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To: Pokey78

Not sure if you missed this on your ping list or if I just didn't catch it. New to me...but it is a couple of days out of date.


15 posted on 07/14/2004 11:45:36 AM PDT by blanknoone (The NAACP --->NAADP National Association for the Advancement of the Democrat Party.)
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To: blanknoone; Howlin; riley1992; Miss Marple; deport; Dane; sinkspur; steve; kattracks; JohnHuang2; ..
Now we have links to links to linkd articles. Q flu is spreading like Syphilis in Bangkok.

Complete column

Do you remember a year ago when the Democratic National Committee was putting out press releases headlined "President Bush Deceives The American People"?

Yawn. What's new? But last summer the Bush Lie of the Week was all to do with Saddam's trying to buy uranium from Niger. CNN and co. replayed endlessly the critical 16 words from the president's 2003 State of the Union Address: "The British government has learned that Saddam Hussein recently sought significant quantities of uranium from Africa."

Sixteen words that could break a presidency! Bush "misled every one of us," huffed Senator John Kerry. "It's beginning to sound like Watergate," said Governor Howard Dean. Joseph C. Wilson IV, the man the CIA sent to Africa to investigate, wrote a piece for The New York Times titled "What I Didn't Find in Africa."

Can you guess what he didn't find, dear reader? That's right, he didn't find a big package of uranium bearing the address label "S. Hussein, Suite 27, the Saddam Hussein Center for Armageddon Studies, Saddam Hussein Parkway, Baghdad."
Ambassador Wilson said relax, he'd been to Niger, spent "eight days drinking sweet mint tea and meeting with dozens of people," and there's nothing going on.

Well, last Friday in Washington, the Senate Intelligence Committee's report confirmed that both British and French intelligence had informed the US separately of Iraq's efforts in Niger (the country's uranium operations are under the supervision of the French Atomic Energy Commission) and that, despite his protestations to the contrary, even Joe Wilson had discovered evidence of Iraq-Niger contacts. Today in London, Lord Butler will publish his report into the quality of the intelligence on which rested Britain's case for going to war with Iraq. The report is said to be critical of some of Tony Blair's claims, supportive of others. And, among the latter, he says that the statements about Iraq and Niger are justified and supported by the intelligence.

In other words, the British government did learn that Saddam Hussein did seek significant quantities of uranium from Africa.

As a gazillion e-mails a day shrieked from my inbox back then, "BUSH LIED!!!!!!" So where exactly in that State of the Union observation is the lie? The only bona fide liar in this whole affair would seem to be the preening mediocrity Joseph C. Wilson IV, who lied to his New York Times readers about what he found in Africa and explicitly lied when he insisted that his wife, CIA employee Valerie Plame, was not the one who got him the gig. (He said she had nothing to do with it; the Senate investigation has uncovered her memo recommending him.)

Last summer, the comparatively minor matter of uranium from Niger was all over the front pages and the news shows. Do you think these latest developments will be? Will John Kerry and Howard Dean be eating humble yellowcake? Not to judge from The Washington Post, which buried its revised account of these events deep inside the paper, or The New York Times, which at the time of this writing has shown no interest in the exposure of its sometime pundit, Wilson, as a complete fraud.

I FIRST wrote about this business in July last year. The CIA had disowned the Niger story, and I pointed out that these were the same fellows who'd botched the Sudanese aspirin factory bombing, failed to spot 9/11 coming, etc, etc. "So," I continued, "if you're the president and the same intelligence bureaucrats who got all the above wrong, say the Brits are way off the mark, there's nothing going on with Saddam and Africa, what do you do? Do you say, 'Hey, even a stopped clock is right twice a day'? Or, given what you've learnt about the state of your humint (human intelligence), is it likely they've got much of a clue about what's going on in French Africa? Isn't this one of those deals where the Brits and the shifty French are more plugged in?"

And so it's proved. The fact is almost every European intelligence service reckoned Saddam was trying to buy uranium in Africa. The only folks who didn't think so were the CIA.

Let's weigh their comparative interest in the story. The Financial Times revealed last week that one continental intelligence agency had had a uranium-smuggling operation involving Iraq under surveillance for three years. In return, the only primary investigation initiated by the most powerful nation on the face of the Earth was to send a narcissistic kook from a Saudi-funded think tank on vacation for a week to sip mint tea with government stooges. Joe Wilson declared he didn't even bother filing a written report, and the "Bush spurned my advice!" column he wrote for The New York Times reads like a bad travelogue: "Through the haze, I could see camel caravans crossing the Niger river."

After that, the great narcissist took to the talk-show circuit and somehow managed to make himself the center of the story – But hey, enough about Saddam's nuclear ambitions; let's talk about me.

A few weeks before 9/11, Reuel Marc Gerecht wrote a timely piece in The Atlantic Monthly on the woeful state of US counter-terrorism intelligence in a CIA neutered by politically correct bureaucracy. Among Gerecht's many memorable quotes was this line from a young CIA man reflecting on an agency grown used to desk-bound life in Virginia: "Operations that include diarrhea as a way of life don't happen." That's Niger in a nutshell: Diarrhea Central. Who'd want to be stationed there when they could be back at Langley monitoring the world's e-mail in an air-conditioned office?

But Niger is a 99.5% Sunni Muslim country with a load of uranium. It's exactly the sort of place an intelligence agency in the war on terror ought to be keeping an eye on. And that doesn't mean sending Mint Tea Boy to write it up for the travel section.

That's the issue here: The CIA are tourists in the heart of darkness.

Bush didn't lie! He was right, and the CIA were wrong. That doesn't mean they lied, either. Intelligence is never 100%. You make a judgment, and in this instance the judgments of the British and Europeans were correct, and the judgment of the principal intelligence agency of the world's hyperpower was way off. Something is badly awry at the CIA, and that should be a cause of great concern – for all Americans.

National security shouldn't be a Republican/Democrat thing. But it's become one because, for too many Americans, when it's a choice between Bush and anybody else, they'll take anybody else. So, in Fahrenheit 9/11, if it's a choice between Bush and Saddam, Michael Moore comes down on the side of the genocidal whacko and shows us lyrical slo-mo shots of kiddies flying kites in a Ba'athist utopia. In the Afghan war, if it's a choice between Bush and the women-enslaving Taliban, Susan Sarandon and co. side with the Taliban.

And in the most exquisite reductio of this now universal rule, if it's a choice between Bush and the CIA, the Left sides with the CIA. There's one for the peace marches: Hey, hey, CIA/How many Bush lies did you expose today? This isn't an anti-war movement. This is a movement in denial.

21 posted on 07/14/2004 1:32:39 PM PDT by Pokey78
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