The
spin is not holding. Facing two controversies--the
Wilson leak (click here if you have somehow managed to miss this story) and the still-MIA WMDs--the
White House has been tossing out explanations
and rhetoric that cannot withstand scrutiny.
Let's start with the Wilson leak. In the issue
coming out October 6, Newsweek will
be reporting that after Bob Novak published
a July 14 column containing the leak attributed
to "senior adminsitration officials" that
identified former Ambassador Joseph Wilson's
wife, Valerie Plame, as an undercover CIA
operative, White House officials were touting
the Novak story, according to NBC News reporter
Andrea Mitchell. Apparently, these officials
were encouraging reporters to recycle or pursue
the story about Wilson's wife. The newsmagazine
also notes that, according to a source close
to Wilson, shortly after the leak occurred
Bush's senior aide Karl Rove told Hardball
host Chris Matthews that Wilson's wife was
"fair game." Matthews told Newsweek
that he would not discuss off-the-record conversations.
(He told me the same weeks ago when I made
a similar inquiry about this chat with Rove.)
An anonymous source described as familiar
with the exchange--presumably Rove or someone
designated to speak for him--maintained that
Rove had only said to Matthews it was reasonable
to discuss whether Wilson's wife had been
involved in his mission to Niger. (In February
2002, Wilson had been asked by the CIA to
visit Niger to check out allegations Iraq
had been shopping for uranium there; he did
so and reported back that the charge was probably
untrue. In July, he publicly challenged the
White House's use of this claim and earned
the administration's wrath.)
These disclosures do not reveal who were the
original leakers. (The Justice Department,
at the CIA's request, started out investigating
the White House; it has widened its probe
to include the State Department and the Defense
Department.) But these new details are significant
and undercut the White House line on the leak.
At a White House press briefing, Scott McClellan,
Bush's press secretary, repeatedly said that
Bush and his White House took no action after
the Novak column was published on July 14
because the leak was attributed only to anonymous
sources. "Are we supposed to chase down every
anonymous report in the newspaper?" McClellan
remarked.
He was arguing that a serious leak attributed
to anonymous sources was still not serious
enough to cause the president to ask, what
the hell happened? And he made it seem as
if the White House just ignored the matter.
Not so. Mitchell's remark and even the Rove-friendly
account of the Rove-Matthews conversation
are evidence the White House tried to further
the Plame story--that is, to exploit the leak
for political gain. Rather than respond by
trying to determine the source of a leak that
possibly violated federal law and perhaps
undermined national security ( The Washington
Post reported that the leak also blew
the cover of a CIA front company, "potentially
expanding the damage caused by the original
disclosure"), White House officials sought
to take advantage of it. Spin that, McClellan.
Newsweek is also disclosing that a National
Security Council staffer previously worked
with Valerie Wilson (nee Plame) and was aware
of her position at the CIA because he or she
had worked closely with Wilson's wife at the
Agency's counterproliferation division. McClellan
has indicated in his press briefings that
the White House did not--and has not--acted
to ascertain the source of the leak. But shouldn't
Bush or chief of staff Andrew Card (if Card
is not one of the leakers) have asked this
person whether he or she mentioned Valerie
Wilson's occupation to anyone in the White
House? (I believe I know the name of this
person but since he or she may be working
under cover I am not at this point going to
publish it.)
McClellan has had a tough time providing straight
answers. At the October 1 press briefing,
he was asked what Bush did after the leak
first appeared. He replied by saying that
"some news reports" have noted that Valerie
Wilson's CIA connection "may have been well-known
within the DC community." That hardly seems
so. Her neighbors did not know, and Wilson
maintains their close friends did not know.
No reporter that I have talked to--and I've
spoken to many covering this story--had heard
that.
During that briefing, reporters wondered if
Bush approved of the Republican campaign to
depict Wilson as a partisan zealot lacking
credibility. McClellan sidestepped: "The President
is focused on getting to the bottom of this."
The next day, he was once more asked whether
it was appropriate for Republicans to be attacking
Wilson. "I answered that question yesterday,"
he said. One problem: he hadn't. He also maintained
that Bush "has been the one speaking out front
on this." Not quite. For over two months,
Bush had said nothing about the leak. And
on this day, Bush met with reporters for African
news organizations and joked about the anti-Wilson
leak. When asked what he thought about the
detention in Kenya of three journalists who
had refused to reveal sources, he said, "I'm
against leaks." This prompted laughter, and
Bush went on: "I would suggest all governments
get to the bottom of every leak of classified
information." Addressing the reporter who
had asked the question, Bush echoed the phrase
that McClellan had frequently used in his
press briefings and quipped, "By the way,
if you know anything, Martin, would you please
bring it forward and help solve the problem?"
Perhaps Bush needed a good chuckle after reading--or
being briefed on--the testimony that chief
weapons hunter David Kay was presenting that
day to Congress. In an interim report, Kay
had noted that his Iraq Survey Group had found
evidence of "WMD-related program activities,"
but no stocks of unconventional weapons. Kay
also had an interesting observation about
the prewar intelligence on Iraq's WMDs: "Our
understanding of the status of Iraq's WMD
program was always bounded by large uncertainties
and had to be heavily caveated."
Wait a minute. That was not what Bush and
his compadres had said prior to the war. Flash
back to Bush's get-out-of-town speech on March
17, two days before he launched the war. He
maintained, "Intelligence gathered by this
and other governments leaves no doubt that
the Iraq regime continues to possess and conceal"
weapons of mass destruction. Yet Kay was saying
there had been "large uncertainties" in the
intelligence. How does that square with Bush's
no-doubt claim? It doesn't.
