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Obama, Osama and a Love Struck Media 

Thursday, 02 June 2011 18:52 Roger Aronoff 

 
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The great achievement of the Barack Obama presidency occurred on May 1st,
2011, when a team of Navy SEALs took out the most wanted man in America,
Osama bin Laden. It happened on Obama's watch, and the mission succeeded,
but how it was handled, and mishandled, by Obama and his team in the
aftermath raises many disturbing questions. There is no question that
America's elite military forces performed brilliantly in pulling off this
mission, and we salute them. Count me among those who are glad that he was
killed, and not captured for trial and detention.

obama-osamaWhile bin Laden is well known for his role in the 9/11 attacks on
the World Trade Center in New York and the Pentagon in Washington, D.C.,
some may not remember that, as former federal prosecutor Andrew McCarthy
pointed out, he "had been under indictment by the Justice Department for 13
years when he finally met his demise yesterday. A federal grand jury in
Manhattan had charged him with terrorism conspiracy in June 1998, after he
had, yet again, declared war on the United States. He'd already been doing
that for years. It was only a few weeks later, on Aug. 7, 1998, that his
al-Qaeda cells in eastern Africa bombed the American embassies in Nairobi
and Dar es Salaam-the first 224 of what became the thousands of innocents
the master terrorist would murder in the ensuing decade-plus." 

But from the outset, when the public was notified around 10 p.m. ET on
Sunday, May 1, that the President would soon be coming out with a big
announcement, the public relations aspect of the operation was handled so
badly as to confirm the views held by a large segment of the population:
President Obama is either incompetent and surrounded by incompetents, or he
is manipulative, deceitful and usually calculating the potential political
windfall he can garner from a situation. As tens of thousands of Americans
poured out into the streets within the first hours and day following the
dramatic Sunday night announcement of the death of bin Laden, the
administration was spinning stories and timelines that were inconsistent,
false, and contradictory. They brushed this off as "fog of war" mistakes
that always happen in the aftermath of intense military operations, that in
no way detract from the act itself. 

But others saw it as a pattern of self-serving deceit that has been the
hallmark of the Obama administration, such as how he has described his
relationships with people like unrepentant terrorist and co-founder of the
Weather Underground, William Ayers, and the anti-Semitic and anti-American
preacher, Reverend Jeremiah Wright; or his gross exaggerations or lies on
legislation and budgetary matters, such as the notion that ObamaCare will
reduce the national deficit and lower health care costs. 

The early reports on the night of Sunday, May 1st were that Osama bin Laden
had been killed in Pakistan about a week earlier and it had taken that much
time to confirm the DNA as bin Laden's. Obama ended that story quickly in
his address to the nation that night, when he said that the operation had
just taken place that afternoon, which was the early morning hours of Monday
in Pakistan, where the mission took place. Subsequent reporting said that
the DNA was tested and confirmed to be that of Osama bin Laden, and he was
buried at sea shortly thereafter. 

Victor Davis Hanson, the noted historian and journalist wrote a piece for
National Review Online called "The First-Person Presidency," in which he
carefully parsed President Obama's speech from that night announcing the
killing of bin Laden. He pulled out the parts in which Obama kept referring
to himself: "Tonight, I can report..And so shortly after taking office, I
directed Leon Panetta.I was briefed on a possible lead to bin Laden.I met
repeatedly with my national security team.I determined that we had enough
intelligence to take action.Today, at my direction.I've made clear.Over the
years, I've repeatedly made clear.Tonight, I called President Zardari . . .
And my team has also spoken.These efforts weigh on me every time I, as
Commander-in-Chief.Finally, let me say to the families.I know that it has,
at times, frayed." 

You see, it was all about Obama. He's the one running for re-election. And
that was only the beginning of the bungled PR week for the White House.
Considering how the media and the administration portrayed the events, it
did at least create a medium-sized bump (and in some cases a significant
bump) in Obama's approval rating. In the most cited poll, the AP-GfK poll,
Obama was shown to have a job-approval rating of 60% one week after the
death of bin Laden. But what the stories about that didn't point out, with a
few exceptions like National Review and WorldNetDaily, was that the number
of respondents to that poll who identified themselves as Democrats or
leaning Democrat outnumbered the Republicans by 17%. This is fairly common
in many agenda-driven polls designed to fool the public, rather than measure
popular sentiment. But this imbalance was much greater than normal. 

