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Bush’s Iraq War Lies Were Untrue

Much hubbub overnight by a joint Center for Public Integrity - Fund for Independence in Journalism study of statements made by Bush administration officials in their attempt to sell the Iraq War.

Bush’s Iraq War Lies Were Untrue

AP/YahooNews: Study: False statements preceded war

A study by two nonprofit journalism organizations found that President Bush and top administration officials issued hundreds of false statements about the national security threat from Iraq in the two years following the 2001 terrorist attacks. The study concluded that the statements “were part of an orchestrated campaign that effectively galvanized public opinion and, in the process, led the nation to war under decidedly false pretenses.”

[...]

The study counted 935 false statements in the two-year period. It found that in speeches, briefings, interviews and other venues, Bush and administration officials stated unequivocally on at least 532 occasions that Iraq had weapons of mass destruction or was trying to produce or obtain them or had links to al-Qaida or both.

“It is now beyond dispute that Iraq did not possess any weapons of mass destruction or have meaningful ties to al-Qaida,” according to Charles Lewis and Mark Reading-Smith of the Fund for Independence in Journalism staff members, writing an overview of the study. “In short, the Bush administration led the nation to war on the basis of erroneous information that it methodically propagated and that culminated in military action against Iraq on March 19, 2003.”

NYT is less judgmental with “Web Site Assembles U.S. Prewar Claims

Warnings about the need to confront Iraq, by President Bush, Vice President Dick Cheney, Secretary of State Colin L. Powell, Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld, the national security adviser, Condoleezza Rice, and two White House press secretaries, among others, can be combed line by line, and reviewed alongside detailed critiques published after the fact by official panels, historians, journalists and independent experts.

There is no startling new information in the archive, because all the documents have been published previously. But the new computer tool is remarkable for its scope, and its replay of the crescendo of statements that led to the war. Muckrakers may find browsing the site reminiscent of what Richard M. Nixon used to dismissively call “wallowing in Watergate.”

[...]

The officials have defended many of their prewar statements as having been based on the intelligence that was available at the time — although there is now evidence that some statements contradicted even the sketchy intelligence of the time.

President Bush said in 2005 that “much of the intelligence turned out to be wrong” but that “it was right to remove Saddam Hussein from power.”

This is the crux of the matter. Being proven wrong is not “lying.”

The study is entitled, “False Pretenses: Following 9/11, President Bush and seven top officials of his administration waged a carefully orchestrated campaign of misinformation about the threat posed by Saddam Hussein’s Iraq.” Quite clearly, then, the authors contend that the statements were made with full knowledge that they were wrong in order to lead the nation to war.

The study finds no such thing.

It is now beyond dispute that Iraq did not possess any weapons of mass destruction or have meaningful ties to Al Qaeda. This was the conclusion of numerous bipartisan government investigations, including those by the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence (2004 and 2006), the 9/11 Commission, and the multinational Iraq Survey Group, whose “Duelfer Report” established that Saddam Hussein had terminated Iraq’s nuclear program in 1991 and made little effort to restart it.

But those committees were taking the evidence from well after the study’s timeframe. None of those commissions found that the administration deliberately lied.

The Duelfer Report was released a month before the 2004 election. Its chairman, Charles Duelfer, told a Senate panel, “We were almost all wrong” on Iraq. Note that he includes himself — and his audience — in this. This was Page 1 in the Washington Post and almost surely led every news report in the country that night. Bush was re-elected a month later.

The 9/11 Commission’s task, as its nickname implies, was to conduct a postmortem on the attacks, not assess the arguments leading up to the Iraq War. Its main findings were that our system of intelligence was broken and simply not up to the task of counterterrorism.

As to its findings on Saddam’s links to al Qaeda and similar organizations, the story is far more complex. Read Judith S. Yaphe’s statement to the Commission for a solid overview.

The executive summary of “False Pretenses” includes a number of statements that, given the advantage of hindsight, were untrue.

On February 5, 2003, in an address to the United Nations Security Council, Powell said: “What we’re giving you are facts and conclusions based on solid intelligence. I will cite some examples, and these are from human sources.” As it turned out, however, two of the main human sources to which Powell referred had provided false information. One was an Iraqi con artist, code-named “Curveball,” whom American intelligence officials were dubious about and in fact had never even spoken to. The other was an Al Qaeda detainee, Ibn al-Sheikh al-Libi, who had reportedly been sent to Eqypt by the CIA and tortured and who later recanted the information he had provided. Libi told the CIA in January 2004 that he had “decided he would fabricate any information interrogators wanted in order to gain better treatment and avoid being handed over to [a foreign government].”

Rather clearly, our intelligence was wrong. But there’s no reason in the world to believe Powell believed that to be the case. That this was among the strongest examples the authors could find speaks to their agenda — and the weakness of their case — rather than Powell’s integrity.

Or this:

On May 29, 2003, in an interview with Polish TV, President Bush declared: “We found the weapons of mass destruction. We found biological laboratories.” But as journalist Bob Woodward reported in State of Denial, days earlier a team of civilian experts dispatched to examine the two mobile labs found in Iraq had concluded in a field report that the labs were not for biological weapons. The team’s final report, completed the following month, concluded that the labs had probably been used to manufacture hydrogen for weather balloons.

So, a report that would be written a month after Bush made the statement demonstrated that what Bush thought was true was wrong. And, of course, in May 2003 the war was already underway, so this was hardly an example of “false pretenses” getting us into war.

The most damning examples are along these lines:

In July 2002, Rumsfeld had a one-word answer for reporters who asked whether Iraq had relationships with Al Qaeda terrorists: “Sure.” In fact, an assessment issued that same month by the Defense Intelligence Agency (and confirmed weeks later by CIA Director Tenet) found an absence of “compelling evidence demonstrating direct cooperation between the government of Iraq and Al Qaeda.” What’s more, an earlier DIA assessment said that “the nature of the regime’s relationship with Al Qaeda is unclear.”

