Using your position as Governor to sexual abuse women and then lie
about it under oath is OK in your eyes?
When you say leaking classified information do you realize your
referring to the attempted purchase of uranium. It's old news and was
declassified after the war started. Why should it remain classified?

Michael Ledeen
Sixteen Words, Again
The myth of a great sin lives on.
http://www.nationalreview.com/ledeen/ledeen200604100726.asp

Dafna Linzer and Barton Gellman provide their gullible readers with a
reprise of one of the great myths of the runup to the Iraq war: that
President Bush used blatantly false information to justify the war.

The story revolves around various claims by several intelligence
services that Saddam's agents were trying to buy uranium in Africa. At
least three European services — the French, the Italian, and the
British — told Washington about the reported Iraqi efforts. Some of
the reports were carefully described as "unconfirmed." Others were
based on documents that were given to the American embassy in Rome by
Italian journalists, some of which subsequently turned out to be
forgeries. Still other reports were highly regarded by the Europeans,
especially the British, which led President Bush to say, in his State
of the Union speech (January 28, 2003): "The British Government has
learned that Saddam Hussein recently sought significant quantities of
uranium from Africa."

The consensus at CIA was highly critical of these reports (most CIA
officials were against the war and didn't want to be blamed for it),
but the White House, understandably very suspicious of the quality of
CIA's information and analysis, had pushed hard to get more
information. Ambassador Joe Wilson had been sent by CIA to Niger in
2002 to snoop around, at least in part because he came highly
recommended by his wife, Valerie Plame, herself a CIA officer, and
opposed to the war.

After Bush's State of the Union, Wilson claimed publicly that his trip
had convinced him that the intelligence reports were groundless.
However, he had reported privately — oddly enough in a verbal, not
written, report to CIA — that a former high Nigerien official had said
that the Iraqis had wanted high-level discussions about "increasing
trade," which either meant uranium or goats.

Nonetheless, after the war began, Wilson's public remarks earned him
celebrity status in New York and Washington, and the White House
decided to try to discredit him. Accordingly, Scooter Libby was
authorized to talk to select journalists (which the Washington Post
editorially described as a "good leak") about some of the information
that suggested Saddam was trying to get uranium in Africa. Libby's
actions just showed up in a filing by Special Prosecutor Patrick
Fitzgerald, and prompted the Linzer-Gellman story.

Linzer and Gellman say, referring to the phony documents, that "the
evidence Cheney and Libby selected to share with reporters had been
disproved months before." And they add, in a triumphant tone reserved
for the announcement of a knockout punch, that "the Bush
administration and British Prime Minister Tony Blair maintained they
had additional, secret evidence they could not disclose. In June, a
British parliamentary inquiry concluded otherwise, delivering a
scathing critique of Blair's role in promoting the story."

But Linzer and Gellman are wrong, indeed so clearly wrong that it
takes one's breath away. The British government did indeed have
information about Iraqi efforts to purchase uranium in Africa, and it
wasn't connected to the forgeries. And the definitive British
parliamentary inquiry — the Butler Commission Report of July, 2004 —
not only did not deliver "a scathing critique," but totally endorsed
the position of British intelligence.

The key paragraph in the Butler Report is this:

We conclude that...the statements on Iraqi attempts to buy uranium
from Africa in the Government's dossier, and by the Prime Minister in
the House of Commons, were well-founded. By extension we conclude also
that the statement in President Bush's State of the Union Address of
28 January 2003 that: "The British Government has learned that Saddam
Hussein recently sought significant quantities of uranium from Africa"
was well-founded. (Page 123, Paragraph 499)

The British Intelligence Service, MI6, still stands by that story, as
does the French service, the DGSE. And the two agencies did not base
their assessments on the phony documents (indeed, the DGSE knew all
about those documents, which were peddled and probably drafted by one
or two Italian agents of theirs). According to London Sunday Times
reporter Mick Smith — an outspoken critic of the American/British use
of intelligence to justify the war, and an outspoken critic of Bush —
the Franco/British analysis is based in part on a letter from Iraq's
Ambassador to the Vatican, that specifically discussed uranium from
Niger. Smith also adds the delicious tidbit that the pile of forgeries
actually contained an accurate document about the visit of Saddam's
man in the Vatican to Niger in 1999.

So Linzer and Gellman are entirely wrong. Bush's statement was true,
and an extensive British parliamentary inquiry concluded that there
was good reason for him, and Blair, to say so. Nonetheless, it is now
part of the conventional wisdom to say that "the sixteen words" were a
lie. How can that be? It's not as if Bush's critics need that detail
in order to tear apart the bad intelligence work leading up to
Operation Iraqi Freedom. There are enough errors to fill several
volumes, as they have.

Part of the answer — the other part being the malevolence and
sloppiness of the press — is that the White House made a total hash of
the whole thing, as is their wont. Indeed, if you go back and read the
painful statements regarding "the sixteen words," you will find at
least one in which Steven Hadley, then deputy national-security
adviser, took full "responsibility" for the sin of including those
words in the State of the Union. Incredibly for the fine lawyer he is,
Hadley seems to have confessed to a crime he didn't commit.

Moreover, the entire Libby operation was misconceived. The White House
was reacting to Wilson's writings (and an earlier leak of his own to a
New York Times columnist). Didn't they know that Wilson's actual
report actually supported the president's 16 words? If they did, they
should have hung him with his own two-faced actions. If they did not,
it was either because they didn't press CIA for the whole story, or
because CIA didn't provide it, knowing it would have helped the White
House to which they were legally obliged to tell the whole truth
(maybe Fitzgerald, in his poor imitation of Savanarola, might like to
look into that).

Once again, when it comes to telling their own story, this
administration has few peers in its ability to make a mess. Maybe they
caught a bug from the Washington Post?


On 4/10/06, Gruss Gott wrote:
> Yeah, apparently having a little lovin' in the Whitehouse is the
> height of immorality.
>
> However bringing your country to war over faulty intelligence and
> smearing anyone who disagrees with you by leaking classifing
> information ... well ... apparently that makes you patriot.
>
> How did our country get so full of fuck ups?

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