Sent to you by Sean McBride via Google Reader: Echoes Of Iraq War:
White House Claims Bailout Will Pay For Itself via Think Progress by
Ali on 9/25/08
To justify the exorbitant cost of the bailout for the financial
industry, Bush administration officials have been repeating the dubious
claim that American taxpayers should expect to recover much, if not
all, of the proposed $700 billion:

PAULSON: This is not an expenditure. … Money will come back in.

BERNANKE: What’s clear is that the $700 billion is not an expenditure.
There’s going to be a substantial amount of recovery.

BUSH: Money will flow back to the Treasury as these assets are sold,
and we expect that much, if not all, of the tax dollars we invest will
be paid back.

White House spokesmen Ed Gillespie and Tony Fratto appeared on Fox
News, repeating that “a lot of that money, and maybe all of it, will
come back.” Watch a compilation:

As Paul Krugman writes, “The premise of the Paulson plan — though never
stated bluntly — is that these assets are hugely underpriced, so that
Uncle Sam can buy them at prices that help the financial industry a
lot, without big losses for taxpayers. Are you prepared to bet $700
billion on that premise?”

The White House’s assurances that the bailout will pay for itself is
eerily reminiscent of the assurances the Bush team made that the Iraq
war would be similarly inexpensive — if not profitable — for America.
Take a look at some of those promises:

RICHARD PERLE, Chair of Pentagon’s Defense Policy Board: “Iraq is a
very wealthy country. Enormous oil reserves. They can finance, largely
finance the reconstruction of their own country. And I have no doubt
that they will.” [7/11/02]

PAUL WOLFOWITZ, Deputy Defense Secretary: “There is a lot of money to
pay for this that doesn’t have to be US taxpayer money, and it starts
with the assets of the Iraqi people. We are talking about a country
that can really finance its own reconstruction and relatively soon.”
[3/27/03]

ARI FLEISCHER, White House press secretary: “Iraq has tremendous
resources that belong to the Iraqi people. And so there are a variety
of means that Iraq has to be able to shoulder much of the burden for
their own reconstruction.” [2/18/03]

LAWRENCE LINDSEY, White House economic adviser: “The likely economic
effects [of a war in Iraq] would be relatively small…. Under every
plausible scenario, the negative effect will be quite small relative to
the economic benefits.” [9/16/02]

Krugman concludes, “The whole premise of the bailout push has been
‘We’re the grownups, we know what we’re doing, just trust us.’ Sorry,
but that’s how Colin Powell sold the Iraq war. Fool me once, shame on
you, fool me twice … you shouldn’t get fooled.”

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