Of course, there’s no evidence here that Rumsfeld was aware of these reports. SECDEFs don’t read things that don’t make it to the top of the chain of command, after all.

My strong suspicion, though, is that Rumsfeld knew that an unequivocal “Sure” overstated the case. This, I think, reflects the consensus view of all but the most rabid pro- or anti-Bush observers that the administration 1) thought Saddam was dangerous, 2) believed he had an active WMD program if not WMD possession, 3) feared Saddam would transfer said technology to terrorists and other enemies of the United States and 4) cherry picked information that bolstered their case for action while downplaying dissenting views and evidence.

That’s bad. It’s not the way democracies are supposed to work and undermines the public’s confidence in their leaders. But it’s light years away from simply lying to the people about WMD known not to exist, which is what the report alleges.

Further, it’s worth noting that, despite most of the evidence and conclusions above being widespread by the fall of 2004, President Bush was nonetheless reelected by a comfortable margin. The public had already turned against the war by that point but nonetheless believed he was someone they trusted to continue to lead the national security apparatus.

UPDATE: Bryan Preston weighs in, noting that George Soros funded the report and wondering why that fact isn’t prominently noted in the news accounts.

Dave Schuler thinks most of the bloggers discussing the report are “using precisely the same approach used by the Bush Administration: they’re going beyond what the report says and voting their hearts, saying what they believe to be true rather than what can be proven to be true.”

About the Author: James Joyner is the publisher of Outside the Beltway and the managing editor of the Atlantic Council. He's a former Army officer, Desert Storm vet, and college professor with a PhD in political science from The University of Alabama. He lives just outside the Beltway in Alexandria, Virginia.

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Comments
 

The public had already turned against the war by that point but nonetheless believed he was someone they trusted to continue to lead the national security apparatus.

Well, that or the anti-gay amendments and such that Rove pushed to have on the ballot in key states which helped push him over the top.

It seems really, really dangerous to make the inferences you're making, James.

Posted by Hal | January 23, 2008 | 08:41 am | Permalink
 

From everything I have seen the cherry picking you describe consisted of taking the majority of intelligence opinions and discarding the outliers.

I am sorry, but that is normally how the process works.

Posted by davod | January 23, 2008 | 08:51 am | Permalink
 

It seems really, really dangerous to make the inferences you're making, James.

Elaborate, please.

Posted by James Joyner | January 23, 2008 | 09:00 am | Permalink
 

Elaborate, please.

Sorry, perhaps "dangerous" was a bad choice. "self delusional" would be perhaps better. Let's remember that if Ohio went for Kerry, Bush would have lost. And Ohio was THE place for the anti-gay measures that Rove pushed (very hard, I might add) to get on the ballot, which increased evangelical turnout. Coupled with the voting irregularities in Ohio, massive problems with the polling places, etc, I think it's safe to say that Rove's gambit was pretty effective. And considering the margin of victory in Ohio - 118,601 votes - it's pretty clear that had those votes gone the other way the narrative would be quite different.

So making such a bold statement as to say that the electorate had decided he was the guy he trusted seems pretty weak, at best, and self delusional if you just look at the Ohio results - even if you don't believe there was any hanky panky or voter suppression, or what have you.

Clearly, a lot of people voted for Bush because they turned out for their real issue, which was making sure the anti-gay measures in Ohio passed. Voting for Bush was a secondary concern.

Posted by Hal | January 23, 2008 | 09:12 am | Permalink
 

"Bush's Iraq War Lies Were Untrue"

That's a little redundant, don't you think?

Posted by tim | January 23, 2008 | 09:28 am | Permalink
 

So, instead of being deceitful, President Bush was just ignorant.

I feel much better.

Posted by Philadelphia Steve | January 23, 2008 | 09:31 am | Permalink
 

Being proven wrong is not “lying.”

When you say things like "we know they have them; and we know where they are", referring to WMDs, and you really DON'T know either one of those things, you are lying. Period.

Posted by M1EK | January 23, 2008 | 09:34 am | Permalink
 

Also, refer to Bob Graham's comments about the run-up to war. Even the intelligence he was getting was clear that the war was unjustified - unfortunately, his rank-and-file colleagues only got the stuff that was being filtered by Cheney's crew.

Posted by M1EK | January 23, 2008 | 09:36 am | Permalink
 

"Bush's Iraq War Lies Were Untrue"

That's a little redundant, don't you think?

Intentionally so. The point of the post is that the study presumes that untrue things are therefore lies.

Posted by James Joyner | January 23, 2008 | 09:36 am | Permalink
 

So making such a bold statement as to say that the electorate had decided he was the guy he trusted seems pretty weak, at best, and self delusional if you just look at the Ohio results - even if you don't believe there was any hanky panky or voter suppression, or what have you.

As a technical matter, Ohio was the difference maker -- but only because it was the last state counted. Regardless, Bush won by 2 million votes nationally.

No doubt that issues other than security mattered. But it was the main issue in the campaign.

"What one issue mattered most to you in deciding how you voted for president?" Open-ended. Multiple responses accepted. Asked of Bush and Kerry voters. Form 1 (N=569).

.
%

Iraq/The war
27

Economy/Jobs
14

Moral values
9

Terrorism/Security
9

Honesty/Integrity
5

Other Bush
5

Other Kerry
4

Health care
3

Abortion
3

Direction of the country
2

Candidate's religiosity, morals
2

Strength/Leadership
2

Foreign policy
2

Gay marriage/Marriage
2

Don't change course
2

Other
15

Unsure/Nothing/Everything
5

Posted by James Joyner | January 23, 2008 | 09:40 am | Permalink
 

27% !!! 36 if you add the second issue.

