All the President's Lies
By Robert Parry
October 30, 2006
http://www.consortiumnews.com/2006/103006.html
Many Americans are cynical about what they hear from politicians
– and often with good reason – but perhaps no U.S. political
leader in modern history has engaged in a pattern of lying and
distortion more systematically than George W. Bush has.
Bush’s lies also aren’t about petty matters, such as some
personal indiscretion or minor misconduct. Rather his dishonesty
deals with issues of war and peace, the patriotism of his
opponents, and the founding principles of the American Republic.
They are the kinds of lies and distortions more befitting the
leader of a totalitarian state whipping up his followers to go
after some perceived enemy than the President of the world’s
preeminent democracy seeking an informed debate among the
citizenry.
For instance, in an Oct. 28 speech in Sellersburg, Indiana, Bush
worked the crowd into a frenzy of “USA, USA” chants by accusing
Democrats of not wanting to “detain and question terrorists,”
not wanting to listen in on “terrorist communications,” and not
wanting to bring terrorists to trial – all gross distortions of
Democratic positions.
Bush has used this same gambit for many years. He characterizes
his strategies and actions in the most innocuous ways; he then
ignores honest reasons for disagreement with him; and he
characterizes his opponents’ positions in the most absurd manner
possible.
So, regarding the “war on terror,” Bush never mentions the
constitutional concerns about his strategies or the questions
about their effectiveness. According to him, his decisions are
always benign and obvious; those of his opponents border on the
crazy and disloyal.
“When al-Qaeda or an al-Qaeda affiliate is making a phone call
from outside the United States to inside the United States, we
want to know why,” Bush told the cheering Indiana crowd. “In
this new kind of war, we must be willing to question the enemy
when we pick them up on the battlefield.”
Referring to the capture of alleged 9/11 conspirator Khalid
Sheikh Mohammed, Bush said, “when we captured him, I said to the
Central Intelligence Agency, why don’t we find out what he knows
in order to be able to protect America from another attack.”
Bush then contrasted his eminently reasonable positions with
those held by the nutty Democrats.
“When it came time on whether to allow the Central Intelligence
Agency to continue to detain and question terrorists, almost 80
percent of the House Democrats voted against it,” Bush said, as
the crowd booed the Democrats.
“When it came time to vote on whether the NSA [National Security
Agency] should continue to monitor terrorist communications
through the Terrorist Surveillance Program, almost 90 percent of
House Democrats voted against it.
“In all these vital measures for fighting the war on terror, the
Democrats in Washington follow a simple philosophy: Just say no.
When it comes to listening in on the terrorists, what’s the
Democratic answer? Just say no. When it comes to detaining
terrorists, what’s the Democrat answer?”
Crowd: “Just say no!”
Bush: “When it comes to questioning terrorists, what’s the
Democrat answer?”
Crowd: “Just say no!”
Bush: “When it comes to trying terrorists, what’s the Democrat’s
answer?”
Crowd: “Just say no!”
Bush vs. the Truth
Yet, Bush realizes that the Democrats are not opposed to
eavesdropping on terrorists, or detaining terrorists, or
questioning terrorists, or bringing terrorists to trial.
What Democrats – and many conservatives – object to are Bush’s
methods: his tolerance of abusive interrogation techniques; his
assertion of unlimited presidential authority; his abrogation of
habeas corpus rights to a fair trial; and his violation of
existing laws, such as the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act
which already gives the President broad powers to engage in
electronic spying inside the United States, albeit with the
approval of a special court.
Bush’s critics argue that all his “war on terror” objectives can
be achieved without throwing out more than two centuries of
American constitutional traditions or by violating human rights,
such as prohibitions against torture.
While Bush says Democrats don’t want to try terrorist, their
real complaint about his Military Commissions Act of 2006 comes
from its denial of habeas corpus for non-citizens and its vague
wording that could apply its draconian provisions to American
citizens as well. [See Consortiumnews.com’s “Who Is ‘Any Person’
in Tribunal Law?”]
Bush’s defenders may argue that the President was just using
some oratorical license in the Indiana stump speech. But all the
points he made to the crowd, he also has expressed in more
formal settings.
The distortions also fit with Bush’s long pattern of slanting
the truth or engaging in outright lies when describing his
adversaries, both foreign and domestic.
Yet Bush is almost never held to account by a U.S. news media
that seems almost as cowed today as it was when Bush misled the
nation into the Iraq War or – after the invasion – when he lied
repeatedly, claiming that he had no choice but to invade because
Saddam Hussein had barred U.N. weapons inspectors from Iraq.
[See Consortiumnews.com’s “Bush & His Dangerous Delusions.”]
Even when acknowledging that Bush’s statements often turn out to
be false, his defenders say it’s unfair to call him a liar. They
say he’s just an honest guy who gets lots of bad information.
