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  1. #1
    W4A1 143 43CK? Nbadan's Avatar
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    ..the M$M that is....

    Debunking Iran's Nuclear Program: Another 'Intelligence Failure' -- On the Part of the Press?
    Iraqi WMD redux: The release of the NIE throwing cold water on oft-repeated claims of a rampant Iranian nuclear weapons program has chastened public officials and policymakers who have promoted this line for years. But many in the media have made these same claims, often extravagantly.
    By Greg Mitc

    NEW YORK (December 04, 2007) --
    Press reports so far have suggested that the belated release of the National Intelligence Estimate yesterday throwing cold water on oft-repeated claims of a rampant Iranian nuclear weapons program has deeply embarrassed, or at least chastened, public officials and policymakers who have promoted this line for years. Gaining little attention so far: Many in the media have made these same claims, often extravagantly, which promoted (deliberately or not) the tubthumping for striking Iran.

    Surely you remember Sen. John McCain's inspired Beach Boys' parody, a YouTube favorite, "Bomb-bomb-bomb, Bomb-bomb Iran"? That was the least of it. You could dance to it and it had a good beat. Not so for so much of the press and punditry surrounding the bomb. Who can forget Norman Podhoretz's call for an immediate attack on Iran, in the pages of the Wall Street Journal last May, as he argued that "the plain and brutal truth is that if Iran is to be prevented from developing a nuclear arsenal, there is no alternative to the actual use of military force -- any more than there was an alternative to force if Hitler was to be stopped in 1938."

    As I've warned in this space for years, too many in the media seemed to fail to learn the lessons of the Iraqi WMD intelligence failure -- and White House propaganda effort -- and instead, were repeating it, re: Iran. This time, perhaps, we may have averted war, with little help from most of the media. In this case, it appears, the NIE people managed to resist several months of efforts by the administration to change their assessment. If only they had stiffened their backbones concerning Iraq in 2002.

    For the rest of today and this week, media critics will be offering up all sorts of reminders of the near-fatal claims by many in the press relating to Iranian nukes. Sure to get attention are the scare stories in the summer of 2005 after "proof" of an Iranian nuke program somehow surfaced on a certain laptop, proudly unveiled by offiicials and bought by many in the media then as firm evidence (and now debunked, like much of the "proof" of Iraqi WMD provided by defectors a few years back).

    Without much effort, I've already found this beauty from David Brooks of The New York Times from Jan. 22, 2006, when he declared that "despite administration hopes, there is scant reason to believe that imagined Iranian cosmopolitans would shut down the nuclear program, or could if they wanted to, or could do it in time - before Israel forced the issue to a crisis point. This is going to be a lengthy and tortured debate, dividing both parties. We'll probably be engaged in it up to the moment the Iranian bombs are built and fully functioning."

    As recently as this past June, Thomas Friedman of The Times wrote: "Iran is about to go nuclear."

    Even more recently, on October 23, 2007, Richard Cohen (like Brooks and Friedman, a big backer of the attack on Iraq) of The Washington Post, wrote: "Sadly, it is simply not possible to dismiss the Iranian threat. Not only is Iran proceeding with a nuclear program, but it projects a pugnacious, somewhat nutty, profile to the world."

    More in this vein is sure to come: I found those three quotes without even breaking a sweat. At least Friedman, Brooks and Cohen back some kind of diplomacy in regard to Iran, unlike many of their brethren.

    Another Post columnist, Jim Hoagland, exactly one month ago summarized his year-long travels and study surrounding this issue, declaring "unmistakable effort by Iran to develop nuclear weapons....That Iran has gone to great, secretive lengths to create and push forward a bomb-building capability is not a Bush delusion." He added the warning that "time is running out on the diplomatic track."

    One week before that, reporting on his trip to Moscow, Hoagland noted Putin's doubts that Tehran will be able to turn enriched uranium into a usable weapon -- but called that failure "implausible."

    We'd be remiss if we left out William Kristol, the hawk's hawk on Iran, who for the July 14, 2006 issue of The Weekly Standard called for a "military strike against Iranian nuclear facilities. Why wait? Does anyone think a nuclear Iran can be contained? That the current regime will negotiate in good faith? It would be easier to act sooner rather than later. Yes, there would be repercussions--and they would be healthy ones, showing a strong America that has rejected further appeasement."

