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Iraq

Bush Revisionist Changes Reasons for War. Again.

Re: Spinning for Bush, Then Spinning the Spin | Mother Jones, By David Corn, Mon Mar. 15, 2010 3:00 AM PDT

Spinners gotta spin. And Brad Blakeman, a Republican strategist and commentator, is an expert at keeping his own gyrations turning.

On Tuesday, he and I appeared on MSNBC to discuss Karl Rove’s new book. The main issue at hand was Rove’s assertion that George W. Bush did not “lie us” into the Iraq war. I went first and explained how the Bush administration had overstated iffy intelligence regarding Iraq’s WMD capabilities to grease the way to the invasion. Defending Bush’s war, Blakeman, who had worked in the Bush White House’s scheduling office, noted that Saddam Hussein had used WMDs against the Kurds—without mentioning that this had happened 15 years before the Iraq war and that UN inspectors had subsequently reported destroying Iraq’s WMD facilities. He then asserted that another reason for the war was that Saddam “was preventing inspectors from coming in and inspecting the [suspected WMD] sites that the UN demanded be inspected.”

I interrupted, “Brad, that’s not true,” noting that UN inspectors had been inside Iraq for months prior to the war and had uncovered no evidence of existing WMD stockpiles. 

Revisionists gotta revise. And Brad Blakeman now joins the growing chorus of revisionists all singing songs of the innocuous behavior and the moral chastity and innocence of George W. Bush. Liz Cheney, Dick Cheney, and Karl Rove are all a conspiratorial clan of former Bush components who can make themselves seem cleaner by cleaning up Bush. “Bush didn’t lie!” Sadly, yet another lie.

“They were denied access,” Blakeman insisted.” And after I referred to two instances when Bush had made utterly false statements about Saddam’s relationship to al Qaeda and his nuclear weapons capabilities—statements not supported by the intelligence of the time—Blakeman argued that Bush had not lied. He repeated his claim that the reason for the war had been Saddam’s opposition to weapons inspections:

President Bush did not bring us into this war because of WMD. He brought us into the war because Saddam Hussein failed to allow inspections of the sites the UN demanded be inspected.

While Blakeman throws out lies David Corn lays out the facts. For all of us who weren’t in a coma during this time, the fall of 2002, and happened to pick up a newspaper, we recall that Saddam Hussein was really rather generous to the inspectors’ requests to inspect. I remember that the Iraqi officials went with the inspectors and opened the sites for them. One such site turned out to be a milk factory. Corn interjects some facts here from a “2003 Congressional Research Service report on the inspection process:”

* From late November 2002 to March 2003, U.N. inspectors combed Iraq looking for weapons of mass destruction (WMD).

* The U.N. Monitoring, Verification, and Inspection Commission (UNMOVIC) and the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) conducted over 750 inspections at 550 sites. These inspections seemed to benefit from strengthened authorities under the new U.N. resolution, new technologies, a better relationship between UNMOVIC and the [International Atomic Energy Agency], and pressure from the threat of military strikes.

* On the eve of war, inspectors withdrew from Iraq.

* For the approximately three months of inspections, inspectors reported that the Iraq was cooperating on access, with a few minor delays. Dr. [Hans] Blix [the head of UNMOVIC] noted in his March 7 [2003] report that cooperation on process was better this time for UNMOVIC than it had been for UNSCOM [in the 1990s].

Thank you, David Corn, for getting the truth out there. These revisionists cannot be allowed to have their retelling of history to stand as the truth.

I like to read comments to these articles when they are allowed and now I want to post one comment I found that offered intelligent, if not somewhat apologetic, support for Brad Blakeman’s version of history. This comment by Jason Ray:

The issue of WMD and the inspectors was not as clear-cut as you make it seem. Hans Blix himself clearly stated that the Iraqis had been unhelpful in many areas. Indeed, Mr. El Baradei stated that, “What’s required is a dramatic change in spirit and sincerity,” on the subject of coorporation (sic). I think it’s safe to say that Blix and El Baradei are as non-partisan as it gets in the UN-community.

Also, wasn’t there concern that Iraq had launched SCUDs into Kuwait after the Coalition started targeting Saddam’s palaces and command centers? The main concern being that Iraq wasn’t supposed to have any of these SCUDs yet they were launching them.

I am no defender of George Bush or New Labour, but if there was no case for the invasion why did the UN pass a resolution threatening invasion unless Iraq fully cooperated? The UN backed out at the last minute when its members demanded yet another resolution and at this point the Compassionate Cowboy decided to invade Iraq.