Geebus, you're reaching. Basically, you've just proven that it's rather a long stretch to say that people "believed he was someone they trusted to continue to lead the national security apparatus."

Also, this is *all* voters, which include democrats who voted for Kerry for precisely the same reasons. So, you'd pretty much have cut that in half unless you have a different break down.

Even better, you simply ignored the next table in the link you provided:

"Which ONE issue mattered most to you in deciding how you voted for president . . . ?" Respondents read list of options below. Options rotated. Asked of Bush and Kerry voters. Form 2 (N=567).

.

ALL BUSH Voters KERRY Voters
% % %
Moral values

27 44 7
Iraq

22 11 34
Economy/Jobs

21 7 36
Terrorism

14 24 3
Health care

4 1 8
Education

4 2 6
Taxes

3 4 2
Other (vol.)

4 5 3
Unsure

1 2 1

Clearly, MORAL issues ruled the day with Bush voters, which is exactly what my post was saying. Iraq and terrorism - even among the faithful, were a

Posted by Hal | January 23, 2008 | 09:53 am | Permalink
 

dang. I was saying that this table shows that even among the faithful Iraq and terrorism couldn't hold a candle to Moral issues. And it's interesting to see that in the break down, Terrorism was a bigger issue for people who voted *against* Bush.

Posted by Hal | January 23, 2008 | 09:56 am | Permalink
 

While reading the "he said she said" historical record, I think your point 4) cherry picked information that bolstered their case for action while downplaying dissenting views and evidence clearly identifies the problem at hand. The questions we should be asking isn't who's fault it is, that's just campaign fodder. Instead we should focus on how to solve the root problem. Time was of the essence in the run up to the war. Cherry picked statements can manipulate public opinion in one direction or another, but that opinion rarely holds true over time. If the American public and our elected officials had waited for additional analysis reconciled or addressed all other detractors, the war may have never happened. I guess with all our historical knowledge and so called advanced democratic state, we're destined to repeat past mistakes. In the end our society is no different than a herd of lemmings sprinting off the cliff in the name of self preservation. And that is exactly how both party establishments like to have it.

Nick - the ignorant citizen from the north

Posted by Nick | January 23, 2008 | 09:58 am | Permalink
 

Geebus. Even the last table of the link you provided cuts right against your thesis:

"Which issues, if any, were most important to you in deciding how you would vote for president today? . . ." Respondents could make up to two selections from the list below.

.

ALL Voters BUSH Voters KERRY Voters
% % %
Moral/Ethical values

40 54 24
Jobs/Economy

33 18 48
Terrorism/Homeland security

29 45 13
Situation in Iraq

16 11 21
Education

15 12 18
Social issues, such as abortion and gay marriage

15 14 15
Taxes

9 11 7
Health care

9 5 14
Foreign affairs

5 3 8
Social Security

5 3 7
Medicare/Prescription drugs

3 2 4
None of the above

2 2 3

Posted by Hal | January 23, 2008 | 09:58 am | Permalink
 

Interesting that none of these Democrats and their statements leading up to the Iraq war were included in the Soros propaganda.

Interesting, but not surprising.

Being wrong and lying aren't the same thing, no matter how much the antiBushies want it to be.

Posted by Good Lt | January 23, 2008 | 10:01 am | Permalink
 

"If the American public and our elected officials had waited for additional analysis reconciled or addressed all other detractors, the war may have never happened."

Just what additional analyis would have changed the picture.

Posted by davod | January 23, 2008 | 10:05 am | Permalink
 

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/11/18/AR2005111802397.html

That was written by the Bob Graham, head of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence during the run-up to the invasion. It is manifestly obvious that the president was not being honest.

Posted by Adam H. | January 23, 2008 | 10:11 am | Permalink
 

They are simply war-criminals disguised as incompetent leaders. Prosecute!

Posted by Joe American | January 23, 2008 | 10:15 am | Permalink
 

From everything I have seen the cherry picking you describe consisted of taking the majority of intelligence opinions and discarding the outliers.

I am sorry, but that is normally how the process works.

It was much more than cherry picking I'm afraid. As the Downing Street memo shows, the administration was deliberately fixing the facts to suit their desired outcome- war with a country that had nothing to do with 9/11.

Iraq did not represent an imminent threat to the United States. A thoughtful President, aware of his solemn obligation never to send the troops under his commend into battle unnecessarily, would have taken the time available to weigh all intelligence carefully, listening to both sides with equal seriousness.

As events have shown, confirming what many throughout the diplomatic and intelligence services were saying, everything the administration put forward as fact has turned out to be false.

In short, close to 4000 American men and women have lost their lives in war that need not have been fought and that has left America weaker not stronger and less safe than before

His supporters have already forgiven the president for this gravest of sins. History and a majority of the American people never will.

Posted by cian | January 23, 2008 | 10:19 am | Permalink
 

...
4) cherry picked and exaggerated information that bolstered their case for action while downplaying dissenting views and evidence and smearing any who put forward dissenting views
5) made absolute declarative statements about knowledge of WMDs (and their location), potential uses of aluminum tubes*, and Al Qaida ties without said knowledge or in spite of evidence to the contrary.

4 amounts to misrepresentation and misdirection and 5 amounts to lies.

* contrary to what was known at the time.

Posted by Grewgills | January 23, 2008 | 10:26 am | Permalink
 

Just what additional analysis would have changed the picture.

Confirmation and verification of all data points including reconciliation of the outliers. Any intelligence agency worth their weight in paper clips did the analysis, it was just ignored.