    As often the case, Salon.com's popular blogger, Glenn Greenwald, may have gotten there first. A longtime critic of The Washington Post editorial page and its editor, Fred Hiatt, he has already happily reprinted a few choice passages from the past.

    Here is the latest, from a Sept. 26, 2007 editorial in the Post, which flatly denounced Iran's "race for a bomb":

    "As France's new foreign minister has recognized, the danger is growing that the United States and its allies could face a choice between allowing Iran to acquire the capacity to build a nuclear weapon and going to war to prevent it.

    "The only way to avoid facing that terrible decision is effective diplomacy -- that is, a mix of sanctions and incentives that will induce Mr. Ahmadinejad's superiors to suspend their race for a bomb. ...

    Even if Tehran provides satisfactory answers, its uranium enrichment -- and thus its progress toward a bomb -- will continue. That doesn't trouble Mr. ElBaradei, who hasn't hidden his view that the world should stop trying to prevent Iran from enriching uranium and should concentrate instead on blocking U.S. military action ...

    "European diplomats say they are worried that escalating tensions between the United States and Iran, if fueled by more sanctions, could lead to war. What they don't make clear is how the government Mr. Ahmadinejad represents will be induced to change its policy if it has nothing to fear from the West."

    Greenwald also resurrects Post editorial quotes in this vein going back to 2005, along with this choice snippet from a September online interview with Kenneth Pollack, whose complete wrongheadedness on Iraqi WMD somehow has not kept him from remaining a darling of the press as an expert on Iran's nukes and other Middle East issues:

    "Q. How compelling is the evidence that Iranians are developing a nuclear weapons program?

    "POLLACK: Obviously, the evidence is cir stantial, but it is quite strong."


    I'll provide other examples of pundit malfeasance as they surface.
    Editor and Publisher

    May I recommend: Buying the War

    In the run-up to the Iraqi war, skepticism was a rarity among journalists inside the Beltway. Journalist Bob Simon of 60 MINUTES, who was based in the Middle East, questioned the reporting he was seeing and reading. "I mean we knew things or suspected things that perhaps the Washington press corps could not suspect. For example, the absurdity of putting up a connection between Saddam Hussein and Al Qaeda," he tells Moyers. "Saddam...was a total control freak. To introduce a wild card like Al Qaeda in any sense was just something he would not do. So I just didn't believe it for an instant." The program analyzes the stream of unchecked information from administration sources and Iraqi defectors to the mainstream print and broadcast press, which was then seized upon and amplified by an army of pundits. While almost all the claims would eventually prove to be false, the drumbeat of misinformation about WMDs went virtually unchallenged by the media. THE NEW YORK TIMES reported on Iraq's "worldwide hunt for materials to make an atomic bomb," but according to Landay, claims by the administration about the possibility of nuclear weapons were highly questionable. Yet, his story citing the "lack of hard evidence of Iraqi weapons" got little play. In fact, throughout the media landscape, stories challenging the official view were often pushed aside while the administration's claims were given prominence. "From August 2002 until the war was launched in March of 2003 there were about 140 front page pieces in THE WASHINGTON POST making the administration's case for war," says Howard Kurtz, the POST's media critic. "But there was only a handful of stories that ran on the front page that made the opposite case. Or, if not making the opposite case, raised questions."

    "Buying the War" examines the press coverage in the lead-up to the war as evidence of a paradigm shift in the role of journalists in democracy and asks, four years after the invasion, what's changed? "More and more the media become, I think, common carriers of administration statements and critics of the administration," says THE WASHINGTON POST's Walter Pincus. "We've sort of given up being independent on our own."

  2. #2
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    Lessons of Iraq Aided Intelligence On Iran

    Officials Cite New Caution And a Surge in Spying


    By Joby Warrick and Walter Pincus
    Washington Post Staff Writers
    Wednesday, December 5, 2007; A01

    The starkly different view of Iran's nuclear program that emerged from U.S. spy agencies this week was the product of a surge in clandestine intelligence-gathering in Iran as well as radical changes in the way the intelligence community analyzes information.