My reply was this, which Mother Jones website wouldn’t let me post due to a technical glitch:

I said, “The UN would not have passed resolution 1441 that ‘threatened invasion’ were it not for the lies and falsification of intelligence surrounding the existence of WMDs in Iraq. In short, Bush lied the UN into war, with the help of a great presentation from Colin Powel, which was a monstrous lie. Bush was able to convince the UN that Saddam was keeping us from examining weapon sites, which he was not, that weren’t really weapon sites.

Bush also did some serious arm twisting in the Security Council. He told them to either act, or he would, by asking in 2002, “Will the United Nations serve the purpose of its founding, or will it be irrelevant?” But the purpose of its founding was to maintain peace, not precipitate war.

The Bush Doctrine dangerously adopted the policy of preventive war, a violation in itself of UN Charter 2(4).”

Here is an excerpt of a reply by a commentator named leafsong1:

2) A UN authorized invasion would be authorized by the UN; the US is not empowered to guess what the UNSC might be thinking and unilaterally act to enforce their will.

George W. Bush bent over backwards to rub off the blame onto the UN for his illegal invasion. The UN Security Council would not take responsibility for this, and rightly so, no matter how much Bush tried to blame them and have the UN own the invasion. Although it may be argued that Iraq violated resolutions dating back to 1991, those resolutions are owned by the UN Security Council – all 15 members – not just the United States. The United States cannot unilaterally invade another country as if it were the will of the Security Council, which it was not. The UN’s response to the arm twisting was to send the inspectors back into Iraq, and Iraq did not deny them access as Blakeman has claimed.

The UN inspectors fled Iraq on their own, not booted out as Blakeman would have you believe. They did it for their own safety during the ramp-up to war.

Brad Blakeman is the former president and chief executive officer, as well as one of several prominent conservatives funding Freedom’s Watch, a  now defunct organization that promoted the Bush Doctrine through TV ad buys, and funded/promoted the swiftboating of Senator John Kerry.

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Today’s GOP is Smaller than Ever, Screams to Remain Relevant

Re: Today’s GOP is both united and divided – washingtonpost.com, By Jon Cohen and Dan Balz, Washington Post Staff Writer
Monday, November 30, 2009

The Republican rank and file is largely in sync with GOP lawmakers in their staunch opposition to efforts by President Obama and Democrats to enact major health-care legislation, but a new Washington Post poll also reveals deep dissatisfaction among GOP voters with the party’s leadership as well as ideological and generational differences that may prove big obstacles to the party’s plans for reclaiming power.

Republicans and GOP-leaning independents are overwhelmingly negative about Obama and the Democratic Party more broadly, with nearly all dissatisfied with the administration’s policies and almost half saying they are “angry” about them. About three-quarters have a more basic complaint, saying Obama does not stand for “traditional American values.” More than eight in 10 say there is no chance they would support his reelection.

My question is this, why do journalists and TV pundits talk about the Republican Party as if it were just as large and relevant as the Democratic Party? There is only one place in this entire article that mentions how small the GOP has become. It is in the middle of the second page (online) and surrounded by parentheses as if it were something injected as a side note or just for your information:

Almost three-quarters of Republicans and GOP-leaners identify themselves as “conservative” on most issues, up sharply from a couple of years ago. (In some part, the rise is attributable to fewer Americans calling themselves Republicans; with an average of just 22 percent in Post polls this year saying so, the lowest number in polls since 1981.)

Oh by the way, 78% of voting Americans are NOT Republicans.

But the right-wing journalists insist that what they do or what they say is just as relevant as the majority opinion without any disclaimer about just how many of them there are. The news media cover the small, but loud, tea-bag protests as if they were just springing up everywhere as a natural occurrence automatically because of the crazy hyperbole that Obama is a socialist or that their grandma has to die. The reporters proudly over-estimate the numbers of the crowd and unapologetically talk about the insane posters and signs as if they had something legitimate to say. And if you are thinking that, well, the squeaky wheel gets the grease, then just think back to when there were massive marches and demonstrations to end the war in Iraq. That particular loudly squeaking wheel got no grease at all.

Now, the Washington Post interviews a few right-wing freaks in Colorado and suddenly their opinion is supposed to be some sort of new, awesome truth, when if fact, it is the minority opinion.