Posted by Nick | January 23, 2008 | 10:30 am | Permalink
 

I generally agree with the post. President Bush probably did not think he was lying. It is likely he thought it likely that WMD would be found, and Saddam was hiding them. President Bush is incurious and, therefore, would never investigate to determine whether his preconceived notions are true or not. Vice President Chaney, on the other hand, undoubtedly knew that the WMD stuff was a bunch of nonsense. Mr. Chaney wanted war to overthrown Saddam, and WMD was merely a pretext. Illustrative of Mr. Cheney's knowledge was his panic when Amb. Wilson openly questioned the administration line on WMD, which lead to Mr. Cheney's hatchet man, Scooter Libby, outing Amb. Wilson's wife -- a covert CIA agent. I doubt many of you will agree with me, but all of us -- other than the truly ideologically blinkered -- know this is the truth.

Posted by Demosthenes | January 23, 2008 | 10:34 am | Permalink
 

Elegant post, well argued, for the continuation of the fairy story of the Brave Decider, who mislead by his incompetent spies, embarked on a war to: (1) rid a megalomaniac ruler of weapons of mass destruction, (2) Liberate an oppressed people, yearning to be free, or, (3) Introduce the beauty and advantages of Democracy into the Middle East. Take your choice; all were used, depending on the teller of this fairy story…

Unmentioned in Mr. Joyner’s fairy story was the opposition by other countries this war, and the work by Hans Blix who was showing that the primary premises (ye old mushroom cloud) were incorrect.

No matter how you slice it, of the many paths available to it, the Administration chose war. No matter how you gild the story, the choice for war was made immediately after 9/11, and was of greater import than Afghanistan or Bin Laden.

Like Mr. Joyner I grieve for the mud on the reputation of General Powell, a man of integrity and service to the country. Unfortunately, given a choice of duty (service to the Commander in Chief) and Honor (service to truth) he chose the former, thinking that he could in some fashion modify the course the Administration was choosing…

Posted by Our Paul | January 23, 2008 | 10:44 am | Permalink
 

if i have reports, as it has been shown the administration did, that there is good reason to doubt something...but i go out and make an unequivocal statement on the subject...then i'm lying. if i say aluminum tubes can only be used for nuclear enrichment, but i have seen reports that cast doubt on that finding...then i am lying. end of story. period. and if i am the president and my staff chose not to show me those reports, then i am an incompetent manager. you chose...liar or incompetent, then hitch your wagon to one of the candidates and move on.

Posted by jay k. | January 23, 2008 | 11:03 am | Permalink
 

If you have all the data and information these guys had and you got wrong so often, either people lying or are grotesquely incompetent. So you're going with grotesquely incompetent?

Posted by jeff | January 23, 2008 | 11:04 am | Permalink
 

To make this easy I've put the lies in bold:

On February 5, 2003, in an address to the United Nations Security Council, Powell said: “What we’re giving you are facts and conclusions based on solid intelligence. I will cite some examples, and these are from human sources.”

See, was that so hard? When you claim to have facts and solid intelligence when the opposite is true, AND YOU KNOW THE OPPOSITE IS TRUE then you are lying.

Did they know the opposite was true? Yes. The intelligence of the time was highly speculative. Their statements were definitive, leaving no possiobility of error. They lied. Period.

It is nice that you wish to give them some benefit of the doubt but they have proven utterly unworthy of it.

You're smarter than this Mr. Joyner.

Posted by Tlaloc | January 23, 2008 | 11:24 am | Permalink
 

I see a gaggle of lefties here don't want to face the ugly truth about their attempted hijacking of the English language - mugging the word "incorrect" and trying to change it to "lie."

It's easy to dispel this nonsense, really. Watch this video, lefties. Then come back and prattle on about the evils of Democrats for us. We'll wait.

Again, the same people who defend Bill Clinton who are fulttering in here, accusing people of LYING, are just too rich.

A lie is "I did not have sexual relations with that woman." That's a lie. He did, he knew it, and he lied about it. To a judge and to everyone.

Being wrong is "The British Government has learned that Saddam Hussein has recently tried to by large quantities of uranium from Africa." There is no lie there - that's what the intel said going back to 1998, and this video proves the Democrats were reading the same intel back then.

Stop trying to redefine the word "incorrect" or "incompetent" to mean "lie."

Clinton would be ashamed of you.

Posted by Good Lt | January 23, 2008 | 11:25 am | Permalink
 

>>>See, was that so hard? When you claim to have facts and solid intelligence when the opposite is true, AND YOU KNOW THE OPPOSITE IS TRUE then you are lying.

Where's the evidence that he didn't believe the intel? Where's the evidence that he knew the opposite was true? Provide links and sources so we can evaluate, please.

You have no case if you can't produce any.

Thanks in advance for clearing this up.

Posted by Good Lt | January 23, 2008 | 11:26 am | Permalink
 

Interesting that none of these Democrats and their statements leading up to the Iraq war were included in the Soros propaganda.

Quick question, who do the various intelligence agencies of the US report to? The President. They inform congress as *he* allows. Consequently blaming democrats for being wrong after they had been lied to is a bit, shall we say, disingenous?

Posted by Tlaloc | January 23, 2008 | 11:27 am | Permalink
 

Being wrong is "The British Government has learned that Saddam Hussein has recently tried to by large quantities of uranium from Africa." There is no lie there - that's what the intel said going back to 1998, and this video proves the Democrats were reading the same intel back then.

No, that's a lie of ommission because they knew at the time that that story was bull&^^$.

Where's the evidence that he didn't believe the intel? Where's the evidence that he knew the opposite was true? Provide links and sources so we can evaluate, please.

So you haven't read any of the findings about the Iraq war intelligence is what you are saying? And here you are pretending to know something about the matter?

Posted by Tlaloc | January 23, 2008 | 11:31 am | Permalink
 

>>>They inform congress as *he* allows.

