So after 5 years of hearing that Bush lied we now finally hear he didn’t. I have been saying this till I turned blue in the face and people just kept on spewing forth the Democrat line or LIE that Bush did and because of that thousands died.
How many people called for his impeachment? how many called for him to admit he was wrong and wanted him to apologize? how many Bush hating congresscritters spewed this crap while in session, on TV, in chambers, in speeches knowing dam right well what the truth was. They after all saw the same intelligence reports and spoke for years even during the Clinton administration that Iraq was a clear and present danger. Bill, Hillary, Kerry, Kennedy, Pelosi, Reid and all the rest of the lying bigmouths at one time repeated those very words.
I never want to hear these words again. Isn’t about time to admit the truth? After all Bush is a lame duck. Get over it people.
For almost five long years, many of us have tried to explain to a deaf media and public that President Bush was a victim of the world’s intelligence when it came to the whole weapons of mass destruction thing with Iraq. Liberals chanted “Bush lied, people died” and some have called for The Hague to try him for war crimes.
So, you can imagine my frustration and near uncontrollable anger when after all that, the Los Angeles Times decides to shock the world…
Bush never lied to us about Iraq Read more at blackandright.mndnet.com …
Bush never lied to us about Iraq - Los Angeles Times
in the contemporary rhetoric of many Democrats, who, when attacking the Bush administration’s case for war against Saddam Hussein, employ essentially the same argument. In 2006, John F. Kerry explained the Senate’s 77-23 passage of the Iraq war resolution this way: “We were misled. We were given evidence that was not true.” On the campaign trail, Hillary Rodham Clinton dodged blame for her pro-war vote by claiming that “the mistakes were made by this president, who misled this country and this Congress.”
Nearly every prominent Democrat in the country has repeated some version of this charge, and the notion that the Bush administration deceived the American people has become the accepted narrative of how we went to war.
Yet in spite of all the accusations of White House “manipulation” — that it pressured intelligence analysts into connecting Hussein and Al Qaeda and concocted evidence about weapons of mass destruction — administration critics continually demonstrate an inability to distinguish making claims based on flawed intelligence from knowingly propagating falsehoods.
In 2004, the Senate Intelligence Committee unanimously approved a report acknowledging that it “did not find any evidence that administration officials attempted to coerce, influence or pressure analysts to change their judgments.” The following year, the bipartisan Robb-Silberman report similarly found “no indication that the intelligence community distorted the evidence regarding Iraq’s weapons of mass destruction.”
Contrast those conclusions with the Senate Intelligence Committee report issued June 5, the production of which excluded Republican staffers and which only two GOP senators endorsed. In a news release announcing the report, committee Chairman John D. Rockefeller IV got in this familiar shot: “Sadly, the Bush administration led the nation into war under false pretenses.”
Yet Rockefeller’s highly partisan report does not substantiate its most explosive claims. Rockefeller, for instance, charges that “top administration officials made repeated statements that falsely linked Iraq and Al Qaeda as a single threat and insinuated that Iraq played a role in 9/11.” Yet what did his report actually find? That Iraq-Al Qaeda links were “substantiated by intelligence information.” The same goes for claims about Hussein’s possession of biological and chemical weapons, as well as his alleged operation of a nuclear weapons program.
Four years on from the first Senate Intelligence Committee report, war critics, old and newfangled, still don’t get that a lie is an act of deliberate, not unwitting, deception. If Democrats wish to contend they were “misled” into war, they should vent their spleen at the CIA.
In 2003, top Senate Democrats — not just Rockefeller but also Carl Levin, Clinton, Kerry and others — sounded just as alarmist. Conveniently, this month’s report, titled “Whether Public Statements Regarding Iraq by U.S. Government Officials Were Substantiated by Intelligence Information,” includes only statements by the executive branch. Had it scrutinized public statements of Democrats on the Intelligence, Foreign Relations and Armed Services committees — who have access to the same intelligence information as the president and his chief advisors — many senators would be unable to distinguish their own words from what they today characterize as warmongering.
This may sound like ancient history, but it matters. After Sept. 11, President Bush did not want to risk allowing Hussein, who had twice invaded neighboring nations, murdered more than 1 million Iraqis and stood in violation of 16 U.N. Security Council resolutions, to remain in possession of what he believed were stocks of chemical and biological warheads and a nuclear weapons program. By glossing over this history, the Democrats’ lies-led-to-war narrative provides false comfort in a world of significant dangers.
Read more LATimes.com



3 users commented in " Bush never lied to us about Iraq - Los Angeles Times "
Follow-up comment rss or Leave a TrackbackNow how about admitting that Nixon got it right about Alger Hiss.
Maybe then we can also correct history about Joe McCarthy.
I love these parody sites.
[…] Thompson posted this today, and naturally I had to click through and see whether or not the Los Angeles Times had, in fact, […]
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