit.
"The allegations stem from two emails sent to and from Griffin in August of 2004, when he was working as the Research Director for the Republican National Committee. The subject line of the emails was “caging” and attached was a spreadsheet with the names and addresses of 1,835 voters in Duval County. A woman working for the Republican Party of Florida seems to have prepared the spreadsheet, which she sent to Griffin and other RNC researchers, as well as Brett Doster, the executive director of the Bush-Cheney Florida 2004 re-election campaign."
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Saturday, June 16, 2007

More Media Bias -- Against Clinton


Thanks to Media Matters' Jamison Foser for tipping us off to this one.

When asked if Clinton is electable, Tim Russert chose to cite a poll OTHER than one commissioned by his employer.

By doing so, he was able to create an impression exactly opposite the one he WOULD have created had he relied on his own network's poll. There is a reason for this.

Why would he avoid citing his own network's poll which showed her beating Rudy by five points? And instead go with another poll which allowed him to create the opposite impression?
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WH Culture of Lying

STORM: So, Mr. Bartlett, staying the course is no longer the operative strategy?

BARTLETT: Well, Hannah, it’s never been a stay-the-course strategy.
Now for the truth. *S*

BUSH: We will stay the course, we will complete the job in Iraq. [8/4/05]

SNOW: The second thing you do is you stay the course. [7/10/06]

SNOW: But on the other hand, you also cannot be a President in a wartime and not realize that you’ve got to stay the course. [8/17/06]

BUSH: We will stay the course. [8/30/06]

BUSH: We will stay the course until the job is done, Steve. And the temptation is to try to get the President or somebody to put a timetable on the definition of getting the job done. We’re just going to stay the course. [12/15/03]

BUSH: And my message today to those in Iraq is: We’ll stay the course. [4/13/04]

SNOW: People are going to want more of it, and that’s why the President is determined to stay the course. April. [8/16/06]

BUSH: And that’s why we’re going to stay the course in Iraq. And that’s why when we say something in Iraq, we’re going to do it. [4/16/04]

BUSH: And so we’ve got tough action in Iraq. But we will stay the course. [4/5/04]
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Snow Caught Lying Again

Tony Snow on June 13, 2007:

Q: Okay, but at the beginning of this story, the President, you, Dan Bartlett, others said on camera that politics was not involved, this was performance-based.

MR. SNOW: That is something -- we have never said that
Oh, really? Now for the truth!
Tony Snow on March 15, 2007:

"[W]hat the President has -- the Department of Justice has made recommendations, they've been approved. And it's pretty clear that these things are based on performance and not on sort of attempts to do political retaliation, if you will.".
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Thursday, June 7, 2007

So Much for Bernstein

Thanks to our friends at Media Matters for this bit where Carl Berstein says Hillary Clinton broke the law - and then recants in the next breath:
"O'REILLY: Did she break the law?

BERNSTEIN: Yes.

O'REILLY: OK. Good, I like this. How did she break the law?

BERNSTEIN: She broke the law if, indeed, she perjured herself.

O'REILLY: Well, you just said she did break the law.

BERNSTEIN: No. The special prosecutor determined that she did not. So he did not file the charge.

O'REILLY: So you think she did. But the special prosecutor, Ken Starr, said no.

BERNSTEIN: That is co-- [It sounded like he started to say, "That is correct."] -- you know what? Let me be really straightforward. I don't think she broke the law."
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Wednesday, June 6, 2007

Personna

By Major Bill Fisher USMCR (Ret.)
Orignally printed in the Covington [Tennessee] Leader; August 28, 2002


It is decision time in our land.

We as Americans are in effect being asked to support a pre-emptive strike against Iraq, our supposed enemy. Let us take a look back about 60 years or so.

In October of 1937, President Franklin Roosevelt laid the mantle of aggressor on both Germany and Italy thereby in effect putting Japan in the barrel with Nazis and Fascists (Japan had signed a treaty with Germany and Italy). Roosevelt said, "We are adopting such measures as will minimize our risk of involvement...." Roosevelt's intention was made clear when the United States joined in with the League of Nations (to which we did not belong) in censuring Japan. Our ambassador to Japan, Joseph Grew, felt our interest in China did not risk war with Japan. For the next several years our relationship with Japan deteriorated and in the minds of the military group who controlled the Emperor of Japan, we were the bad guys and about to do them harm.

In no way will the average World War II veteran give the Japanese a pass on what happened December 7, 1941. However, in the minds of those controlling the Japanese government, there was not a choice but to strike us first. Do we want to follow that same morally bankrupt approach in our dealings with Iraq?

The people at the top of our government, with the exception of the Secretary of State Colin Powell, are devoid of any combat experience. One might construe the present attempt by the President, the Secretary of Defense, and the Vice-president to fight a war as "wannabe's" trying to win their spurs. The President spent the Vietnam years jumping in and out of the National Guard, Rumsfeld drove a Navy plane during the in-between years and Cheney copped out on an education and a parental deferment. In fairness, Senator Tom Daschle and Congressman Richard Gephardt are in the same boat.

No one in their right mind would condone the events of Sept. 11, 2001, but the question is now, how do we protect ourselves and punish the criminals while maintaining the moral plane that has been the hallmark of our blest nation?

Do we really want a super government agency, Homeland Defense? Do we really want one or two generals in charge of the entire continental United States? Do we want a secretary of defense that breaks over 200 years of tradition and summarily maneuvers a sitting marine commandant to a lesser post before his term is finished? Or a secretary of defenses that fed-eralizes National Guard units for domestic duty in the absence of a true national emergency?

Do we want to continue this fiasco of so called "security" at passenger entry points in our airports? What is one to think when the smallest metal object creates a scene while one will receive stainless steel eating utensils once aboard an aircraft (QANTAS two weeks ago)? Does it really take 15 people to man two security lines?

While "Chicken Little" scurries around from down on the ranch, important domestic needs are glossed over. The men who gave up their youth to fight the scourge of Japan are deserving of better treatment than is presently being doled out. The bureaucrats in the Veterans Administration are now moving to close and consolidate which usually means the ' veteran either does without or drives extra miles.

The real problem appears to be that our national leadership is responding to the Military Industrial Complex in spite of Elsenhower's warning. If we allow all of the wish list to be fulfilled, freedom, as we know and fought to preserve it, will gradually diminish.

As usual, old Ben Franklin has sage advice, "They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.

By Major Bill Fisher USMCR (Ret.)
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