This is factually incorrect.

Members of Congress have access to all the same intel that Bush did, which they can access when they want to. They would not have had the information necessary to vote on these matters in 2002 had they not.

And of course, the proof that they knew what the intel said is shown in this video that you curiously are not watching because it demolishes completely the "BOOSH LIED" canard.

Keep trying.

Posted by Good Lt | January 23, 2008 | 11:31 am | Permalink
 

>>>No, that's a lie of ommission because they knew at the time that that story was bull&^^$.

EVIDENCE SUPPOORING THIS INCORRECT ASSERTION, PLEASE.

>>>So you haven't read any of the findings about the Iraq war intelligence is what you are saying? And here you are pretending to know something about the matter?

CITE THE EVIDENCE SUPPORTING YOUR ASSERTIONS IF YOU'RE SO CERTAIN.

Thanks.

Posted by Good Lt | January 23, 2008 | 11:32 am | Permalink
 

This is factually incorrect.

Members of Congress have access to all the same intel that Bush did,

Congress did not have access to the same intellignce. When an NIE is put together there are a ton of foot notes, additional materials and so on that go with it to give the full picture. Congress does not get that. What they get is essentially the executive summary, which paints a misleading picture when the best estimate is highly speculative because they do not get any of that information that there are credible alternatives.

Posted by Tlaloc | January 23, 2008 | 11:33 am | Permalink
 

>>>Consequently blaming democrats for being wrong after they had been lied to is a bit, shall we say, disingenous?

How were they "lied to" in 1998, before BOOSH was a blip on the radar screen?

Answer: NOBODY LIED.

You're being a tad disingenuous.

Posted by Good Lt | January 23, 2008 | 11:35 am | Permalink
 

>>> Congress does not get that.

They certainly can if they want to, but then again, making war is not constitutionally delegated solely to Congress.

And they did have all the same intel in 1998.

>>>What they get is essentially the executive summary, which paints a misleading picture when the best estimate is highly speculative because they do not get any of that information that there are credible alternatives.

So Congress has no access or recourse to check out intel they think might be incorrect?

NOPE. Congress has the right to get any intel the President does. The PRESS doesn't have a right to the information, but members of Congress sure as hell do.

Stop trying to rewrite the Constitutional powers of Congress and the Presidency in your quest to rewrite history.

Posted by Good Lt | January 23, 2008 | 11:39 am | Permalink
 

good lt...
i admire your loyalty. misguided though it may be.
he made that statement trying to bolster his case for attacking and occupying another sovereign nation. at the same time he also knew that there was serious doubt by several agencies about whether saddam had tried to purchase uranium. that makes it a lie. this is not a case of discovering an error after the fact. the white house had been told on at least a couple of occasions that the story was untrue.
additionally...if you equate lying about extra-marital sex with lies that lead to the death of 4000 of our troops and countless innocent civilians then you have a bigger problem than simple bush cult worship.

Posted by jay k. | January 23, 2008 | 11:44 am | Permalink
 

EVIDENCE SUPPOORING THIS INCORRECT ASSERTION, PLEASE.

So you aren't familiar with the whole Joe Wilson thing either, huh? Why exactly are you broadcasting your ignorance?

CITE THE EVIDENCE SUPPORTING YOUR ASSERTIONS IF YOU'RE SO CERTAIN.

start here:

3. Overall Conclusions -Weapons of Mass Destruction
(U) Conclusion 1. Most of the major key judgments in the Intelligence Community’s October 2002 National Intelligence Estimate (NIE), Iraq’s ContinuiHg Programsfor Weapons of Muss Destruction, either overstated, or were not supported by, the underlying intelligence reporting. A series of failures, particularly in analytic trade craft, led to the mischaracterization of the intelligence.

from the Senate Select Intelligence Commitee report on the matter, you know the one you couldn't be bothered to read. You can find it here:
http://www.gpoaccess.gov/serialset/creports/iraq.html

Now of course you sare going to say "But that says it was the analystts to blame!" That's because you're not paying attention. The PResident has access to the conflicting reports. He is in a position to know that the NIE is speculative. Congress isn't.

Furthermore it's not exactly a coincidence that the NIE came out so badly skewed from reality. Bush's administration is legendary for pushing politics into every aspect of government (the DoJ, the FDA, and most certainly the CIA).

Posted by Tlaloc | January 23, 2008 | 11:48 am | Permalink
 

Good Lt- you are wrong about congress having access to everything the president does. You eaither know this and are lying or you are ignorant and refuse to learn. Either way what's the point of me continuing to try and educate you?

Posted by Tlaloc | January 23, 2008 | 11:50 am | Permalink
 

>>>additionally...if you equate lying about extra-marital sex with lies that lead to the death of 4000 of our troops and countless innocent civilians then you have a bigger problem than simple bush cult worship.

NOBODY LIED ABOUT IRAQ. One is a lie (Clinton) and the other is faulty intel (Bush). There's a difference that even a child can decipher. I don't know what's so hard to understand about this simple concept that seems to confound Bush-haters.

I don't like BOOSH much at all. But pretending facts don't exist to prop up your repeated lies about "THE LIES OF WAR" is really not helping your case.

>>>nation. at the same time he also knew that there was serious doubt by several agencies about whether saddam had tried to purchase uranium.

So what? I thought the argument was that there was no credible alternative to the intel Boosh "cherry picked." So what you're saying, then, is that he was presented with intel from UN, UK, US, and other sources suggesting one thing, and intel from other sources advising caution.

The decision was his to make, and he made it. You may not have liked the decision, that's irrelevant. It doesn't make anybody a "liar" because they made an unpopular decision.

I mentioned Clintoon to give you an example of the definition of a lie, which I assume was clear.

