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White House recipe for war: fabricate, smear, repeat

By Washington Post
Published February 27, 2007


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WASHINGTON - Even as jurors pondered whether Vice President Dick Cheney's former chief of staff should be convicted for lying about what the Bush administration did to smear one of its critics, there was Cheney accusing another adversary of doing the work of the terrorists.

The fabricate-and-smear cycle illustrated so dramatically during the case of I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby explains why President Bush is failing to rally support for the latest iteration of his Iraq policy. The administration's willingness at the outset to say anything, no matter how questionable, to justify the war has destroyed its credibility. Its habit of attacking those who expressed misgivings has destroyed any goodwill it might have enjoyed. Bush and Cheney have lost the benefit of the doubt.

Yet Cheney has learned nothing and forgotten nothing. His latest demon is House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, whom he accuses of validating al-Qaida's objectives.

"Al-Qaida functions on the basis that they think they can break our will," Cheney told ABC News on Friday by way of explaining his earlier attack on the House speaker. "That's their fundamental underlying strategy: that if they can kill enough Americans or cause enough havoc, create enough chaos in Iraq, then we'll quit and go home."

Cheney added: "And my statement was that if we adopt the Pelosi policy, that then we will validate the strategy of al-Qaida. I said it, and I meant it."

No doubt he did, and those words illustrate the administration's political methodology from the very beginning of its public campaign against Iraq. Back in 2002 and early 2003, it browbeat a reluctant country into this war by making assertions about an Iraqi nuclear program that proved to be groundless and by inventing ties between Saddam Hussein and al-Qaida that didn't exist.

Then, once our troops were committed, anyone who had second thoughts could be trashed and driven back as a proterrorist weakling. The quagmire would be self-perpetuating: Once you checked in, you could never leave.

The evidence presented at the Libby trial has demonstrated how worried Cheney was that this scheme could unravel. Thanks to Patrick Fitzgerald, the painstaking prosecutor, we know that Cheney was beside himself over former Ambassador Joseph Wilson's July 6, 2003, New York Times op-ed article undercutting the administration's claim that Saddam Hussein had sought nuclear materials in Niger.

Whatever the jury decides, Fitzgerald has amply demonstrated that Cheney directed Libby to destroy Wilson's credibility, partly by leaking that his wife, Valerie Plame Wilson, was a CIA operative who had suggested Wilson was well qualified to investigate the claims in Niger.

Libby-Cheney apologists have argued that Cheney had a right to be angry because Wilson said that Cheney had sent him to Niger. But Wilson said no such thing. In his New York Times piece, Wilson wrote only that he had been "informed by officials at the Central Intelligence Agency that Vice President Dick Cheney's office had questions about a particular intelligence report." That was true.

The attack apparatus has now turned on Fitzgerald, whose record is that of a thoroughly nonpartisan prosecutor. Fitzgerald's perjury rap against Libby, Cheney allies say, is a cheap attempt to criminalize politics.

Really? Here's what Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, R-Fla., had to say about perjury: "Lying under oath is an ancient crime of great weight because it shields other offenses, because it blocks the light of truth in human affairs. It is a dagger in the heart of our legal system, and indeed in our democracy. It cannot, it should not, it must not be tolerated."

Ros-Lehtinen made that statement not about Libby, but back in 1998 to justify the impeachment of Bill Clinton. I have no idea where she stands on the Plame-Wilson issue. But it's certainly amusing that so many who were eager to throw Clinton out of office for perjury and obstruction of justice when he lied about sex are now livid at Fitzgerald for prosecuting alleged untruths. Do they think that sex is more important than war?

E.J. Dionne's e-mail address is postchat@aol.com.

2007, Washington Post Writers Group

[Last modified February 27, 2007, 01:03:41]


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Comments on this article
by the obvious 02/27/07 10:50 AM
Bush admin funding Al-Qaeda http://www.atlanticfreepress.com/content/view/1046/81/
by Reggie 02/27/07 10:23 AM
The truth is ugly but it will set us free. This Congress should investagate this White House and hold hearings on the reasons giving for going to war with Iraq. We need liberty and justice based on the facts.
by Jamilhussein 02/27/07 09:52 AM
Cheney is dead on, terrorism is theater for the western media. It's designed to instill fear in the native population and make the ruling gov't look weak because it's nearly impossible to stop. It worked in vietnam and it's working now.
by geezersgal 02/27/07 09:17 AM
Captured documents have shown that Al-Qaida's intent was not to break our will but our bank! Thanks to this administration they have succeeded. After 4 years they are now breaking the armed services. And now Cheney is threatening Iran. With what?
by Dan 02/27/07 09:11 AM
Cheney is right on Pelosi--same objective as terrorists. As for Fitz, he was supposed to see if a crime was committed. He admits he knew it wasn't by the 2nd day of investigation, yet he continued to investigate until he created a crime (perjury).
by Jim 02/27/07 07:27 AM
Cheney is the real villan, he's fulfulled Osama's objectives; the US out of Saudi, Iraq's secular gov replaced with an Islamic regime, and millions of new followers that hate the US. Anyone who buys his spin is truly brainwashed.
by Ellen 02/27/07 07:25 AM
Sex rules! Young people just reaching voting age were raised on a steady diet of Bill and Monica. What else should we expect? Bypass law-abiding new immigrants, in favor of illegals? Law, diplomacy and honesty no longer matter.
by Solomon 02/27/07 07:17 AM
A lie needs the support of other lies to keep 'the lie' alive-at the cost of lives. VP's lie without conscious! Its his job-lie and cover-lie and cover. Chaney for president in '08.
by KG 02/27/07 06:33 AM
understand that, in the pursuit of power, there is no lie dick cheney won't scruple to tell, and to keep it, no smear he wouldn't utter.
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