From the King Of Blogging, Sean Conners. Various articles and op/ed's on just about anything from A to Z. Politics, religion, entertainment and whatever else seems interesting at the moment. Members and non-members alike are welcomed to participate in th
Like many other bloggers, I can be a cable news junkie sometimes. unlike some, I try to get a good mix of views in. I'll catch some stories from conservatives like Wolf Blitzer, Joe Scarborough, Tucker Carlson and even Bill O'Reilly and Sean Hannity. I also will catch some Olbermann and fellow libertarian Bill Maher for some more progressive viewpoints. But traditionally, my favorite news show over the last decade has been Chris Matthew's "Hardball."

Matthews interviews with a polite, yet aggresive style most of the time. Tho, like all reporters, sometimes gets a little soft on occasion, like in 2002 when the drumbeat for the Iraq war was happening. But then, just about ALL the press acted like a bunch of administration spokespeople then. America was still in the "give the president our confidence" mode and the media reflected that sentiment, for better or worse.

But by the summer of 2003, Chris and his staff seemed to get their sea legs back. He began asking the tough questions again, and got back to not letting his guests just recite memorized talking points and pre-drawn spins.

And in July of 2003, Chris began looking beneath the surface in the matter of the "16 words." The now infamous, and bogus claim that Saddam Hussein was secretly trying to buy yellowcake from the African nation of Niger. As more and more people questioned the validity of that statement, Matthews started digging into the "who knew what and when did they know it" possibilities. On July 8th, Andrea Mitchell, a hardball and NBC correspondent, got the ball rolling.

Meanwhile, the White House played it cool. They insisted the claims, while inaccurate, were thoroughly vetted, they had no previous knowledge of the facts being erroneous, and that the issue of some former Ambassador going to investigate the claims were of little importance, barely even a sidenote. As Andrea Mitchell reported on July 8th, 2003 on the MSNBC show when she got the ball rolling as new facts were beginning to come to light...

ANDREA MITCHELL NBC CORRESPONDENT (voice over): With the president in Africa, the White House finally admitted that Saddam Hussein probably did not try to buy uranium from Niger to build nuclear weapons as the administration had charged before the war. But the admission came after the president had left for Africa last night. After press spokesman, Ari Fleischer, had told reporters earlier in the day, quote, "there is zero, nada, nothing new here", and only after former CIA envoy, Joseph Wilson, who discovered the charge was bogus a year ago went public. [/]

MITCHELL: Was this the politicization of intelligence in order to justify a war?

JOSEPH WILSON, FORMER CIA ENVOY: Either the administration had some information that it has not shared with the public, or, yes, they were using the selective use of facts and intelligence to bolster a decision in a case that had already been made.


Turns out, both were accurate. We know now that the administration did indeed both use intelligence selectively and had lots of info it never shared with the public or Congress. And you don't have to watch Hardball to know that, The Council On Foreign Relations reached the same conclusions, as have many others, many of which could never be accused of being anything "of the left."

In July of 2006, The Council published the following summary on the subject of prewar intelligence, it can be found here...Link Their summary? "During the run-up to the invasion of Iraq, writes the intelligence community's former senior analyst for the Middle East, the Bush administration disregarded the community's expertise, politicized the intelligence process, and selected unrepresentative raw intelligence to make its public case."

But back to 2003.

Matthews spoke to Republican Congressman Kurt Weldon and asked Weldon about the possibilities that The administration had the information that Wilson found and ignored it as they had already made up their minds to take our nation to war in Iraq, no matter what....

MATTHEWS: ... I agree with you completely about that question, about the occupation. I think it`s a very aggravating situation over there, and very questionable how long we are going to stay, et cetera. But I want to get back to this. Last year the CIA sent -- the Central Intelligence Agency sent ambassador Joseph Wilson to Niger to investigate whether that country sold uranium to Iraq.

He, the former ambassador, concluded it was highly doubtful that such a transaction had taken place. And he told Andrea Mitchell on your "MEET THE PRESS" that he was, quote, "absolutely convinced that Dick Cheney`s office, the vice president`s office was aware of his report before the State of the Union Address."

I want to ask you, Congressman Weldon, does it disturb you? The possibility that the vice president of the United States, his office, learned that this uranium information wasn`t accurate, that Saddam Hussein did not try to buy uranium from Africa, and yet they let the president go ahead and say that in his State of the Union Address? Does that bother you?

WELDON: It bothers me that our president used information in his speech to the nation and the world that was not based upon solid evidence and was not backed up and corroborated by our intelligence agency. That bothers me.

MATTHEWS: Why would the vice president`s office, Scooter Libby or whoever is running that office -- why would they send a CIA effort down in Niger to verify something, find out there wasn`t a uranium sale, and then not follow-up by putting that information -- or correcting that information -- in the president`s State of the Union? If they went to the trouble to sending Joe Wilson all the way to Africa to find out whether that country had ever sold uranium to Saddam Hussein, why wouldn`t they follow-up on that?