I'm still not sure what's so hard to understand about this.

Posted by Good Lt | January 23, 2008 | 11:51 am | Permalink
 

>>>Good Lt- you are wrong about congress having access to everything the president does.

They had access to all of the pre-war intel that he did. Whether or not they chose to exercise their oversight role is another question.

>>>You either know this and are lying or you are ignorant and refuse to learn. Either way what's the point of me continuing to try and educate you?

That's a nice false dichotomy, but you have backed up anything you've been proclaiming here with a shred of evidence. I provided a video to you showing many of the public statements going back to 1998 that Democrats who saw and were aware of the intel were saying.

You respond with "nuh-uh."

Sorry. Yeah-huh.

CITE EVIDENCE PROVING ME WRONG. CITE EVIDENCE PROVING BOOSH "LIED."

Thanks.

Posted by Good Lt | January 23, 2008 | 11:56 am | Permalink
 

good lt...
congress DOES NOT have the same access to intel that the white house does. certain members may. and because it is classified information they are not free to discuss it with other members. one member that did have access is bob graham who was the chairmean of the senate select committee on intelligence during the tragedy of 9/11 and the run-up to bushs war in iraq. he voted against giving bush authorization to attack and occupy iraq. he has since written about the numerous caveats in the sept. 2002 nie...caveats that were omitted from the executive summary. that is the executive summary that was available to the entire congress.
so stop trying to rewrite the constitutional powers of congress and the presidency in your quest to rewrite history.

Posted by jay k. | January 23, 2008 | 11:56 am | Permalink
 

i don't know what's so hard to understand about this simple concept that seems to confound bush-lovers. if you make an unequivocal statement about something which you know there is doubt about then you are lying. period. end of story.

Posted by jay k. | January 23, 2008 | 11:58 am | Permalink
 

You guys still trying to claim/believe that the Bushies didn't know that the Niger uranium, aluminum tubes, intercontinental gas-spraying cruise missiles, and Saddam-9/11 connection stories were lies?

Dumb, dumb, dumb.

Posted by Laney | January 23, 2008 | 12:03 pm | Permalink
 

That's a nice false dichotomy, but you have backed up anything you've been proclaiming here with a shred of evidence.

Okay so now we know you are a liar since you asked for evidence and I gave you a quote and a link to the SSIC report.

See how this works- you just made a statement that was false and you had reason to know it was false, hence *you* are a liar.

Posted by Tlaloc | January 23, 2008 | 12:08 pm | Permalink
 

One is a lie (Clinton) and the other is faulty intel (Bush).

Actually they both parsed words in an intentional effort to mislead while keeping the statements defensible as literal truth. The veracity of the statements made by both Bush and Clinton are on a similar level, but the subject matter and its importance to the national interests are quite different.

Others in the administration made statements more bold than did Bush and some of those are lies. ie "We know where they are [WMDs]. They're in the area around Tikrit and Baghdad and east, west, south and north somewhat." or "[the aluminum tubes are] only really suited for nuclear weapons programs." The first of those statements is an unequivocal statement of knowledge that he did not possess. (He could not have known they were there since they were not.) The second statement was contradicted by the IAEA and the Dept of Energy prior to the statement. Maybe when Bush made that claim in the SOTU he had been misinformed, but someone was doing that misinforming and they were tied to the administration and they if not he were certainly lying.

Posted by Grewgills | January 23, 2008 | 12:17 pm | Permalink
 

>>> if you make an unequivocal statement about something which you know there is doubt about then you are lying.

That's called making a decision.

Lying would be making an unequivocal statement indirect opposition to ALL OF THE INTEL HAD IT SAID SADDAM HAD NO WMD.

IT DID NOT SAY THAT.

Thanks for playing, and really, go back and look up the definition of "lying." Your definition isn't even close.

>>>i don't know what's so hard to understand about this simple concept that seems to confound bush-lovers. if you make an unequivocal statement about something which you know there is doubt about then you are lying. period. end of story.

The passage you cited was not a "lie." He made a judgement call as president, which nobody argues he that he does not have the right to do, and he made the call. That's not a "lie."

I'm sorry to dissappoint you. You had it all figured out until you saw the Democrats hawking BOOSH's rhetoric on Iraq years before he even entered office.

I know - it's inconvenient to face the truth sometimes, especially when you've spent so many years convincing yourself that your lies are objective reality.

See - here's a lie: "I did not have sexual relations with that woman."

He knew what he was saying was patently and completely false. He knew the truth and he lied about it.

You still have yet to cite any evidence "lies" were told to anyone, and why BOOSH hasn't been prosecuted for "LYING."

Keeping in mind, of course, that being wrong and lying are two different things - hence, they're different words.

Posted by Good Lt | January 23, 2008 | 12:22 pm | Permalink
 

>>>Bush's administration is legendary for pushing politics into every aspect of government (the DoJ, the FDA, and most certainly the CIA).

We all know that Democrats never push politics into anything, though. Not global warming hysterics, not race and class warfare, not healthcare, NOTHING.

ONLY BOOSH PLAYS POLITICS. That's the best you can do?

LOL

Wait till the Donks get the White House back, and then talk to me about who's "pushing politics."

But I'm sure you'll stop paying attention by then.

>>>Okay so now we know you are a liar since you asked for evidence and I gave you a quote and a link to the SSIC report.

Where did the report say he lied?

Posted by Good Lt | January 23, 2008 | 12:27 pm | Permalink
 

>>>You guys still trying to claim/believe that the Bushies didn't know that the Niger uranium, aluminum tubes, intercontinental gas-spraying cruise missiles, and Saddam-9/11 connection stories were lies?

I'm still waiting for the "proof" that anything Bush ever said about Iraq or otherwise was "LYING," as opposed to being factually wrong.