The killing of bin Laden was referred to ad nauseum as Obama's "defining
moment." To many it was. The narrative that the White House was putting out,
and its faithful media were parroting, was that this proved that he was no
weak and indecisive leader, and that his courage, toughness and deliberate
ways had resulted in the most prized capture-or-kill in the decade long War
on Terror since 9/11. Obama was even characterized as a "cowboy," the term
that was used to define George W. Bush's presidency, but in Bush's case it
was meant as a pejorative. In Obama's case it was meant to convey that cool,
strong archetypal American. 

Yet strangely, the story put out by the Obama administration began falling
apart. The contradictions and false statements were thoroughly documented in
a 4,000-plus word article by James Rosen of Fox News that quoted nearly
every announcement and briefing that first week by numerous government
officials. 

The narrative began the night of May 1st with reports that the killing of
bin Laden happened a week earlier and the delay was about testing the DNA.
Next were reports from intelligence briefers that "they were engaged in a
firefight" that lasted "most of the 40 minutes" that the entire operation
lasted. The firefight turned out to be no more than five minutes, and was
originally said to have included bin Laden himself, but then it was stated
that he wasn't carrying a weapon. In fact no one in the house was involved
in a firefight after the initial encounter that killed the first person the
SEALs encountered. 

According to Obama's Assistant for Homeland Security and Counter-Terrorism
John Brennan, who spoke publicly the next day, the Obama national security
team was observing and had "real-time visibility into the progress of the
operation," Brennan said. "I'm not going to go into details about what type
of visuals we had or what type of feeds that were there, but it was-it gave
us the ability to actually track it on an ongoing basis." 

And what had they seen? According to Brennan, bin Laden "was engaged in a
firefight with those that entered the area of the house," and "was killed in
that firefight." 

CIA Director Leon Panetta later announced a 20 - 25 minute blackout in the
video, thus undermining Brennan's claim of "real time visibility." Obama
later referred to what he called "the capture and killing" of bin Laden. Bin
Laden's wife was said to have been used as a human shield, but then no. The
list goes on and on. 

When White House spokesman, and former Time magazine reporter, Jay Carney
was asked if these were "fog of war" discrepancies he replied: "[W]hat is
true is that we provided a great deal of information with great haste in
order to inform you and, through you, the American public about the
operation and how it transpired.And obviously some of the information
was-came in piece by piece and is being reviewed and updated and elaborated
on." 

Nevertheless, the contradictory statements raised suspicions about the White
House's version of events since no independent version would likely emerge. 

CBS's "60 Minutes" to the Rescue 

On the following Wednesday, Steve Kroft of CBS's "60 Minutes" interviewed
President Obama for the following Sunday's show. There wasn't one tough
question asked of Obama. Calling them softballs is too kind. There was
nothing about the contradictory and inconsistent versions of what happened.
The whole interview was intended to build on the notion that the President
had become a tough, yet thoughtful, commander in chief. Kroft obviously
didn't want to put President Obama on the spot. Perhaps CBS understood that
if they wanted continued access to Obama and his top people, they had to toe
the line, or be shut out as happened to the San Francisco Chronicle. The
editor of the Chronicle said that it was threatened with loss of access for
posting a video of protesters singing a song to Obama at a fundraiser in
April. 

But more likely it's that CBS News supports Obama's agenda and wants to help
him get re-elected. It is reminiscent of the situation in 2004, just two
months before the presidential election, when CBS's "60 Minutes" attempted a
political hit-job on President Bush to help John Kerry get elected. They
produced a segment on President Bush's National Guard service based on lies
and forged documents, for which four producers lost their jobs. 

Sharing the Credit 

Back to bin Laden. The questions began almost immediately. Was this a
vindication of President Bush's methods of fighting the War on Terror? What
led to this operation? How was bin Laden found? 

Washington Post columnist Charles Krauthammer weighed in: "The bin Laden
operation is the perfect vindication of the war on terror. It was made
possible precisely by the vast, warlike infrastructure that the Bush
administration created post-9/11, a fierce regime of capture and
interrogation, of dropped bombs and commando strikes. That regime, of
course, followed the more conventional war that brought down the Taliban,
scattered and decimated al-Qaeda and made bin Laden a fugitive. 