    Drawing lessons from the intelligence debacle over supposed Iraqi weapons of mass destruction, Director of National Intelligence Mike McConnell required agencies to consult more sources and to say to a larger intelligence community audience precisely what they know and how they know it -- and to acknowledge, to a degree previously unheard of, what they do not know.

    " 'Do not know' is a new technical term for an NIE,"
    said a senior official who was involved in preparation of the report, known as a National Intelligence Estimate.

    While intelligence officials say the new conclusion about the Iranian program proved that the reforms were sound, the wide gap between Monday's report and previous assessments also left the agencies vulnerable to accusations that officials had failed for too long to grasp a fundamental change in course by Iran's leaders.

    ( Repugs have been telling us for years that only the Repugs can be trusted with NatSec. 9/11, Iraq, Afghanistan, and the Repug-managed NatSec apparatus have proved the opposite, inarguably )

    The new report upended years of previous assessments by asserting that the Islamic republic halted the weapons side of its nuclear program in 2003. The report, while expressing concern about Iran's rapidly growing civilian nuclear energy program, contradicted assertions by top Bush administration officials and previous intelligence assessments that Iran has been bent on acquiring nuclear weapons.

    "The new report brings the U.S. intelligence community in line with what the IAEA [International Atomic Energy Agency] and several European governments were saying years ago," said David Albright, a former United Nations weapons inspector and president of the Washington-based Ins ute for Science and International Security.

    In 2005, a National Intelligence Estimate had said Iran was "determined" to acquire nuclear weapons, a view that meshed with the foreign policy of an administration that in 2002 declared Iran to be part of an "axis of evil." But former and current U.S. intelligence officials said the flaws in that report reflected only the extreme difficulty of penetrating Iran's nuclear program.

    "It's the hardest damn target out there -- harder than North Korea," said an intelligence official who contributed to the report. "This is a program they tried very hard to hide from us, and it was hard even to fathom who was in charge."

    The 2005 report's assertions that Iran was secretly working on nuclear weapons turned out to be accurate, but dated. Ellen Laipson, former vice chairman of the National Intelligence Council, said the earlier judgment was based on credible information that may have been the best available at the time.

    "It's not getting it wrong, it's that [the intelligence] collection may have been insufficient," said Laipson, now president of the Henry L. Stimson Center, a defense think tank. "It takes years to know the truth."

    ( but it only takes only a couple minutes to bomb a country. Looks like Condi's "mushroom" cloud was a decade+ premature, at least. In the case of Iraq, even longer. )

    A pivotal moment occurred in early summer 2005, when President Bush
    discussed the new Iran NIE with advisers during a routine intelligence briefing. Why, he asked, was it so hard to get information about Iran's nuclear program?

    ( if only dubya had been so demanding AND RESPONSIVE in the summer of 2001. dubya and head were intentionally asleep at the wheel. )

    The exchange, described by a senior U.S. official who witnessed it, helped instigate the intelligence community's most aggressive attempt to penetrate Iran's highly secretive nuclear program. Over the coming months, the CIA established a new Iran Operations Division that brought analysts and clandestine collectors together to search for hard evidence.

    Communications intercepts of Iranian nuclear officials and a stolen Iranian laptop containing diagrams related to the development of a nuclear warhead for missiles both yielded valuable evidence about Iran's nuclear past as well as its decision in 2003 to suspend the weapons side of its program.

    But there was no "eureka" moment, according to senior officials who helped supervise the collection efforts. The surge in intelligence-gathering helped convince analysts that Iran had made a "course correction" in 2003, halting the weapons work while proceeding with the civilian nuclear energy program.

    The result, ironically, was a new National Intelligence Estimate on Iran that reached conclusions far different from what many intelligence officials expected.

    "One reason this is actually an intelligence success is that when we got additional information that could lead to a different conclusion, we had an ability to move in that direction," said a senior intelligence official involved in the drafting process.

    Former and current intelligence officials say the new NIE reflects new analytical methods ordered by McConnell -- who took the DNI job in January -- and his deputies, including Thomas Fingar, a former head of the State Department's intelligence agency, and Donald M. Kerr, a former director of the Los Alamos National Laboratory and an expert on nuclear weapons technology.

    Besides requiring greater transparency about the sources of intelligence, McConnell and his colleagues have compelled analysts working on major estimates to challenge existing assumptions when new information does not fit, according to former and current U.S. officials familiar with the policies.

