--- Doug Pensinger <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I respect your opinion, and understand that this is
> the way you understand 
> the situation.  I hope that you can read the
> following and try to 
> understand the reasons I disagree with you and
> perhaps try to convince me 
> that I'm wrong in a manner commensurate with your
> intelligence (for which 
> I have the utmost respect.)  Please consider that
> the opinions below are 
> not just my own; tens of millions of Americans are
> asking similar 
> questions and coming to similar conclusions.  So no
> matter how much you 
> dislike me, these are questions that can not be
> avoided by supporters of 
> the Bush administration.

I don't dislike you at all Doug.  But I have become
increasingly uncomfortable discussing politics on this
list, because it seems to me that there are a fair
number of people who really, really hate the
President.  Not disagree with the President, _hate_
the President.  It's sort of like when Howard Dean was
in the Democratic debate and kept referring to
President Bush as "the enemy."  No, he's not, and if
you think of him that way, then we do have a problem. 
Osama Bin Laden is the enemy.  Assad, maybe.  Various
people in Saudi Arabia.  But President Bush is the
President of the United States.  I don't agree with
everything that he's done.  You apparently agree with
nothing that he's done.  But that doesn't make him
evil, and it shouldn't in your eyes.
> 
> I've read compelling testimony that the
> administration stovepiped 
> intelligence in order to build the case for war. 
> This week Tenat said 
> that "analysts never said there was an imminent
> threat" yet prior to the 
> war, Administration officials including the
> President repeatedly made the 
> case that there was (quotes available upon request.)

First, the President _never_ used the word imminent to
describe the threat.  Not ever.  

Second, "stovepiped" is a description of American
intelligence pretty much all the time.  I can recall
meetings with Cabinet and sub-Cabinet level officials
in 1998, 1999, 2001 and 2002 in which they described
the principal problem of American intelligence
organization as "stovepiping".  So Tenet's description
was one of an institutional problem, not of something
the Administration did.

But, more than that, the case that the Administration
made was indistinguishable or _more conservative_ from
the beliefs of other governments.  Thanks to the
Hutton Inquiry, we now know beyond any doubt that the
Blair government was entirely honest in its
presentation of the facts.  We also know,
interestingly enough, that it was opponents of the war
- the ones complaining loudest about Administration
lies - who were in fact faking stories to discredit
the war effort.  One can wonder why so-called liberals
were do desperate to save Saddam Hussein.  But that's
neither here nor there - just an aside.  But the Blair
government agreed with the Administration's threat
assessment.  The German government publicly stated
that they believed that Saddam was _6 months_ away
from acquiring nuclear weapons.  The French government
agreed that Saddam had WMDs.  Everyone agreed that
Saddam had WMDs.  There wasn't any real debate on the
topic.

Even if you limit yourself to American intelligence,
the Clinton Administration believed the exact same
things that the Bush Administration does.  In fact,
Bill Clinton himself has repeatedly said - most
recently in Davos just a few weeks ago - that he
believed that Saddam had WMDs.  Which, of course, we
know that he did.  We just don't know what happened to
them.

So we were wrong.  We were wrong in Libya too, but in
the exact opposite direction.  We had _no idea_ that
their WMD program was advanced as it was.  Had we been
wrong in the other direction in Iraq, would that have
been preferable?

>  Somewhere in there, 
> the truth has been compromised.  So:  1) Do you deny
> that the 
> administration made misleading statements?  2) If
> you do, how do you 
> explain the conflict between Tenet's statement and
> the administration's 
> statements prior to the invasion?  3) If not, are
> you saying that the 
> administration lied to accommodate the U.N.?    

I've covered the first three questions, I think.  The
Administration made arguments that not only did _it_
believe, _every other government in the world_
believed as well.  No one thought Saddam did not have
WMDs.  The Administration conveyed the threat as well
as it knew it, and _no one disputed the truth of that
threat_.  They just disputed whether it was worth
doing something about it.

4)> How do you explain the 
> statements by O’Neil and others that the
> Administration was determined to 
> take out Hussein from their first day in office?

O'Neill was well answered by Michael Kinsley who - by
his own statement - hates George Bush.  All O'Neill
showed was that there were meetings before 9/11
discussing regime change.  This is not a surprise -
the Bush Administration was legally compelled, by
nearly unanimous vote of the Congress, to seek regime
change.  It was a stated goal of the Clinton
Administration.  O'Neill was horrifyingly, stunningly
naive about Washington, and the strongest indictment
you can make against the Administration is that it was
dumb enough to hire someone so incompetent.  I quote:
"O'Neill seems genuinely surprised to discover that
Bush actually does intend to cut taxes (as he promised
repeatedly in his campaign); that the administration
wants "regime change" in Iraq (as did the previous
administration and almost everyone else in the
world�the question was what to do about it)".

Everyone wanted regime change.  Everyone understood
that there was only one way to do it.  The only
difference between the Bush Administration and its
opponents was that it was honest enough to admit this,
and brave enough to do something.  Those are generally
thought of as virtues, not sins.  The fact that some
opponents of the war deny these two undeniable truths
- that regime change was a goal of the US government
before the Bush Administration (again, something that
we were legally committed to by a vote of Congress and
by many public statements from the Clinton
Administration) and that there was only one way to do
it (invading Iraq) - is why people like me no longer
have faith in _their_ good intentions.

=====
Gautam Mukunda
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
"Freedom is not free"
http://www.mukunda.blogspot.com

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