| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
![]() Impeach George Bush In Case You Haven't Heard, Cheney Lied Too Dick Cheney is not a public relations man for the Bush administration, not a spinmeister nor a political operative. He's the vice president of the United States, and when he speaks in public, which he rarely does, he owes the American public the truth. Source: BuzzFlash, 2003-09-19 Candidate: Dick Cheney In his appearance on "Meet the Press" Sunday, Cheney fell woefully short of truth. On the subject of Iraq, the same can be said for President Bush, Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and his deputy, Paul Wolfowitz. But Cheney is the latest example of administration mendacity, and therefore a good place to start in holding the administration accountable. The list: • Cheney repeated the mantra that the nation ignored the terrorism threat before Sept. 11. In fact, President Bill Clinton and his counterterrorism chief, Richard Clarke, took the threat very seriously, especially after the bombing of the USS Cole in October 2000. By December, Clarke had prepared plans for a military operation to attack Osama bin Laden in Afghanistan, go after terrorist financing and work with police officials around the world to take down the terrorist network. Because Clinton was to leave office in a few weeks, he decided against handing Bush a war in progress as he worked to put a new administration together. Instead, Clarke briefed national security adviser Condoleezza Rice, Cheney and others. He emphasized that time was short and action was urgent. The Bush administration sat on the report for months and months. The first high-level discussion took place on Sept. 4, 2001, just a week before the attacks. The actions taken by the Bush administration following Sept. 11 closely parallel actions recommended in Clarke's nine-month-old plan. Who ignored the threat? • Cheney said that "we don't know" if there is a connection between Iraq and the Sept. 11 attacks on the United States. He's right only in the sense that "we don't know" if the sun will come up tomorrow. But all the evidence available says it will -- and that Iraq was NOT involved in Sept. 11. Cheney offered stuff, but it wasn't evidence. He said that one of those involved in planning the attack, an Iraqi-American, had returned to Iraq after the attack and had been protected, perhaps even supported, by Saddam Hussein. That proves exactly nothing about Iraq's links to the attack itself. Cheney also cited a supposed meeting in Prague between hijacker Mohamed Atta and a senior Iraqi intelligence officer -- but the FBI concluded that Atta was in Florida at the time of the supposed meeting. The CIA always doubted the story. And according to a New York Times article on Oct. 21, 2002, Czech President Vaclav Havel "quietly told the White House he has concluded that there is no evidence to confirm earlier reports" of such a meeting. Moreover, the United States now has in custody the agent accused of meeting with Atta. Even though he must know how much he would benefit by simply saying, "Yes, I met Atta in Prague," there has been no announcement by the administration trumpeting that vindication of its belief in an Iraq-Sept. 11 link. • In trying to make that link, Cheney baldly asserted that Iraq is the "geographic base" for those who struck the United States on Sept. 11. No, that would be Afghanistan. • On weapons of mass destruction, Cheney made a number of statements that were misleading or simply false. For example, he said the United States knew Iraq had "500 tons of uranium." Well, yes, and so did the U.N. inspectors. What Cheney didn't say is that the uranium was low-grade waste from nuclear energy plants, and could not have been useful for weapons without sophisticated processing that Iraq was incapable of performing. Cheney also said, "To suggest that there is no evidence [in Iraq] that [Saddam] had aspirations to acquire nuclear weapons, I don't think is valid." It's probably not valid; Saddam wanted nuclear weapons. But Cheney is changing the subject: The argument before the war wasn't Saddam's aspirations; it was Saddam's active program to build nuclear weapons. Cheney also said "a gentleman" has come forward "with full designs for a process centrifuge system to enrich uranium and the key parts that you need to build such a system." That would be scientist Mahdi Obeidi, who had buried the centrifuge pieces in his back yard -- in 1991. Obeidi insisted that Iraq hadn't restarted its nuclear weapons program after the end of the first Gulf War. The centrifuge pieces might have signaled a potential future threat, but they actually disprove Cheney's prewar assertion that Iraq had, indeed, "reconstituted" its nuclear-weapons program. Cheney also said he put great store in the ongoing search for Saddam's WMD program: "We've got a very good man now in charge of the operation, David Kay, who used to run UNSCOM [the U.N. inspection effort]." In fact, Kay did not run UNSCOM; for one year he was the chief inspector for the International Atomic Energy Agency's team in Iraq. But it's funny Cheney should mention Kay. Last summer, the leader of the 1,400-person team searching for WMD expressed great confidence that they would find what they were looking for. He said he wouldn't publicize discoveries piecemeal but would submit a comprehensive report in mid-September. Apparently he has submitted the report to George Tenet at the CIA. The question now is whether it will ever be made public; several reports in the press have suggested that Kay has come up way short. In five months, 1,400 experts haven't found the WMD locations that Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld said before the war were well-known to the United States. Cheney also said that an investigation by the British had "revalidated the British claim that Saddam was, in fact, trying to acquire uranium in Africa -- what was in the State of the Union speech." The British investigation did nothing of the kind. A parliamentary investigative committee said the documents on the uranium are being reinvestigated, but that, based on the existence of those documents, the Blair government made a "reasonable" assertion and had not tried to deliberately mislead the British people. To explore every phony statement in the vice president's "Meet the Press" interview would take far more space than is available. This merely points out some of the most egregious examples. Opponents of the war are fond of saying that "Bush lied and our soldiers died." In fact, they'd have reason to assert that "Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld and Wolfowitz lied and our soldiers died." It's past time the principals behind this mismanaged war were called to account for their deliberate misstatements. Add a comment to this Message in our Forums. While you're at