In the Colorado focus groups, Republican voters expressed strong concerns about the first year of the Obama presidency. Pam Hyde, 53, who works at an elementary school, said new government spending worries her. “We’ll never recover from that,” she said. “I can’t imaging recouping the money that he’s proposing to spend. Unbelievable.”

As a matter of comparison, did the interviewer ask her if she was aware that the cost of war in Iraq and Afghanistan this year would almost double the price of the health care bill for one year? No. Did he ask her if she was aware that we spend ten times the amount of the health care reform on the Defense Department every year? No. The interviewer let her words just hang out there as if they meant something. Did the interviewer ask if she was aware that a third of the stimulus bill was in the form of tax cuts for the middle class? Sadly, no.

What the right wing discomfort boils down to is that there is a black Democrat in the White House. There is nothing more substantial being said or inferred. It is pure Bracknophobia, nothing else.

In the immortal words of The Daily Show’s Jon Stewart, “you lost, it’s supposed to taste like a sh*t taco”. (This quote is at the 3:31 mark.)

The Daily Show With Jon Stewart Mon – Thurs 11p / 10c
Baracknophobia – Obey
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More and more conservatives are leaning toward the hard right-wing fringe, being upset about Obama, and they are floundering, desperately, to be heard. Of Republicans:

On fiscal issues, the percentage calling themselves conservative has soared to more than eight in 10. More striking is that a majority considers themselves to be “very conservative” on fiscal issues, up about 20 points in two years. On social issues, two-thirds of Republicans say they are conservative, and about a third of Republicans say they are very conservative. Overall, about two in 10 are both fiscally conservative and moderate-to-liberal on social issues.

Let them trend to the right. This is the best thing to ever happen to the Democratic Party, well, that and Sarah Palin.

[Palin1.jpg]

Caricature of Sarah Palin

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Thank The Troops By Bringing Them Home

Re:  Jon Soltz: Thanks… Again And Again And Again, Posted by Jon Soltz, Co-Founder of VoteVets.org, served as a Captain in Operation Iraqi Freedom, Posted: November 26, 2009 08:22 AM

End the wars

Jon was speaking of the many TV commercials Thursday, Thanksgiving day that thanked the troops.

At the same time, I can’t help but think that some young grunt is watching these videos for maybe the fourth or fifth time from a TV that the USO set up in the warzone. And, while he’ll strap on his rifle and go whenever called, part of him is thinking “How many more Thanksgivings am I going to have to watch these videos from over here? If you want to thank me, let me eat some turkey at home. Let me see my girlfriend and parents and friends for more than just short stints at home. Don’t you have someone who can rotate in here for me so I can stop doing these tours for a while?”

This is my point in my previous post, It’s President Obama, Not McCain, or McMorris Rodgers, I stated:

We have been undulated with calls to help military families since Bush led the invasion of Afghanistan back in 2001, and then turned the nation toward a straw bogy-man, illegally, in Iraq. I support helping military families being a veteran myself, an Army retiree, and with a service member in our family who completed a tour in Iraq a short time ago. But, this smacks of wrapping a political agenda inside the flag. She says nothing about the deep scars that may be left for decades to come inside our military and their families due to continual wars that were began by the right-wing and the repetitive rotations in and out of the theater of operations. Yes, let’s support them while they are called up once again and let’s enable them to be called over and over because of that support.

The point is that it is starting to sound more like McCarthyism-type raving and not as sincere as in years past. It is almost like a futuristic movie where “Big Brother” propaganda continually plays on huge TV screens at city street intersections, “Thank the Troops, Thank the Troops”. What is really meant is “Support the War, Support the War”.

This propaganda campaign is very effective at delaying the end and subsequently ensuring more profits for arms manufacturers. The more we support and thank the troops publically, the more we propel the propaganda and enable even more war. There should be commercials on TV during Thanksgiving Day football that states, let’s really help the troops and end the war. Soltz was appreciative of the good wishes for the troops, but added, “But at a certain point, for those there for yet another holiday, the thanks start to ring a bit more hollow.”

We need to hurry and get to an end state that can be an acceptable/tolerable status quo, then leave both Afghanistan and Iraq for good. It is time we get fed up with war.

Get hold of your State’s Congressional delegation and tell them to bring our boys and girls home. Give them some rest and relaxation. Our forces are stretched to the breaking point. If something happened on our mainland, there would not be sufficient forces to deal with that contingency. Let them defend our country from here – a strategic military maneuver.

If you really want to thank the troops, then end the war.

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