WELDON: Well, that`s a question that needs to be answered. I don`t know the answer to that. I know Scooter Libby, and I would say this is a legitimate question that many of us have been raising about the specifics in the president`s speech and whether or not it was -- we were able to verify the information relative to the attempted purchase of uranium.

MATTHEWS: Gentlemen, let`s listen to -- Congressman Emanuel too. Let`s listen to what the former ambassador, Joe Wilson, said on "MEET THE PRESS " on this very subject.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

WILSON: And my judgment on this is that if they were referring to Niger when they were referring to uranium sales from Africa to Iraq, that information was erroneous and that they knew about it well ahead of both the publication of the British white paper and the president`s State of the Union Address.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

MATTHEWS: Congressman Weldon, it is now in mid-July. This occurred in mid-January. Does it bother you it took the White House until the president was out of the country and to have someone release this information on background without direct attribution to some official at the White House. It looks to me like they tried to bury this bad information today.

WELDON: Well, that may be the case, and if that`s the case, that`s wrong. The facts are that we need to get to the bottom of what actually happened, when the White House knew the factual information, what involvement the vice president`s office had, and as a member of the Armed Services Committee and vice chairman of that committee, that`s a question I`m pursuing right now


Later in the broadcast, in another interview, Matthews said this...

MATTHEWS: Well, let`s talk about a big head. And former ambassador, Joe Wilson, said that this was cleared by the vice president`s office. They are the ones who sent him to Africa to find out whether it was true or not, whether it was action -- there was traffic in nuclear materials between the country of Niger and the country of Saddam Hussein`s Iraq. He came back and said there was nothing going on like that six months before the speech. Doesn`t the vice president`s office hold the greatest culpability here for not acting on that truth?

Then he closed his broadcast that night withthis statement....

MATTHEWS: I want to stick with -- Just to recap, here`s what we know. Joe Wilson, a former ambassador in the United States government, was sent to Niger to establish there whether there was in fact an arms deal for nuclear materials between Saddam Hussein and the government of Niger.

He came back and reported back to the CIA at the behest of the vice president`s office, that there was no such deal. That office of the vice president, whoever is in there, Scooter Libby on down, or the vice president himself, never told the president that there was nothing to that, that that was a dry hole story. And yet, the president went on television, telling the American people it was true. Somebody`s to blame here, and it`s a very high level and it`s not speculating.


No, it wasn't. It was "dead on balls" accurate. And despite their outer facade, the administration was squirming behind the scenes. despite their claims to the contrary, we now know, via, the "Scooter Libby Perjury and Obstruction of Justice" trial, that Matthews and Wilson were right all along. The claims were bogus that the President made in the State of the Union. The Vice President's office did ask the CIA to send someone and investigate the claim. The CIA did report back the findings. And the Vice President was "obsessed" as the evidence is showing and insiders are reproting, with discrediting the administration critic, by any means possible.



So what? May be the response.



But those are the same folks who feel some religious-like obligation to defend this administration no matter what. to the rest of us, it is not only a shame and travesty, but possibly a damn good reason to remove Dick Cheney from office.



As the Wilson trip and outing of his wife, the former CIA agent, Valarie Plaime were being looked into, the President declared that any involved with this leak, would "no longer be in his administration." Well, regardless of how you see the overt criminal acts of the vice president's office, and what can be proven "beyond a reasonable doubt" is not the standard here. If we don't hold the vice president and his office to that higher standard, then exactly who can be? We know now that Dick Cheney has spent his tenure in the White House doing everything he can to gin up this war, discredit any who opposed it, regardless of the facts and has abused his powers of office without question in my mind. Not all of that is "provable" in a criminal court, but I don't need it to be. Dick Cheney is a threat to our National Security in my view. His ideologies are radical and reckless. His secret ways and setting up his own intelligence apparatus to sell his radical and reckless views have done nothing but harm this nation. We can argue about the President's own culpability over the past years, but one thing is for sure, Dick must go!