"Without all of this," Krauthammer continued, "the bin Laden operation could
never have happened. Whence came the intelligence that led to Abbottabad?
Many places, including from secret prisons in Romania and Poland; from
terrorists seized and kidnapped, then subjected to interrogations, sometimes
'harsh' or 'enhanced'; from Gitmo detainees; from a huge bureaucratic
apparatus of surveillance and eavesdropping. In other words, from a Global
War on Terror infrastructure that critics, including Barack Obama himself,
deplored as a tragic detour from American rectitude." 

The Left would have none of that. They still considered Bush to be a war
criminal, and regardless how many of Bush's tactics and tools Obama has
adopted as his own, this was Obama's moment. They didn't want to give any
credence to the notion that waterboarding, which some consider to be
torture, could have produced the tip that led to the courier, who led them
to bin Laden. 

Just as the Obama administration was denying that to be the case, Director
Panetta went on NBC and said that "We had multiple series of sources that
provided information with regards to this situation. clearly some of it came
from detainees [and] they used these enhanced interrogation techniques
against some of those detainees." When asked by anchor Brian Williams if
waterboarding was part of the "enhanced interrogation techniques," Panetta
replied, "that's correct." 

The New York Times argued in an editorial that "torture did not play a role
in capturing bin Laden." They of course meant waterboarding. 

An important point to remember on the issue of whether or not waterboarding
is illegal is the fact that twice Congress attempted to make it illegal
during Bush's presidency. But when Obama came into office, and the Democrats
had large majorities in the House and Senate, they didn't even bring it up.
The reason, apparently, was that if they did pass such a law, it would have
made the point that before then, it wasn't illegal. 

Former Bush Officials Weigh In

Former Bush Attorney General Michael Mukasey offered his perspective in a
Wall Street Journal article: "The harsh techniques themselves were used
selectively against only a small number of hard-core prisoners who
successfully resisted other forms of interrogation, and then only with the
explicit authorization of the director of the CIA. Of the thousands of
unlawful combatants captured by the U.S., fewer than 100 were detained and
questioned in the CIA program. Of those, fewer than one-third were subjected
to any of these techniques." 

Mukasey cited former CIA Director Michael Hayden as saying that as late as
2006, fully half of what the government knew about al Qaeda's activities and
structure was a result of those interrogations, and that the interrogation
techniques were approved and deemed lawful after thorough analysis by the
Justice Department. 

Mukasey said that President Obama ran on the promise to do away with these
techniques before he even knew what they were. "Days after taking office he
directed that the CIA interrogation program be done away with entirely, and
that interrogation be limited to the techniques set forth in the Army Field
Manual, a document designed for use by even the least experienced troops.
It's available on the Internet and used by terrorists as a training manual
for resisting interrogation." 

Mukasey was critical of the fact that "In April 2009, the administration
made public the previously classified Justice Department memoranda analyzing
the harsh techniques, thereby disclosing them to our enemies and assuring
that they could never be used effectively again." He was also troubled by
the announcement of their intentions to replace the CIA interrogation
program with one administered by the FBI. And he pointed to the December
2009 incident in which the "underwear bomber," Omar Faruq Abdulmutallab, was
caught on a plane over Detroit trying to detonate a bomb, and was then read
his Miranda rights. He said it was later disclosed that the new program,
with the FBI in charge, wasn't yet being implemented. 

"Yet the Justice Department, revealing its priorities," wrote Mukasey, "had
gotten around to reopening investigations into the conduct of a half-dozen
CIA employees alleged to have used undue force against suspected terrorists.
I say 'reopening' advisedly because those investigations had all been
formally closed by the end of 2007, with detailed memoranda prepared by
career Justice Department prosecutors explaining why no charges were
warranted." He said that Attorney General Eric Holder conceded that when he
had ordered the investigations reopened in September 2009, he hadn't read
those memoranda. Mukasey concluded that "The investigations have now dragged
on for years with prosecutors chasing allegations down rabbit holes, with
the CIA along with the rest of the intelligence community left demoralized."


This unnecessary attack on the CIA was only compounded by how recklessly the
Obama administration revealed operational details of the mission to get bin
Laden-details that could result in risks to future operations-and how eager
they were to take credit for it for political gain. 

Now, questions arise whether this is the time to declare victory in
Afghanistan and speed up the withdrawal, and reduce our footprint throughout
the world. 

Obama's big problem is still credibility. He lacks it among a large part of
the population. While most agree that killing bin Laden was an important
accomplishment, and could have been a turning point, both in the war and in
his credibility as commander-in-chief, his handling of it has only increased
the level of doubt and distrust of his administration.

 



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