    ( wow, ing rocket science, huh? )


    The report also reflects what several officials described yesterday as a new willingness by the intelligence community to analyze intentions in addition to capabilities. While Iran has the scientific, technical and industrial capacity to make nuclear weapons, including knowledge of how to enrich uranium to a level usable in bombs, the new intelligence collected through intercepted communications raised doubts about Iran's intended use of the technology.

    As McConnell said in a Nov. 14 speech, it "inserted some new questions" that made the community go back and review the conventional wisdom about Iran. It also shed light on Iran's susceptibility to international diplomatic pressure -- a large factor in Tehran's decision to cut off research on building a bomb, analysts concluded.

    McConnell said his objective in preparing the Iran estimate was "to present the clinical evidence and let it stand on its own merits with its own qualification," meaning that it would contain dissent. "There are always disagreements on every National Intelligence Estimate," he said.

    ( in the run up to Iraq, the WH suppressed/classified all NatSec dissenters, while cherry picking the career-padding assenters )

    He and other officials jettisoned a requirement that each conclusion in an NIE reflect a consensus view of the intelligence community -- a requirement that in the past yielded "lowest-common-denominator judgments," said one senior intelligence official familiar with the reforms.

    "We demolished democracy" by no longer reflecting just a majority opinion, "because we felt we should not be determining the credibility of analytic arguments by a raising of hands," the official said. Some analysts, for example, were not "highly confident" that Iran has not restarted its nuclear program, a result reflected in the classified report. Other analysts said Iran was further away from attaining a nuclear weapons capability than the majority said.

    DNI officials also pressed for a broader array of intelligence sources, including news accounts and other "open sources" that traditionally had carried little weight inside intelligence agencies. In the case of Iran, critical information was gleaned from non-clandestine sources, such as news photographs taken in 2005 depicting the inner workings of one of Iran's uranium enrichment plants, an official said.

    Those photos helped persuade analysts that the Natanz plant was suited to making low-enriched uranium for nuclear energy but not the highly enriched uranium needed for bombs. "You go to wherever you think the answer might be," the official said, "instead of waiting for it to trickle into your top-secret computer system."

    ( so for $50B/year, the spooks get their intel from reading Iranian press releases? )

    Several top officials said McConnell and others were determined to avoid a repe ion of the intelligence community's very public failures in assessing Iraq's weapons programs. Not only were its analytical judgments wrong -- U.S. forces in Iraq never found the chemical or biological weapons that the CIA said they would -- but the agency relied on sources known to be suspect or even discredited.

    ( for dubya+ head, the intel, right or wrong, was totally beside the point, which was to invade Iraq no matter what, for the oil.

    Note that dubya is now saying this NIE is irrelevant to his objective of attacking Iran for regime change to get at their oil and to establish eternal US hegemony over M/E )

    For instance, U.S. claims that Iraq had built mobile biological weapons laboratories were based on more than 100 reports from a single source, an Iraqi defector code-named "Curveball" whom U.S. officials never interviewed in person. After the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq, investigators concluded that Curveball's stories were fabrications.

    Then-CIA director George J. Tenet initiated some of the reforms in the wake of the Curveball debacle, but Fingar and McConnell added to them and spread them across the intelligence community, officials said.

    Staff writer Robin Wright contributed to this report.


    http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn...402408_pf.html

  3. #3
    keep asking questions George Gervin's Afro's Avatar
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    Does anyone wonder if there were any NIE reports that contained similar information on Iraq? A report that directly refuted what the Whitehouse was relaying to it's allies and opponents? I have always felt that Bush and his crew left out certain tidbits of information when they presented their case for war to the public and the Congress. Oh well, history will tell us.
    Last edited by George Gervin's Afro; 12-05-2007 at 11:15 AM.

  4. #4
    i hunt fenced animals clambake's Avatar
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    Does anyone wonder if there were any NIE reports that contained similar information on Iraq? A report that directly refuted what the Whitehouse was realying to it's allies and oppenents? I have always felt that Bush and his crew left out certain tidbits of information when they presented their case for war to the public and Congress. Oh well, history will tell us.
    the story about Niger was a complete hoax, along with other WMD fairy-tales. i suspect any earlier NIE reports were manufactured by this administration.