Lying implies malice and intentional deceit, which no lib making any wild accusation here can seem to cough up evidence of.

Because there isn't any, save the screams of a bunch of leftwing harpies as unacquainted with the facts as they are with the definitions of words like "incorrect" and "lie."

Posted by Good Lt | January 23, 2008 | 12:31 pm | Permalink
 

good lt...
no it is not called making a decision. it is called lying. if you say something that you know is not true then you are lying. if you portray something as fact when you know it may not be then you are lying.
of course by your faulty logic he made the wrong choice 935 times.
liar or incompetent...he is still a disgrace and should not be in office.

Posted by jay k. | January 23, 2008 | 12:42 pm | Permalink
 

Yay! It's time for everyone's favorite Bush Administration game: "Are They Lying or just Grotesquely Incompetent?"

I'd argue the two aren't mutually exclusive...whatever one can say about the pre-war bamboozlement, whether they were technically "lies", "misrepresentations", or just "bullshit", they have unequivically lied about the run-up to the war repeatedly. Most obviously when they said "Saddam wasn't letting the inspectors do their job" or "we couldn't wait any longer", referring to the period when they were in Iraq and not finding shit. So like most good politicians, Bush and Co. were smart enough to couch their falsehoods in such away that they can now get away with the "we were just dead wrong about EVERYTHING" line, which is pretty much the most charitable interpretation possible.

So it really doesn't matter who wins the "Liars vs. Incompetents" game because we're all losers.

Posted by dearleader nyc | January 23, 2008 | 12:55 pm | Permalink
 

Good Lt,

Let's say that I hold a coin in my hand and I know that when I flip it that it may come up heads or it may come up tails. Now I tell you that it will without doubt come up heads on the next flip. I'm lying, right? I am, in your words, engaging in intentional deceit.

Now let's say that there are hundreds of thousands of lives on the line. That makes for a pretty awful lie on my part, doesn't it?

Posted by Scott Swank | January 23, 2008 | 12:55 pm | Permalink
 

Once again Democrats prove by their actions that they are manipulative and irresponsible when it comes to "facts" and "reporting". Is it the Democrat's general belief that all Americans are so stupid as to fall for this crap? I guess it is a good thing for you voting cows out there that the Democrats are so willing to show you how and what to think and believe. God forbid any Democrat should have to crack a book and really look something up in an effort to determine the truth.

Democrats suck.

Posted by Ron P | January 23, 2008 | 01:04 pm | Permalink
 

Colin Powell deceived all Americans. He was an icon to many of us. According to the study he made more false statements about Iraq than anyone else from the white House during the two year period following 911. What could have been his motive. I hope one day that he will reveal why he lied and caused such a grave injustice to the United States.

Posted by R. Richardson | January 23, 2008 | 01:08 pm | Permalink
 

James,

Hot Air's Bryan Preston links to the Sunlight Foundation, not the CPI, as proof that the CPI is one of "many George Soros fronts". The Malkinites got the wrong group.

Regards, C

Posted by Cernig | January 23, 2008 | 01:11 pm | Permalink
 

ron p believes bush, and then says this about democrats. he was lied to 953 times in two years, believed every word, and then talks about truth, and the inability to look up facts. ha. you can't make it up.
this whole thing does bring up an interesting point for discussion. had bush been honest and told america right upfront that "...we think iraq has wmd, although there is solid evidence to the contrary, and we think he might have ties to al queda, although there is solid evidence to the contrary. and just the same we want to invade iraq in order to provide halliburton with billions in bid-free contracts and to spread democracy like wild-flowers throughout the middle east..." what kind of backing do you think would he have had?

Posted by jay k. | January 23, 2008 | 01:16 pm | Permalink
 

LET's ROLL THE TAPE AND SEE WHO'S "LYING."

Boy. There are a lot of liars Democrats mouthing Bush's lines in that video - even in the 1990s.

Strange, that. Wonder why we don't heart more about that from the arbiters of "truth" known as the nutroots.

Posted by Good Lt | January 23, 2008 | 01:23 pm | Permalink
 

This is a lie.

"And, as a last resort, we must be willing to use military force. We are doing everything we can to avoid war in Iraq."

http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2003/03/20030308-1.html

Posted by Tony Feltner | January 23, 2008 | 01:47 pm | Permalink
 

Good Lt, you need to go easy on the cap tab, it makes you sound crazy.

Clinton's attempt to leave a little wiggle room in his 1998 statement failed miserably, honest people new he was lying. The same honest people know the Bush admin is lying now.

Looks like somewhere along the way you lost the ability to tell the difference.

Posted by cian | January 23, 2008 | 01:50 pm | Permalink
 

I still haven't seen any proof that Bush "lied."

I have seen overwhelming proof that the intel that he and many other policy makers had relied on since the late 1990's regarding Iraq was flawed.

That's, unfortunately for those here attemtping to rewrite history, not a lie.

It's one thing to disagree fundamentally with the war in Iraq. It's another thing entirely to try to rewrite the history of how that war came about.

Posted by Good Lt | January 23, 2008 | 02:00 pm | Permalink
 

goodlt...
um...how many of the people in the video attacked and occupied iraq? how many of them sent 4000 troops to their death...based on what you very generously call a wrong decision? which one of them borrowed two trillion dollars based upon what you very generously call a wrong decision?
clinton did approve some "surgical" bombing. bombing which the dulfer report later said was very effective in halting iraqs wmd capabilities. other factors that had halted iraqs wmd capabilities before bush 43 attacked and occupied them was the original gulf war, and weapons inspections.
so i'm not really sure what your point is.
lying or incompetent. take your pick.

