•• MUST READ •• Courageous Truth Telling ••
Minneapolis Star Tribune Copyrighted Editorial • Tells It
Like It IS • Sez:
"Nothing young Americans can do in life is more honorable
than offering themselves for the defense of their nation. It
requires great selflessness and sacrifice, and quite possibly
the forfeiture of life itself. On Memorial Day 2005, we gather
to remember all those who gave us that ultimate gift.
Because they are so fresh in our minds, those who have died
in Iraq make a special claim on our thoughts and our
prayers.
In exchange for our uniformed young people's willingness
to offer the gift of their lives, civilian Americans owe them
something important: It is our duty to ensure that they
never are called to make that sacrifice unless it is truly
necessary for the security of the country. In the case of Iraq,
the American public has failed them; we did not prevent the
Bush administration from spending their blood in an
unnecessary war based on contrived concerns about Iraq's
weapons of mass destruction. President Bush and those
around him lied, and the rest of us let them. Harsh? Yes.
True? Also yes. Perhaps it happened because Americans,
understandably, don't expect untruths from those in power.
But that works better as an explanation than as an excuse.
The "smoking gun," as some call it, surfaced on May 1 in the
London Times. It is a highly classified document containing
the minutes of a July 23, 2002, meeting at 10 Downing Street
in which Sir Richard Dearlove, head of Britain's Secret
Intelligence Service, reported to Prime Minister Tony Blair
on talks he'd just held in Washington. His mission was to
determine the Bush administration's intentions toward Iraq.
At a time when the White House was saying it had "no
plans" for an invasion, the British document says Dearlove
reported that there had been "a perceptible shift in attitude"
in Washington. "Military action was now seen as inevitable.
Bush wanted to remove Saddam, through military action,
justified by the conjunction of terrorism and WMD. But the
intelligence and facts were being fixed around the policy.
The (National Security Council) had no patience with the
U.N. route, and no enthusiasm for publishing material on
the Iraqi regime's record. There was little discussion in
Washington of the aftermath after military action."
It turns out that former counterterrorism chief Richard
Clarke and former Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill were
right. Both have been pilloried for writing that by summer
2002 Bush had already decided to invade.
Walter Pincus, writing in the Washington Post on May 22,
provides further evidence that the administration did,
indeed, fix the intelligence on Iraq to fit a policy it had
already embraced: invasion and regime change. Just four
days before Bush's State of the Union address in January
2003, Pincus writes, the National Security Council staff "put
out a call for new intelligence to bolster claims" about
Saddam Hussein's WMD programs. The call went out
because the NSC staff believed the case was weak.
Moreover, Pincus says, "as the war approached, many U.S.
intelligence analysts were internally questioning almost
every major piece of prewar intelligence about Hussein's
alleged weapons programs." But no one at high ranks in the
administration would listen to them.
On the day before Bush's speech, the CIA's Berlin station
chief warned that the source for some of what Bush would
say was untrustworthy. Bush said it anyway. He based part
of his most important annual speech to the American people
on a single, dubious, unnamed source. The source was later
found to have fabricated his information.
Also comes word, from the May 19 New York Times, that
senior U.S. military leaders are not encouraged about
prospects in Iraq. Yes, they think the United States can
prevail, but as one said, it may take "many years."
As this bloody month of car bombs and American deaths --
the most since January -- comes to a close, as we gather in
groups small and large to honor our war dead, let us all sing
of their bravery and sacrifice. But let us also ask their
forgiveness for sending them to a war that should never
have happened. In the 1960s it was Vietnam. Today it is
Iraq. Let us resolve to never, ever make this mistake again.
Our young people are simply too precious."
LINK:
Minneapolis Star Tribune •• May 30, 2005 Editorial ••
Memorial Day/Praise bravery, seek forgiveness

5:28:52 AM