It turns out Ahmadinejad was the truthful one

Robert Scheer
Canadian Dimension
December 5, 2007

Bush is such a liar. Or is he just out to lunch on the most important issue that he faces? In October, he charged that Iran’s nuclear weapons program was bringing the world to the precipice of World War III, even though the White House had been informed at least a month earlier that Iran had no such program and had stopped efforts to develop one back in 2003.

Is it conceivable that Bush was telling the truth at his press conference Tuesday when he stated that he learned of the National Intelligence Estimate report, which contained that inconvenient fact, only last week? Even if Bush read the NIE report, he clearly doesn’t respect it, for at his press conference he said “the NIE doesn’t do anything to change my opinion about the danger Iran poses to the world-quite the contrary.” Not that he has anything against the NIE, whose directors he handpicked. “I want to compliment the intelligence community for their good work. Right after the failure of intelligence in Iraq, we reformed the intelligence community.”

But whether or not the intelligence agencies are reformed, the president still ignores them. He didn’t listen when they told him he was wrong in claiming that Iraq had purchased yellow cake uranium from Niger and he doesn’t listen now when they tell him his alarms about Iran are without factual foundation. The difference this time around is that because Bush is a discredited lame duck the intelligence chiefs were a bit more forthcoming with their findings in a report that has, in part, been made available to the public.

The whole episode shows that our democratic system retains at least some essential checks and balances, but it also is depressing to see that, in this instance at least, the fanatical leader of a theocracy seems to have a higher regard for truth than does the president of the world’s greatest experiment in representative democracy.

Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who took office as Iran’s president in August of 2005, two years after Iran’s nuclear weapons program ended, has now been vindicated in his claims that Iran has abandoned the weaponization program. Not so Bush, who has summarily dismissed the intelligence community’s findings and, using his favorite tactic in dealing with debacles, is sticking to his original story. A story, as in the case of the earlier Iraq threat inflation, that too many in the mass media and Congress, including some leading Democrats, have bought.

Take Hillary Clinton, who said that “Iran is seeking nuclear weapons, and the Iranian Revolutionary Guard is in the forefront of that” by way of defending her vote for a resolution that, like the one she voted for before the Iraq war, blindly supports rather than seriously questions the president’s case for war. Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama was absolutely correct in calling candidate Clinton out on that vote and challenging her lame excuse that she had not read the full intelligence report before her Iraq war vote. “Members of Congress,” Obama cautioned, “must carefully read the intelligence before giving the president any justification to use military force.”

Not a bad idea. In the case of Iraq’s non-nukes, the intelligence evidence supporting Bush was flimsy at best when it did not directly contradict his key assertions. In the case of Iran, it is now publicly understood that there is no such evidence, flimsy or otherwise. But don’t count on that to stop the bipartisan coalition of invasion hawks from pushing on.

Once again, they will attack the United Nations’ experts, who have been proved right in Iran as they were in Iraq. A spokesman for the International Atomic Energy Agency pointed out that the NIE report supports the agency’s view that there is “no evidence” of an undeclared nuclear weapons program in Iran and “validates the assessments of [IAEA Director General] Mohamed ElBaradei, who continuously said in his public statements that he saw no clear and public danger, and that therefore that there was plenty of time for negotiations.”

Can we get ElBaradei to run in the Iowa caucus? Why are our leading presidential candidates so easily fooled?

It’s humiliating to all of us who believe in a free press, separation of powers and individual liberty that a system of government designed by its founders to hold leaders accountable can be so easily manipulated by an unremarkable loser who has been rewarded throughout his life for screwing up. It is hoped that this time around the truth will catch up with him before he gets us in yet another bloody war, just to show he can.

Sphere: Related Content

del.icio.us:It turns out Ahmadinejad was the truthful one digg:It turns out Ahmadinejad was the truthful one spurl:It turns out Ahmadinejad was the truthful one wists:It turns out Ahmadinejad was the truthful one simpy:It turns out Ahmadinejad was the truthful one newsvine:It turns out Ahmadinejad was the truthful one blinklist:It turns out Ahmadinejad was the truthful one furl:It turns out Ahmadinejad was the truthful one reddit:It turns out Ahmadinejad was the truthful one fark:It turns out Ahmadinejad was the truthful one blogmarks:It turns out Ahmadinejad was the truthful one Y!:It turns out Ahmadinejad was the truthful one smarking:It turns out Ahmadinejad was the truthful one magnolia:It turns out Ahmadinejad was the truthful one segnalo:It turns out Ahmadinejad was the truthful one gifttagging:It turns out Ahmadinejad was the truthful one
  1. Donald F. Truax on December 6th, 2007