False Talking Points
But there comes a point when that defense wears thin. The
evidence actually points to a leader who wants his subordinates
to give him a steady supply of “talking points” that can be used
to achieve his goals whether the arguments are true, half true
or totally false.
How else can anyone explain why the most expensive intelligence
system in history acted in 2002-03 like a kind of backward
filter in processing evidence about Iraq’s alleged weapons of
mass destruction and Saddam Hussein’s purported ties to
al-Qaeda.
The CIA’s reverse analytical filter consistently removed the
nuggets of good information – when they undercut Bush’s
positions – and let through the dross of misinformation.
In September 2006, the Senate Intelligence Committee issued a
report that detailed how the U.S. intelligence community
surrendered its duty to provide the government with accurate
data and instead gave the Bush administration what it wanted to
hear.
The committee concluded that nearly every key assessment as
expressed in the 2002 National Intelligence Estimate about
Iraq’s WMD was wrong:
“Postwar findings do not support the [NIE] judgment that Iraq
was reconstituting its nuclear weapons program; … do not support
the [NIE] assessment that Iraq’s acquisition of high-strength
aluminum tubes was intended for an Iraqi nuclear program; … do
not support the [NIE] assessment that Iraq was ‘vigorously
trying to procure uranium ore and yellowcake’ from Africa; … do
not support the [NIE] assessment that ‘Iraq has biological
weapons’ and that ‘all key aspects of Iraq’s offensive
biological weapons program are larger and more advanced than
before the Gulf war’; … do not support the [NIE] assessment that
Iraq possessed, or ever developed, mobile facilities for
producing biological warfare agents; … do not support the [NIE]
assessments that Iraq ‘has chemical weapons’ or ‘is expanding
its chemical industry to support chemical weapons production’; …
do not support the [NIE] assessments that Iraq had a
developmental program for an Unmanned Aerial Vehicle ‘probably
intended to deliver biological agents’ or that an effort to
procure U.S. mapping software ‘strongly suggests that Iraq is
investigating the use of these UAVs for missions targeting the
United States.’”
The Senate Intelligence Committee also concluded that the Bush
administration’s claims about the supposed relationship between
the Iraqi government and al-Qaeda were bogus. Rather than
cooperating with Jordanian terrorist Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, as
the Bush administration has claimed for the past four years, it
turned out that the Iraqi government was trying to arrest
Zarqawi.
But the creation of the bogus Saddam Hussein-Osama bin Laden
link was not accidental. According to the committee report, the
misinformation came via an administration mandate to cast every
shred of information in the harshest possible light.
That systemic bias was revealed in the guidelines for a CIA
paper produced in June 2002, entitled “Iraq and al-Qa’ida:
Interpreting a Murky Relationship.”
The CIA study was designed to assess the Iraqi government’s
links to al-Qaeda. But the analysts were given unusual
instructions, told to be “purposely aggressive in seeking to
draw connections, on the assumption that any indication of a
relationship between these two hostile elements could carry
great dangers to the United States.”
A former CIA deputy director of intelligence told the Senate
Intelligence Committee that the paper’s authors were ordered to
“lean far forward and do a speculative piece.” The deputy
director told them, “if you were going to stretch to the maximum
the evidence you had, what could you come up with.”
In other words, the CIA analysts set out to hype any evidence of
possible links between Iraq and al-Qaeda. So, if some piece of
information contained even a remote possibility of a connection,
the assumption had to be that the tie-in was real and
substantive.
When Zarqawi snuck into Baghdad for medical treatment,
therefore, the assumption could not be that the Iraqi
authorities were unaware of his presence or couldn’t find him;
it had to be that Saddam Hussein knew all about it and was
collaborating with Zarqawi.
This practice of assuming the worst – rather than attempting to
gauge likelihoods as accurately as possible – guaranteed the
kind of slanted and even fanciful intelligence reports that
guided the United States to war in 2002-2003.
What Bush Wanted
But what is equally clear from the Senate report is that the
U.S. intelligence community was giving Bush exactly what he
wanted so he could present a litany of alleged grievances that
would justify an unprovoked invasion.
Even after the falsity of the intelligence was known, Bush gave
CIA Director George Tenet, the bureaucrat who oversaw this
perversion of intelligence, the Presidential Medal of Freedom,
the highest honor that can be bestowed on an American civilian.
This pattern of slanting information about Iraq also has not
stopped. It continues to the present day.
For instance, one of Bush’s favorite arguments in his stump
speeches is that the Democrats are playing into Osama bin
Laden’s hands by seeking a U.S. military withdrawal from Iraq.
“In Washington, the Democrats say [Iraq is] not a part of the
war against the terrorists, it’s a distraction.” Bush told that
crowd in Sellersburg, Indiana. “Well, don’t take my word for it
– listen to Osama bin Laden. He has made it clear that Iraq is a
central part of this war on terror. He and his number two man,
Zawahiri have made it abundantly clear that their goal is to
inflict enough damage on innocent life and damage on our own
troops so that we leave before the job is done.”
