Posted on 07/22/2003 8:45:46 PM PDT by onyx
Here's the truth: Bush didn't lie
July 20, 2003
BY MARK STEYN SUN-TIMES COLUMNIST
I was on a radio show the other day, and for the umpteenth time in the last week some anti-war type demanded to know how I felt about uranium in Niger. Well, I wouldn't number it with raindrops on roses and whiskers on kittens among my favorite things. But then I never said I did. And nor did George W. Bush, despite the best efforts of the anti-war crowd to assert that he led us into an ''illegitimate war'' over uranium in Niger. ''BUSH LIED OVER NIGER URANIUM CLAIMS!!!,'' as a good couple dozen e-mails a day scream from my in-box.
I wrote a gazillion pieces urging war with Iraq, and never found the time to let the word Niger pass my lips. But here's what the president had to say, when he ''LIED OVER NIGER URANIUM CLAIMS!!!!!!'' back in the State of the Union address in January:
''The British government has learned that Saddam Hussein recently sought significant quantities of uranium from Africa.''
That's it: 16 words. Where's the lie? The British are standing by it. And it's said in London that they got it from Paris: Niger's uranium operations are under the supervision of the French Atomic Energy Commission.
But, even if you don't think that's true, why is it a lie? The anti-war crowd has been wrong on everything, from hundreds of thousands of civilian deaths to the horrors of the ''brutal Afghan winter'' (now 22 months behind schedule), but on the whole we on the right don't go around shrieking MORE LIES ABOUT AFGHAN WEATHER!!!!!!!!!!!! Could be just a run of bad luck in the old Lefty Predictions Department.
Nonetheless, the Democrats smell blood and don't want to be told that it's their own. ''President Bush deceives the American people,'' roars the Democratic National Committee, headed by Clinton stain-mopper Terry McAuliffe. Bush did not wag his finger and say ''Saddam Hussein did have radioactive relations with that yellowcake, Miss Niger.'' All he did was report that America's closest ally had learned something that it continues to believe to this day. And right now I'd bet on the Brits rather than some CIA tourist who took a bargain-break weekend in Niger and interviewed his bellhop.
Intelligence is a hit-and-miss business. In 1998, when Bill Clinton launched mid-Monica cruise-missile attacks on Afghanistan and the Sudan, he hit a Khartoum aspirin factory and missed Osama bin Laden. The claims that the aspirin factory was producing nerve gas and was an al-Qaida front proved to be untrue. Does that mean Clinton lied to us? I mean, apart from about Gennifer, Monica and which part of the party of the first part's enumerated parts came into contact with part of the party of the second part's enumerated parts, etc. Or was it just that the intelligence was lousy? The intel bureaucracy got the Sudanese aspirin factory wrong, failed to spot 9/11 coming and insisted it was impossible for any American to penetrate bin Laden's network, only to have Johnnie bin Joss-Stick from hippy-dippy Marin County on a self-discovery jaunt round the region stroll into the cave and be sharing the executive latrine with the A-list jihadi within 20 minutes.
So, 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 do you make the reasonable assumption that, given what you've learned about the state of your CIA 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?
But here's a much more pertinent question than whether BUSH LIED!!!!!!!!!!!!!: How loopy are the Democrats? One reason why the president is all but certain to win re-election is the descent into madness of his opponents. They've let post-impeachment, post-chad-dangling bitterness unhinge them to the point where, given a choice between investigating the intelligence lapses that led to 9/11 and the intelligence lapses that led to a victorious war in Iraq, they stampede for the latter. Iraq was a brilliant campaign fought with minimal casualties, Sept. 11 was a humiliating failure by government to fulfill its primary role of national defense. But Democrats who complained that Bush was too slow to act on doubtful intelligence re 9/11 now profess to be horrified that he was too quick to act on doubtful intelligence re Iraq. This is not a serious party.
So now Democratic candidates are carrying on like a bunch of African queens, pretending the entire war hinged on one footnote about some ramshackle French colonial basket-case. ''It's beginning to sound a little like Watergate,'' says Howard Dean. Struggling to keep up with Dean, John Kerry has said that Bush ''misled every one of us,'' even though the senator himself has been warning about Saddam's weapons for years and voted in favor of the Iraq War months before the State of the Union or Colin Powell's UN presentations or anything else. Struggling to keep up with Kerry, Bob Graham wants to impeach the president. Not the president of Niger, the president of America. Seriously.