  5. #5
    Retired Ray xrayzebra's Avatar
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    Oh yeah, it once again is all Bush's fault. I have just one question.


    Is Iran still enriching uranium? And what can you do with enriched
    uranium? Make bombs you say. No kidding.

    That damn Bush, he will say anything to get re-elected. Oh,
    he isn't running. Well who is?

  6. #6
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    "history will tell us."

    don't need history.

    We know that head went to NSA/CIA many times seeking more evidence of Iraqi WMD, because he was cherry picking the evidence and suppressing/classifying dissenting opinions and hiding it all from Congress.

    We know the Rummy and Feith setup their own intel operation at Dod to go around the NSA/CIA and criticize the NSA/CIA doubts about Iraq WMD.

    we know that there were NSA/CIA people who had serious doubts about Iraqi WMD.

    We know that Powell was sent to the UN with bull mobile weapons labs to obtain the UN vote, with many intel people knowing the labs were bul .

    btw, these NIE side stories are ALL BULL and smokescreen.

    dubya and head / neo- s were going to invade Iraq no matter what, occupy Iraq for decades (Rummy lied when he said occupation was not the objective), to grab the oil.

    As we see this week with Iran, dubya is basically saying "the intel, nuke or no nukes, doesn't matter", because he still sees Iran oil and M/E hegemony as his objective, Iran nukes or none.

    Why do you think Afghanistan and the war on terror have been completely off the radar, and the war on terror falsely placed in Iraq? It's all about the oil.

    Oil explains everything, don't get fogged over by all the other Repug/neo- bull .
    Last edited by boutons_; 12-05-2007 at 01:54 PM.

  7. #7
    keep asking questions George Gervin's Afro's Avatar
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    Oh yeah, it once again is all Bush's fault. I have just one question.


    Is Iran still enriching uranium? And what can you do with enriched
    uranium? Make bombs you say. No kidding.

    That damn Bush, he will say anything to get re-elected. Oh,
    he isn't running. Well who is?

    Well actually ray it is Bush's fault. he is President isn't he? The buck stops with him right?

  8. #8
    Retired Ray xrayzebra's Avatar
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    Well actually ray it is Bush's fault. he is President isn't he? The buck stops with him right?
    Well I haven't heard him duck that responsibility yet. Have
    you?

    But I think his actual fault lies in letting the Clinton
    administration people stay on the job instead of getting
    rid of them. Clinton and the dimms have gutted our intel
    and military to the point of injury to our country.

    But what the hay, Bill was a good old boy who like the
    girls, no biggie, right?

    Oh, and I forgot, you didn't answer the question. Are
    they still enriching uranium?

  9. #9
    keep asking questions George Gervin's Afro's Avatar
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    Prediction: 11:31 am

    ray will come back and tell everyone that those at State Dept are actually Clinton holdovers who are undermining Bush because they hate him.. they are invested in defeat....


    more to come.

  10. #10
    Retired Ray xrayzebra's Avatar
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    Prediction: 11:31 am

    ray will come back and tell everyone that those at State Dept are actually Clinton holdovers who are undermining Bush because they hate him.. they are invested in defeat....


    more to come.

    Well actually it is 12:01. But yes you are correct. They
    are career employees from State.

    But I have another question, since you wont answer my
    first one.

    Does it bother you that our Intel people are now telling
    us something different?

    Does it bother you that the dimms have jumped on this
    like it is gospel, when they say Bush tweaked the intel from
    these same people game him on Iraq.

    You know I think I have a new name for the dimm-o-crap
    party. They aren't the party of defeat, they are the
    party of treason. Yeah, I mean treason in the true sense
    of the word. They will put this country down the drain
    to further there own cause.

    This country is in serious, serious trouble. God help us
    all. We have a bunch of politicians who are more
    concerned with killing babies and giving a bunch of sexual
    deviates some kind of civil rights than they are for the
    own safety of our country.

  11. #11
    keep asking questions George Gervin's Afro's Avatar
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    [QUOTE=xrayzebra]Well actually it is 12:01. But yes you are correct. They
    are career employees from State.

    But I have another question, since you wont answer my
    first one.

    Does it bother you that our Intel people are now telling
    us something different?