Kay's testimony is more proof that Bush misrepresented
the intelligence. Regular readers of this
column will know that Kay's remark were preceded
by similar statements from the House intelligence
committee and former deputy CIA director,
Richard Kerr, who has been reviewing the prewar
intelligence. Both the committee (led by Representative
Porter Goss, a Republican and former CIA officer)
and Kerr have concluded the intelligence of
Iraq's WMDs was based on circumstantial and
inferential material and contained many uncertainties.
Prior to the invasion, administration officials
consistently declared there was no question
Iraq had these weapons. On December 5, 2002,
for instance, Ari Fleischer, then the White
House press secretary, said, "the president
of the United States and the secretary of
defense would not assert as plainly and bluntly
as they have that Iraq has weapons of mass
destruction if it was not true, and if they
did not have a solid basis for saying it."
But what had been that "solid_basis"? Intelligence
"bounded by large uncertainties"?
Look at what Kay said about Iraq's nuclear
weapons program:
"With
regard to Iraq's nuclear program, the testimony
we have obtained from Iraqi scientists and
senior government officials should clear up
any doubts about whether Saddam still wanted
to obtain nuclear weapons. They have told
[the Iraq Survey Group] that Saddam Husayn
remained firmly committed to acquiring nuclear
weapons. These officials assert that Saddam
would have resumed nuclear weapons development
at some future pointŠ.
"Despite
evidence of Saddam's continued ambition to
acquire nuclear weapons, to date we have not
uncovered evidence that Iraq undertook significant
post-1998 steps to actually build nuclear
weapons or produce fissile materialŠ.
"Saddam,
at least as judged by those scientists and
other insiders who worked in his military-industrial
programs, had not given up his aspirations
and intentions to continue to acquire weapons
of mass destruction."
Compare this assessment to what Bush and Dick
Cheney had said before the war. In his 2003
State of the Union speech, Bush declared that
Hussein was a threat because he had "an advanced
nuclear weapons development program" in the
1990s. (Bush had failed to mention that the
International Atomic Energy Agency had reported
in 1998 that it had demolished this "advanced"
program.) And Cheney on March 16 said, "we
believe [Hussein] has, in fact, reconstituted
nuclear weapons." His aides later said Cheney
had meant to say "nuclear weapons programs."
But, according to Kay, the evidence so far
collected indicates only that Hussein maintained
a desire to acquire nuclear weapons and had
not developed a program to satisfy that yearning.
Kay later added that it would have taken Iraq
five to seven years to reconstitute its nuclear
weapons program. So what was the evidence
for Bush's and Cheney's assertions that the
program was already revved up? By the way,
Kay says his team has found "no conclusive
proof" Hussein tried to acquire uranium in
Niger. In fact, he reported that one cooperating
Iraqi scientist revealed to the ISG that another
African nation had made an unsolicited offer
to sell Iraq uranium but there is no indication
Iraq accepted the offer.
Kay also reported, "Our efforts to collect
and exploit intelligence on Iraq's chemical
weapons program have thus far yielded little
reliable information on post-1991 CW stocks
and CW agent production, although we continue
to receive and follow leads related to such
stocks." But before the war, the Bush administration
had said flat-out that Iraq possessed chemical
weapons. Did it neglect to pass along to Kay
the information upon which it based this claim?
(Actually, the Defense Intelligence Agency
in September 2002 concluded there was no "reliable
information" on whether Iraq had produced
or stockpiled chemical weapons, but that did
not stop Bush and his aides from stating otherwise.)
How did Bush respond to Kay's interim findings?
He proclaimed they proved that he had been
correct all along. The "interim report," Bush
remarked, "said that Iraq's weapons of mass
destruction program spanned more than two
decades. That's what [Kay] said....He's saying
Saddam Hussein was a threat, a serious danger."
Reality check: Bush had said that the main
reason to go to war was because Hussein possessed
"massive" stockpiles of unconventional weapons
and at any moment could hand them off to al
Qaeda (with whom Bush claimed Hussein was
"dealing"--even though the evidence on that
point was and continues to be, at best, sketchy).
Now Bush is asserting that Hussein was a threat
that could only be countered with invasion
and occupations because he had weapons research
programs that indeed violated United Nations
resolutions but that had not produced any
weapons. That's a much different argument.
Bush, Cheney, McClellan, Donald Rumsfeld,
Paul Wolfowitz, Condoleezza Rice, Colin Powell
and others continue to deny they overstated
(or misrepresented) the case for war. But
the evidence is incontrovertible, and it keeps
on piling up.
So all they have is spin. Bush changes the
terms. McClellan, Rumsfeld, Rice insist that
before the war everybody knew that
Iraq had WMDs. Everybody, that is, except
the folks putting together the intelligence
assessments chockfull of uncertainties. When
it comes to the Wilson affair, the White House
ducks and covers, claiming it had no reason
to react to the original anonymous-source
leak, even though its officials (at the least)
considered the leak solid enough to talk up
to other reporters. And instead of confronting
the ugly (and perhaps criminal) implications
of the leak, the White House's allies in Washington
lash out at Wilson, in a vicious blame-the-victim
offensive, while Mister Change-the-Tone has
nothing to say publicly about this. What if
Wilson is a Democratic partisan? That does
not excuse what was done to his wife.
Leaking and lying--these are not actions easy
to explain away. Drip, drip, drip--that's
the sound often associated with Washington
scandals. But now it may also be the sound
of the truth catching up to the propagandists
and perps of the Bush White House.
JUST RELEASED AND AN AMAZON.COM BESTSELLER:
David Corn's new book, The Lies of George
W. Bush: Mastering the Politics of Deception
(Crown Publishers). For more information and
a sample, check out the book's official website:
www.bushlies.com.


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, economic, democratic, domestic and international
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.