Reprinted from LA Times

July 8, 2003

Robert Scheer:

A Diplomat's Undiplomatic Truth: They Lied

They may have finally found the smoking gun that nails the culprit responsible for the 
Iraq war. Unfortunately, the incriminating evidence wasn't left in one of Saddam 
Hussein's palaces but rather in Vice President Dick Cheney's office.

Former Ambassador Joseph C. Wilson publicly revealed over the weekend that he was the 
mysterious envoy whom the CIA, under pressure from Cheney, sent to Niger to 
investigate a document - now known to be a crude forgery - that allegedly showed Iraq 
was trying to acquire enriched uranium that might be used to build a nuclear bomb. 
Wilson found no basis for the story, and nobody else has either.

What is startling in Wilson's account, however, is that the CIA, the State Department, 
the National Security Council and the vice president's office were all informed that 
the Niger-Iraq connection was phony. No one in the chain of command disputed that this 
"evidence" of Iraq's revised nuclear weapons program was a hoax.

Yet, nearly a year after Wilson reported back the facts to Cheney and the U.S. 
security apparatus, Bush, in his 2003 State of the Union speech, invoked the 
fraudulent Iraq-Africa uranium connection as a major justification for rushing the 
nation to war: "The British government has learned that Saddam Hussein recently sought 
significant quantities of uranium in Africa." What the president did not say was that 
the British were relying on their intelligence white paper, which was based on the 
same false information that Wilson and the U.S. ambassador to Niger had already 
debunked. "That information was erroneous, and they knew about it well ahead of both 
the publication of the British white paper and the president's State of the Union 
address," Wilson said Sunday on "Meet the Press." 

Although a British Parliament report released Monday exonerated the Blair government 
of deliberate distortion to justify invading Iraq, it urged the foreign secretary to 
come clean as to when British officials were first told that the Iraq-Niger allegation 
was based on forged documents. The report noted: "It is very odd indeed" that the 
British government has still not come up with any other evidence to support its 
contention about an Iraq-Niger connection.

Nor has the U.S. administration told its public why it ignored the disclaimers from 
its own intelligence sources. In order to believe that our president was not lying to 
us, we must believe that this information did not find its way through Cheney's office 
to the Oval Office. 
In media interviews, Wilson said it was the vice president's questioning that pushed 
the CIA to try to find a credible Iraqi nuclear threat after that agency had 
determined there wasn't one. "I have little choice but to conclude that some of the 
intelligence related to Iraq's nuclear weapons program was twisted to exaggerate the 
Iraqi threat," Wilson wrote in an Op-Ed article in Sunday's New York Times. "A 
legitimate argument can be made that we went to war under false pretenses." 

In a Washington Post interview, Wilson added, "It really comes down to the 
administration misrepresenting the facts on an issue that was a fundamental 
justification for going to war. It begs the question, what else are they lying about?" 
Those are the carefully chosen words of a 23-year career diplomat who, as the top U.S. 
official in Baghdad in 1990, was praised by then-President George H.W. Bush for his 
role as the last American to confront Hussein face to face after the dictator invaded 
Kuwait. In a cable to Baghdad, the president told Wilson: "What you are doing day in 
and day out under the most trying conditions is truly inspiring. Keep fighting the 
good fight." 

As Wilson observed wryly, "I guess he didn't realize that one of these days I would 
carry that fight against his son's administration." And that fight remains the good 
fight. This is not some minor dispute over a footnote to history but rather raises the 
possibility of one of the most egregious misrepresentations by a U.S. administration. 
What could be more cynical and impeachable than fabricating a threat of rogue nations 
or terrorists acquiring nuclear weapons and using that to sell a war? 

"There is no greater threat that we face as a nation," Wilson told NBC, "than the 
threat of weapons of mass destruction in the hands of nonstate actors or international 
terrorists. And if we've prosecuted a war for reasons other than that, using weapons 
of mass destruction as cover for that, then I think we've done a great disservice to 
the weapons-of-mass-destruction threat."

The world is outraged at this pattern of lies used to justify the Iraq invasion, but 
the U.S. public still seems numb to the dangers of government by deceit.

Indeed, Nixon speechwriter William Safire this week in his column channeled the voice 
of his former boss to reassure Republicans that the public easily could be conned 
through the next election.

Perhaps, and far be it for me to lecture either Safire or a reincarnated Nixon as to 
the ease of deceiving the electorate, but as we learned from the Nixon disgrace, lies 
have a way of unraveling, and the truth will out, even if it's after the next 
election. 
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