    Does it bother you that the dimms have jumped on this
    like it is gospel, when they say Bush tweaked the intel from
    these same people game him on Iraq.



    This country is in serious, serious trouble. God help us
    all. We have a bunch of politicians who are more
    concerned with killing babies and giving a bunch of sexual
    deviates some kind of civil rights than they are for the
    own safety of our country.[/
    QUOTE]


    Gloom and Doom.. you must be falling for the M$M propoganda.. why do your posts regarding treason always end up with us discussing sexuals?

    You ask me if it bothers me that some dems have jumped on this? shouldn't they?



    You know I think I have a new name for the dimm-o-crap
    party. They aren't the party of defeat, they are the
    party of treason. Yeah, I mean treason in the true sense
    of the word. They will put this country down the drain
    to further there own cause.
    We get it ray..not agreeing with bush = treacherous pigs.. got it.

  12. #12
    Retired Ray xrayzebra's Avatar
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    ^^You haven't got anything but one liners.

  13. #13
    I can live with it JoeChalupa's Avatar
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    ^^You haven't got anything but one liners.
    One liners like "Mission Accomplished" or "Bring 'em on" or "axis of evil" or "imminent threat" or "nucular danger"?

  14. #14
    Retired Ray xrayzebra's Avatar
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    One liners like "Mission Accomplished" or "Bring 'em on" or "axis of evil" or "imminent threat" or "nucular danger"?
    Damn, Joe, you are reaching, aren't you. Which of those
    were incorrect?

    We accomplished the defeat of the Iraqi Army.
    "Bring'em on" hits the nail on the head
    "axis of evil" Which country wasn't?
    "imminent threat" Which NIE do you "trust"?

  15. #15
    i hunt fenced animals clambake's Avatar
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    We accomplished the defeat of the Iraqi Army.
    actually, we couldn't really find it.
    "Bring'em on" hits the nail on the head
    and increases their ability to recruit....oops, another bush blunder
    "axis of evil" Which country wasn't?
    the world has now included the US in this list.
    "imminent threat" Which NIE do you "trust"?
    I get it ray. you're happay as long as they're lying to you....sleep tight

  16. #16
    I can live with it JoeChalupa's Avatar
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    Damn, Joe, you are reaching, aren't you. Which of those
    were incorrect?

    We accomplished the defeat of the Iraqi Army.
    "Bring'em on" hits the nail on the head
    "axis of evil" Which country wasn't?
    "imminent threat" Which NIE do you "trust"?
    Reaching is when you won't acknowledge the fact that Bush simply isn't telling the truth. For me his credibility, if there ever was any, has gone down the tubes. I have no problems with admitting that Clinton lied..why is it so hard for repugnants to admit that their beloved leader stretches the truth to fit his own agenda? Come on now.
    The Mission Accomplished show was a farce and you know it.
    I thought you were a little open minded but I see you are actually small minded.

    The NIE I can trust....GWB I cannot.

  17. #17
    keep asking questions George Gervin's Afro's Avatar
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    Reaching is when you won't acknowledge the fact that Bush simply isn't telling the truth. For me his credibility, if there ever was any, has gone down the tubes. I have no problems with admitting that Clinton lied..why is it so hard for repugnants to admit that their beloved leader stretches the truth to fit his own agenda? Come on now.
    The Mission Accomplished show was a farce and you know it.
    I thought you were a little open minded but I see you are actually small minded.

    The NIE I can trust....GWB I cannot.

    Well Bush was right about wmds... uh never mind
    Bush was right when he said mission accomplished.... oh wait...
    Bush was telling the truth when he said Iraq posed an imminent threat to the USA.. er huh....


    On a serious note I pleaded with the Kerry campaign (through numerous emails) that they should frame the election around Bush's credibility... It's his credibility stupid...

    They could have ads with Bush making one claim prior to the war and then making a completely different claim during the post war years..
    His statements justifying the need to rush to war followed up with statements radically different following the war...

  18. #18
    I can live with it JoeChalupa's Avatar
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    Well Bush was right about wmds... uh never mind
    Bush was right when he said mission accomplished.... oh wait...
    Bush was telling the truth when he said Iraq posed an imminent threat to the USA.. er huh....


    On a serious note I pleaded with the Kerry campaign (through numerous emails) that they should frame the election around Bush's credibility... It's his credibility stupid...