The trouble with all this bleating about how you feel ''misled'' is that you sound not like a putative commander in chief but like an Arkansas state employee in Bill Clinton's motel room. Conversely, when Dick Gephardt says he's had ''enough of the phony, macho rhetoric'' from Bush, he's missing its salient feature: The ''bring it on'' rhetoric may be macho, but it isn't necessarily phony.
Step back and look at the two years since Sept. 11. In 2001, the Islamists killed thousands of Westerners in New York and Washington. In 2002, they killed hundreds of Westerners, but not in the West itself, only in jurisdictions such as Bali. In 2003, they killed dozens--not Westerners, but their co-religionists in Morocco and Saudi Arabia. The Bush cordon sanitaire has been drawn tighter and tighter. Meanwhile, the allegedly explosive Arab street has been quieter than a suburban cul-de-sac in Westchester County, and I wouldn't bet that blowing up fellow Muslims and destroying the Moroccan tourist industry and Saudi investment will do anything for the recruitment drive. All of this could be set back by a massive terrorist attack on the U.S. mainland, and if John Kerry's banking on disaster, that at least has a certain sick logic about it. But, if he genuinely believes that Bush's war is as disastrous as he says, he's flipped. Bush is doing what the lefties wanted: He's addressing the ''root causes''--by returning the cause to its roots, and fixing it at source.
Bwahahahahahaha!
the Democrats smell blood and don't want to be told that it's their own... One reason why the president is all but certain to win re-election is the descent into madness of his opponents. They've let post-impeachment, post-chad-dangling bitterness unhinge them... So now Democratic candidates are carrying on like a bunch of African queens...
I agree Howlin.
It is so frustrating when a purely political crap throwing party like this occurs on the democrat side.
I spoke to a registered rat today about this and he apparently believes all the BS. he is not stupid, but is not a political student either. He does not realize that this is all election driven BS.
I am afraid that the sheeple just don't understand the motives and reality behind this charade.
This fact scares me to death and is the primary reason that Clinton got elected. It is just plain and simple political ignorance.
I have some knowledge of nuclear weapons. While a high-yield nuclear weapon yields high psychological (and the most destructive) impact, the development of high-yield weapons is a financial exercise requiring outrageous amounts of money, technical expertise, fissile material and time... All of these aspects are required, to develop even one nuclear warhead. Now, considering the enormous investment of resources required, even a bone-head like Saddam Hussein would never entrust someone else to deliver such a weapon within striking-range of the US (much less to a major U.S. city) because the probabilities of being caught with such a weapon are exceedingly high. Such a weapons program attracts a lot of attention, because certain materials- namely the Uranium or Plutonium needed to complete the bomb- are closely monitored world-wide. If non-enriched uranium was obtained, it would take billions of dollars to enrich it to a useful enrichment level to make even a moderately powerful bomb. Again, such efforts attract a great deal of attention. And finally, if such a weapon were developed from stolen uranium or plutonium, it's not terribly difficult to trace (from residue) the origin of the uranium- a very important clue for finding the perpetrator. All in all, an expensive, risky proposition, with a high probability of being caught.
Biological weapons, on the other hand, are more effective from a psychological standpoint- a victim could be contaminated, and spread the wealth to many others before they finally expire from the contamination... Such weapons are cheap and easily made. More, their development is relatively easy to hide. If a good dispersal agent can be used...? Then their "bang for the buck," if you'll excuse the pun, is far greater than a nuke, without the inherent risks of detection...
Consider, for example, a biological weapon could conceivably be inside a bottle of gatorade, taken onboard a plane as carry-on luggage, and flown to a major city without so much as a second glance by security... Drop it into a water-supply, or ventilation system of a skyscraper...? And you won't know what happened until after some of the victims have died...
That is the scary thing...
Knowing what I do know about nuclear weapons, it was never a real concern... The real thing that worried me (and still does) is the biological... Because for this, there's no protection... Except to kill the bad guys on their own turf.
Be well...
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