it, check out our forums too! User Originated Comments: From: Beau Graves 2004-03-10 04:05:54 correction: the statement, 'in as many years,' is meant to be understood as 3, not 3 million. just wanted to clarify for all of you right-wingers out there. From: Beau Graves 2004-03-10 04:00:24 in response to the narrow-minded, fact-less statements presented by marvin,(by the way, that's the name of my cat, probably just as smart as you,) where should i begin. well first of all, treason is the act of attempting to overthrow by illegal means, the government to which a person owes allegiance. it is not, however, presenting facts, basing your own opinion on those facts, and speaking out against a government of which you disagree with about their current policies. that is the basis of a democracy, and is expected if a democracy is to work properly. too many of you right-winged conservatives take the bush administration at their word, without ever giving anything they do or say a second thought. that sir, leads to a complacent society in which power runs rampant and un-checked, kinda like what's going on right now. secondly, no one hates the "president." i'm sure in his wee little dyslexic mind, (honestly, nothing against anyone with dyslexia here, i know it's a tough disease to live with, i just believe that the leader of the most powerful country in the world should be able to fully comprehend any large, intricate document handed over to him to read, which many times he has demonstrated that he cannot,) that he believes he is doing the right thing, as long as it's what god has told him to do, (hitler was another kooky leader who liked to mention that he was doing the chosen work of god every time he had the chance to.) some of us 'free-thinkers' just disagree with bush, something we again, are allowed to do in a democratic society. many of us believe that this war is of reasons other than to "liberate the iraqi people", (or kill over 10,000 of them in the process,) or to "fight terrorism," (meanwhile giving the other 80% of the world population, which happens to despise the united states, more of a reason to become a terrorist, or freedom fighter, it just depends on whether you're fighting for or against the u.s. at the time,) which are very nice side effects of a war in iraq, but not necessarily the initial factor of which the bush admininstration chose to go to war. thirdly, you are sorely mistaken about your 12 years of prosperity remark about presidents reagan, (not reagen,) and ghw (or daddy, as he's so affectionately referred to by his grown-up son.) the clinton administration brought forth 22 million new jobs to the american workforce, meanwhile your buddy dubya has managed to lose 3 million in as many years, the first time any president has had a net loss in jobs since herbert hoover(70 years ago, for those who are unaware.) so in conclusion, you sir/maam, are living in a blind, narrow-minded conservative shell, and you are the one who needs to wake up, and realize that just because someone puts on a smile, and says he's fighting the good fight, isn't always necessarily telling the whole truth. maybe if you did a little bit of reading outside of the gop website, you might learn some useful information now and again. From: TIM WORDEN 2004-01-09 00:00:00 george w. bush makes me ashamed to call myself an american. From: TIM WORDEN 2004-01-09 00:00:00 From: joe 1999-11-30 00:00:00 does anyone notice that those who are criticizing the administration, and rightfully so, are the only ones who are actually presenting hard evidence. in addition, where the hell did marvin get the idea of this building up of the economy for twelve years and then having clinton destroy it. the national deficit quadrupled after reagan took office. saying that reagan and bush built it up and that clinton destroyed it is as untrue as saying that nixon was committed to getting america out of vietnam. contrariwise, nixon sent in troops to attack north vietnamese stations in cambodia in april of 1970 after he had promised to "wind down the war," and to "not send any more soldiers" to vietnam. |
|
Related News |
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
![]() owned by TheTIP. [ Skip Next | Next | Random Site | List Sites |Previous ] NEWS | ACTION | RESULTS | POLLS | MEMBERS | SEARCH |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| FAIR USE NOTICE This site contains copyrighted material the use of which has not always been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. We are making such material available in our efforts to advance understanding of environmental, political, human rights, economic, democracy, scientific, and social justice issues, etc. We believe this constitutes a 'fair use' of any such copyrighted material as provided for in section 107 of the US Copyright Law. In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, the material on this site is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. For more information go to: http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml. If you wish to use copyrighted material from this site for purposes of your own that go beyond 'fair use', you must obtain permission from the copyright owner. |
Thetip.org assumes no responsibility for any errors or omissions in these materials. Thetip.org makes no commitment to update the information contained herein. Further, Thetip.org cannot edit, control, review for truth or accuracy, or screen for defamation or obscenity any content provided to the Website by a third party through postings, uploaded files, or any other form of communication, nor can Thetip.org ensure prompt removal of defamatory, obscene, inappropriate or unlawful content after transmission. Any such third party postings, files or other communications do not necessarily represent the opinions, beliefs, or positions of Thetip.org. Thetip.org makes no, and expressly disclaims any, representations or warranties, express or implied, regarding the Website, including, without limitation, any implied warranties of merchantability or fitness for a particular purpose. Thetip.org makes no, and expressly disclaims any, warranties, express or implied, regarding the correctness, accuracy, completeness, timeliness, and reliability of the text, graphics, links to other sites and any other items accessed from or via this Website or the Internet, or that the services will be uninterrupted, error-free or free of viruses or other harmful components. Under no circumstances shall Thetip.org, its affiliates, or any of their respective partners, officers, directors, employees, agents or representatives be liable for any damages, whether direct, indirect, special or consequential damages for lost revenues, lost profits, or otherwise, arising from or in connection with this Website, the materials contained herein, or the Internet generally. |