    They could have ads with Bush making one claim prior to the war and then making a completely different claim during the post war years..
    His statements justifying the need to rush to war followed up with statements radically different following the war...
    I concur.

  19. #19
    Retired Ray xrayzebra's Avatar
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    The NIE I can trust....GWB I cannot.
    Which NIE report do you trust. The one in 2005 where
    they say they are making the bomb? Or the one just
    recently released where they say they quit trying in
    2003?

    Pay your money and take your choice.

  20. #20
    I can live with it JoeChalupa's Avatar
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    Which NIE report do you trust. The one in 2005 where
    they say they are making the bomb? Or the one just
    recently released where they say they quit trying in
    2003?

    Pay your money and take your choice.
    I believe we are paying the price for Bush's inability to listen to the facts and stop his war rhetoric. As Pat Buchanan says Joe Biden needs to get back to Washington and HOLD HEARINGS on who knew what, and when. He actually called on Biden to haul Condi Rice and Stephen Hadley before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee to ask them if they knew about the NIE report, and if they had ever told Bush.

    What I don't trust is what comes out of Bush's mouth.

  21. #21
    i hunt fenced animals clambake's Avatar
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    What I don't trust is what comes out of Bush's mouth.
    you and the rest of the world. Bush has nukes and he's running around the world like a wild animal.

    if you were the leadership of other countries, you'd be a fool not to at least try to develop nukes. Bush is the pitbull that's trying to get through the fence of your backyard.

    there's no mystery here. Bush is the worlds menace.

  22. #22
    keep asking questions George Gervin's Afro's Avatar
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    you and the rest of the world. Bush has nukes and he's running around the world like a wild animal.

    if you were the leadership of other countries, you'd be a fool not to at least try to develop nukes. Bush is the pitbull that's trying to get through the fence of your backyard.

    there's no mystery here. Bush is the worlds menace.


    you do such a disservice to wild animals everywhere...

  23. #23
    Retired Ray xrayzebra's Avatar
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    Well Joe, GGA and Clam. I can see that in your eyes Bush is
    the enemy and the rest of the world is nice guys. Yeah, you
    all have it down pat. The mean old USA with Bush as
    President is the bad guy and if we just had Kerry as Prez
    all would be right with the world and we would be living in
    paradise with our seventy virgins and saying prayers everyother
    hour. Ahhhhh yezzzzzzzzz!!!!!!! What a world you folks live
    in.

  24. #24
    i hunt fenced animals clambake's Avatar
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    Well Joe, GGA and Clam. I can see that in your eyes Bush is
    the enemy and the rest of the world is nice guys. Yeah, you
    all have it down pat. The mean old USA with Bush as
    President is the bad guy and if we just had Kerry as Prez
    all would be right with the world and we would be living in
    paradise with our seventy virgins and saying prayers everyother
    hour. Ahhhhh yezzzzzzzzz!!!!!!! What a world you folks live
    in.
    overdose?

  25. #25
    Retired Ray xrayzebra's Avatar
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    I believe we are paying the price for Bush's inability to listen to the facts and stop his war rhetoric. As Pat Buchanan says Joe Biden needs to get back to Washington and HOLD HEARINGS on who knew what, and when. He actually called on Biden to haul Condi Rice and Stephen Hadley before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee to ask them if they knew about the NIE report, and if they had ever told Bush.

    What I don't trust is what comes out of Bush's mouth.
    Yep, old Joe Biden, now there is a guy you can trust.
    Now calling Rice and Hadley before the Senate Foreign
    Relations Committee to ask them when they knew of
    the of the NIE, that would be down right good. Since
    there exist two of them as stated before. One issued
    in 2005 that said they were building the bomb, and one
    just issued which said they stopped trying in 2003,
    strangely this last one said they stopped two years before
    they issued the former in 2005 saying they were trying
    to build one. How bout he call the authors of the the
    reports before the committee and ask them a few pointed
    questions. Like what was their agenda in issuing
    such contradictory reports. Would you like that?
    Oh, they may want to call members of the Senate
    Intelligence Committe before them to ask when they
    knew of the NIE and why none of the question them.
    You think that might be a good idea, since they are
    briefed by the groups as the President.

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