    All

    WE STOP THEM IN THEIR TRACKS!!! Mr. Mush saying that he learned of the National Intelligence Estimate report, which contained that inconvenient fact, only last week? is [B U L L S H I T] and a tranference of guilt e.g BACK DOOR excuse to save face that THEY where stopped in their tracks by the TRUTHERS! WE ARE HAVING AN I M P A C T ! ! !

    More important is that this example shows just how evil these people are and THEY will not stop their THUG efforts to kill thousands and steal other country resources. WE must stay viligant and keep exposing THIER lies.

    KEEP KICKING BUTT!!!

    Love “Light” and Energy

    _Don

  2. Tom on December 6th, 2007

    Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and Iran should be watched like a knight in chess. But our moves should not be ones that throw our pieces into the fire. In this game of chess there are two opposition sets against one that stands for truth. One at our front door and one at the back where the public feels safe trusting to be left open. If we keep our eyes on both (and believe me there are people in our government that are those eyes), the front door will be secured by our vigilance in securing the back. Checkmate after all is not always the most affective strategy in politics. Vigilance is.

  3. derfreebie on December 6th, 2007

    Please, Mr. Scheer: the PURPORTED ‘fanatical leader of a theocracy..’.
    For a second there, I was almost misled to understand your first example were the yanks. My cranial specific gravity is to blame, and everyone please accept my apologies. Bass players do diverge all too frequently.

    If there could be a resounding concurrence in a metaphor, perchance this.

    My cheap symbolic End-Of-Year politically correct and religiously benign present to self will be a beat-up, quite blond maple Peavey neck: which will be screwed onto an otherwise normal Thunderbird body with a ‘57 re-issued Seymour Duncan Precision Bass pickup.
    Like our present administration,
    1. it’s duality is visibly ugly,
    2. It’s really loud and authoritative if you make the mistake of plugging it into anything at all, and finally…
    This is the most sickening -
    3. I would rather play a 100% American made (sooner or later) visible remembrance to a dear departed Brit than nicely matched contemporary junk.

  4. Sean OZ on December 7th, 2007

    Right on Don, these scumbag neo-conartists are the worse breed of human yet seen, they are so far from life they make me sick.

  5. Laowaitattler on December 7th, 2007

    The NIE Report will be soon shown to be flawed in some way. Perhaps some Niger Yellow-cake will be found on the border of Iraq and Iran. Bush will then call for a complete restructuring of the U.S. intelligence community by eliminating any checks and balances, pointing to the complete failure of the current system to assess situations properly as evidenced by the Iran NIE failure.

    Call me cynical.

  6. Against the grain on December 7th, 2007

    I think Mahmoud is probably just a misunderstood guy. He seems like a wise and rational man to me. What’s wrong with a leader screaming that he wants to remove nations from the face of the planet? I think more leaders should adamantly threaten other countries with total destruction. If our evil country could just take a page out of this guy’s book we might be on the right track.

    It’s all the neo-cons fault…my toaster ran hot and burnt my toast this morning. Somewhere George Bush was laughing…I can just feel it.

  7. Gary on December 14th, 2007

    From what I’ve seen from live video feeds from Iran, the right wing religious govt is NOT friendly to dissidents, but neither is the right wing religious govt in the USA. And I mean “religious” in the loosest of terms. Amadinejad seems to support brutal repression of internal dissent, though a lot of that starts with local yokels, yet it is often backed up by national judges.

    Same here.

    Thing is, Amadinejad NEVER threatened to remove Israel from the face of the earth. That was a vile misquote. He did claim aloud (prophesize?) that some day the regime (govt) which inhabits Jerusalem will pass from the pages of time. “Pass from the pages of time” is kind of a poetic public statement, like “It’s not asking what your country can do for you …”.

    Anyhow, I do not doubt that *someone* inside Iran probably would invade Israel if they could, but Israel has over 300 nuclear weapons aimed at Iran, and a full air force made up of largely American planes, as well as their renowned (vicious) intelligence services. The USA has 10,000 nukes. Iran? Zero. No more need be said.