The Libby trial, every day, shows just how obsessed the vice president was with discrediting Wilson by insinuating "nepotism" and just plain denying he ordered the trip in the 1st place. And now, the vice president is continuing to lie, deny and hide behind thin "legalisms" that his people concoct to stall and delawy the American people from knowing the truth. Followers of the trial now are surmizing that Cheney won't even testify in the trial, as advertized by the defense in opening statements, because most likely he will harm the case and will either incriminate himself or more likely need to "plead the 5th" to avoid such self incrimination. this is much more serious than a blowjob, or even lying about a blowjob. The vice president is drunk with power, feels he can "shoot off" any bogus claims that serve his purpose, and then hide behind his desk while his underlings go out and smear any who oppose him or even question him.



during th e2000 campaign, the then candidate Cheney asked the American people to reject the democrat's methods of offering ""more lectures, and legalisms, and carefully worded denials. We offer another way, a better way, and a stiff dose of truth." Turns out, Cheney was not interested in truth at all, at least when it came to pre war intelligence. He was only interested in going to war, come hell or highwater. And since the beginning of this war, Cheney and his cronies have only offered lectures, legalisms and oh, so carefully worded denials. That is, when he isn't hiding behind his desk, office and team of lawyers. Or in this case, allowing his chief of staff to be impaled on a sword to save his own neck.



If the President is ever going to get people back on his side, or in my case, on his side for the 1st time concerning this war, he should ask for Cheney's resignation. it is obvious that he was very much involved, if not obsessed with discrediting all war critics, especially Wilson, who had the facts on his side. Every day now, we learn more and more about the misleading that the vice president's office was directly engaged in and responsible for. And for his manipulation of the facts and efforts to distort them and hide them where the American people were concerned is a crime against this nation, at the very least. It is time to replace Dick Cheney with someone who will restore some credibility to the office and to our nation.










"

Comments (Page 2)
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on Feb 09, 2007
Which is absolutely correct. Even if Saddam wasn't trying to obtain uranium (and he was), it's still correct because this is a report from the British government.


huh? and saddam ALREADY HAD yellowcake...about 500 tons of it. he had no need to go to niger for a "football size" bunch of it. do you people know how expensive and how long and how difficult it is to actually make a bomb? the biggest reason only a handful of countries have the bomb is not because people can't get the materials or can't get a blueprint of a bomb making factory or anything of the sort. that stuff is all out there. there are plenty of rogue scientists who are eager to get to work.

the desire to have a nuclear weapon and the amount of time, recources and everything else it takes to actually build just 1 bomb are miles apart.

on Feb 09, 2007
Mathews, unfortunatley, is an idiot.


yeah,,,whatever...fact remains that matthews was right about this. kill the messenger all ya want...feel free...
on Feb 09, 2007
Lol, it's a whole SCHOOL of red herring, evidently. The reason the Clinton aspect IS so important is that your whole argument states Bush KNEW this or KNEW that. No, Bush had no conclusive proof either way. He said that in his address.

... and neither did Clinton. Clinton determined that it was a) not worth risking optimism, and that Hussein needed to be removed and a new regime promoted. That's the same operating goals Bush had. The ONLY difference here is a question of means, not validation of the effort. Call it a red herring if you like, but you have Madeleine Albright in 1998 saying:

"I don't think we're pretending that we can get everything, so this is - I think - we are being very honest about what our ability is. We are lessening, degrading his ability to use this. The weapons of mass destruction are the threat of the future. I think the president explained very clearly to the American people that this is the threat of the 21st century."


His ability to use WHAT? So here you have the Clinton administration almost positive enough for military attack, WITHOUT the forged documents, and without all the rest of the stuff Hussein did in between, like paying bounties to suicide bombers, etc. To say that Bush somehow had more reason to doubt than Clinton did? Nah, that's a red herring.
on Feb 09, 2007
Lol, it's a whole SCHOOL of red herring, evidently. The reason the Clinton aspect IS so important is that your whole argument states Bush KNEW this or KNEW that. No, Bush had no conclusive proof either way. He said that in his address.

... and neither did Clinton. Clinton determined that it was a) not worth risking optimism, and that Hussein needed to be removed and a new regime promoted. That's the same operating goals Bush had. The ONLY difference here is a question of means,


and i have questioned the MEANS since before the invasion. turns out, i was right. as were the others who saw thru the "sales pitch" that we "had no other options" because if we didn't take him out now, by MEANS of a large scale ground invasion, then we would regret it when we saw "mushroom clouds" on the horizon.
on Feb 09, 2007
Lol, it's a whole SCHOOL of red herring, evidently


so 2 fish make up a "school?"

no


How many fish make a school?
There is no magic number, but in the wild schools are generally large - often numbering in the hundreds or even thousands. In captivity, schooling fish need to have at least 4-6 to create a school that they are comfortable with.
WWW Link
on Feb 09, 2007
"How many fish make a school?"


Are you bored? My Gawd...
on Feb 09, 2007
Are you bored? My Gawd...


a little, lol..it's either this or toy with the lil quack who hijacked one of gideon's post for the sheer purpose of trying to "get me " on anything,,,,and that's gettin boring too.

plus, maybe since the right wing radicals have been trying to nitpick me to death, i thought it might be wise to do a lil pre-emptive research, lol

have a good weekend baker:)
on Feb 09, 2007
lol, you too.
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