Posted by jay k. | January 23, 2008 | 02:00 pm | Permalink
 

>>>"And, as a last resort, we must be willing to use military force. We are doing everything we can to avoid war in Iraq."

What about it is a lie?

We went to the UN, got resolution 1441, passed bi-partisan resolutions in the Congress, offered ultimatums to Hussein, spent 13 months debating it before March 2003...

Where's the lie?

Posted by Good Lt | January 23, 2008 | 02:02 pm | Permalink
 

goodlt...
you apparently are just thick. if you make an unequivocal statement that you know may be wrong then you are lying. if you say i know, when you don't, then you are lying. when you say that aluminum tubes can only be used for nuclear enrichment when you know they are unsuitable for that task then you are lying.
i do admire your blind loyalty though.

Posted by jay k. | January 23, 2008 | 02:02 pm | Permalink
 

What about it is a lie?

We went to the UN, got resolution 1441, passed bi-partisan resolutions in the Congress, offered ultimatums to Hussein, spent 13 months debating it before March 2003...

I'm sorry: I should have been more specific. Here's the lie:

"We are doing everything we can to avoid war in Iraq."

Posted by Tony Feltner | January 23, 2008 | 02:14 pm | Permalink
 

"CITE EVIDENCE PROVING BOOSH 'LIED.' "

This little list is a good place to start:

- we have found the weapons of mass destruction
- he wouldn't let them in
- a wiretap requires a court order

Posted by jukeboxgrad | January 23, 2008 | 02:23 pm | Permalink
 

Several people have pointed out correctly that the aluminum tubes are an example of Bush et al pretending to have information they didn't actually have (something normal humans ordinarily call "lying").

A concise outline of this issue (Bush et al lying about the tubes), with extensive supporting citations, is here.

Posted by jukeboxgrad | January 23, 2008 | 02:23 pm | Permalink
 

>>>um...how many of the people in the video attacked and occupied iraq?

How many people in that video saw the same intel Bush did? All of them. Guess your attempt to shift the goalposts is proof you lost the argument of "nobody saw the intel," and that "Bush made it all up and lied about it."

Concession accepted.

Many of those Democrats, including Clinton and Reid, among others, voted for the war resolution in October 2002. Their attempts to slither away from their votes while pretending they never supported the war are pathetic lies in themselves.

>>>clinton did approve some "surgical" bombing.

OHHHH...so now it's OK to order strikes other countries because it's a Democrat and the strikes are "surgical." Guess the people who died in the baby milk factory are grateful Clinton was such a humanitarian.

And on what intel did Clinton act? The intel was obviously wrong. Guess he lied about that, too.

QED

>>>bombing which the dulfer report later said was very effective in halting iraqs wmd capabilities.

But there were no WMDs, we're told by the Bush-haters. Clinton eliminated them all by bombing a baby milk factory where all the WMD's that never existed suddenly did exist for the purposes of rewriting history.

Christ, that Klintoon Koolaid is powerful.

>>>other factors that had halted iraqs wmd capabilities before bush 43 attacked and occupied them was the original gulf war, and weapons inspections.

Tell it to the Kurds, who were gassed in the north by those "halted" WMDs.

The original Gulf war was a UN-authorized invasion of Iraq supported by the International community to get Iraq out of Kuwait. WMDs had nothing to do with it.

>>>so i'm not really sure what your point is.
lying or incompetent. take your pick.

You're making my point.

You have to pick one. Lying requires proof of malice and intentional deceit. Incompetence requires making bad choices given the information you have. They're not "the same thing."

And if you accept the facts - that Bush did't "lie" about anything - then you can get on the road to recovery. I know to you, that might seem unfathomable, but dealing with factual reality and history is healthy and necessary to make informed judgements about the quality of information you receive.

Posted by Good Lt | January 23, 2008 | 02:25 pm | Permalink
 

>>>"We are doing everything we can to avoid war in Iraq."

Again...We went to the UN, got resolution 1441, passed bi-partisan resolutions in the Congress, offered ultimatums to Hussein, spent 13 months debating it before March 2003...

That doesn't seem like the actions of a war-mongering tyrant nation. We exercised restraint, despite the fact that the restraint didn't ultimately lead to doing nothing.

So, again, you've failed to prove the "lie" happened.

Posted by Good Lt | January 23, 2008 | 02:28 pm | Permalink
 

>>>if you make an unequivocal statement that you know may be wrong then you are lying.

No, you're just stupid if you do this.

MAY be wrong? This means that there is a possibilty that he believed what he was saying.

Hence, NO LIE, which you're again trying to define as a 'mistake.'

If you make an unequivocable statement you KNOW is completely false, that you yourself don't believe, and that had no basis in reality (I did not have sexual relations with that woman), that's a lie.

So far, you've failed to prove any lie took place. In fact, you're close to proving that in fact it was pure incompetence and bad intel, because you can't cite a lie.

If you proved the lie was there (as it sooo clearly is, right?), then why can't you get charges filed?

Because everyone knows the truth. Bush made a bad decision on Iraq. He didn't "LIE" about it.
Keep trying.

Posted by Good Lt | January 23, 2008 | 02:37 pm | Permalink
 

That doesn't seem like the actions of a war-mongering tyrant nation. We exercised restraint, despite the fact that the restraint didn't ultimately lead to doing nothing.

The US invaded Iraq. That is NOT "doing everything we can to avoid war." It's starting a war.

Posted by Tony Feltner | January 23, 2008 | 02:42 pm | Permalink
 

Good Lt,

We know that Bush knew that the intelligence was mixed on whether Iraq had WMD. In spite of this he said that the intelligence was not mixed. That is a lie.

We know that Bush knew Al Qaida was not linked to Iraq. In spite of this he said that Al Qaida was linked to Iraq. That is also a lie.

This is all pretty simple and straighforward.