But that isn’t what the latest intelligence on al-Qaeda’s goals
shows. Indeed, U.S. intelligence has intercepted communiqués
from al-Qaeda leaders to Zarqawi in 2005 that actually reveal
their alarm at the possibility of a prompt U.S. military
withdrawal and their goal of “prolonging the war” by keeping the
Americans bogged down in Iraq.
In a Dec. 11, 2005, letter, a senior al-Qaeda leader known as
“Atiyah” lectured Zarqawi on the need to take the long view and
build ties with elements of the Sunni-led Iraqi insurgency that
had little in common with al-Qaeda except hatred of the
Americans.
“The most important thing is that the jihad continues with
steadfastness and firm rooting, and that it grows in terms of
supporters, strength, clarity of justification, and visible
proof each day,” Atiyah wrote. “Indeed, prolonging the war is in
our interest.” [Emphasis added.]
The “Atiyah letter,” which was discovered by U.S. authorities at
the time of Zarqawi’s death on June 7, 2006, and was translated
by the U.S. military’s Combating Terrorism Center at West Point,
also stressed the vulnerability of al-Qaeda’s position in Iraq.
“Know that we, like all mujahaddin, are still weak,” Atiyah told
Zarqawi. “We have not yet reached a level of stability. We have
no alternative but to not squander any element of the
foundations of strength or any helper or supporter.” [For
details, see Consortiumnews.com’s “Al-Qaeda’s Fragile
Foothold.”]
Atiyah’s worries reiterated concerns expressed by bin Laden’s
deputy Ayman al-Zawahiri in another intercepted letter from July
7, 2005. In that letter, Zawahiri fretted that a rapid U.S.
pullout could cause al-Qaeda’s operation in Iraq to collapse
because foreign jihadists, who flocked to Iraq to fight
Americans, would give up the fight and go home.
“The mujahaddin must not have their mission end with the
expulsion of the Americans from Iraq, and then lay down their
weapons, and silence the fighting zeal,” wrote Zawahiri,
according to a text released by the U.S. Director of National
Intelligence.
To avert mass desertions, Zawahiri suggests that Zarqawi talk up
the “idea” of a “caliphate” along the eastern Mediterranean.
What al-Qaeda leaders seem to fear most is that a U.S. military
withdrawal would contribute to a disintegration of their fragile
position in Iraq, between the expected desertions of the foreign
fighters and the targeting of al-Qaeda’s remaining forces by
Iraqis determined to rid their country of violent outsiders.
In that sense, the longer the United States remains in Iraq, the
deeper al-Qaeda can put down roots and the more it can harden
its new recruits through indoctrination and training. These
intercepted letters also fit with last April’s conclusion by
U.S. intelligence agencies that the U.S. occupation of Iraq has
proved to be a “cause celebre” that has spread Islamic
radicalism around the globe.
Bush surely knows all this, but he also appears confident that
he can continue to sell a distorted interpretation of the
evidence to a gullible U.S. public. Basically, it appears that
the President believes that the American people are very stupid.
Robert Parry broke many of the Iran-Contra stories in the 1980s
for the Associated Press and Newsweek. His latest book, Secrecy
& Privilege: Rise of the Bush Dynasty from Watergate to Iraq,
can be ordered at secrecyandprivilege.com. It's also available
at Amazon.com, as is his 1999 book, Lost History: Contras,
Cocaine, the Press & 'Project Truth.'
=============================================
It has become clear in recent months that a critical mass of the
American people have seen through the lies of the Bush
administration; with the president's polls at an historic low,
growing resistance to the war Iraq, and the Democrats likely to
take back the Congress in mid-term elections, the Bush
administration is on the ropes. And so it is particularly
worrying that President Bush has seen fit, at this juncture to,
in effect, declare himself dictator.
Source:
(1)
http://leahy.senate.gov/press/200609/091906a.html and
http://leahy.senate.gov/press/200609/092906b.html See also,
Congressional Research Service Report for Congress, "The Use of
Federal Troops for Disaster Assistance: Legal Issues," by
Jennifer K. Elsea, Legislative Attorney, August 14, 2006
(2)
http://www.govtrack.us/congress/bill.xpd?bill+h109-5122
(3) Journal of Counterterrorism & Homeland Security
International, "Recent Contract Awards", Summer 2006, Vol.12,
No.2, pg.8; See also, Peter Dale Scott, "Homeland Security
Contracts for Vast New Detention Camps," New American Media,
January 31, 2006.
(4) "Technology Transfer from defense: Concealed Weapons
Detection", National Institute of Justice Journal, No 229,
August, 1995, pp.42-43.
www.towardfreedom.com/home/content/view/911/
Bush Moves Toward Martial Law
by repost Saturday, Oct. 28, 2006 at 2:39 AM
http://sf.indymedia.org/news/2006/10/1732834.php