At a White House press conference this morning, a reporters asked the president to explain the enormous discrepancy between his comments about Iran’s nuclear program and the National Intelligence Estimate. It didn’t go well.
For those of you who can’t watch clips online, Bush said, “…I was made aware of the NIE last week. In August, I think it was John — Mike McConnell came in and said, ‘We have some new information.’ He didn’t tell me what the information was.”
Now, I can appreciate the fact that the president has developed a reputation for lacking intellectual curiosity, but I’m trying to imagine how a scenario like this played out. There was an NIE, it was circulated for months, and Bush was escalating his rhetoric about Iran’s non-existent nuclear program. In August, the Director of National Intelligence told the president, “We have some new information.” At that time, according to NSA Stephen Hadley, the president was told specifically to “stand down.”
In response, Bush not only didn’t ask what this “new information” was, he explicitly ignored the “stand down” recommendation and started talking about “World War III.”
Wait, it gets worse.
Less than 24 hours ago, Hadley specifically said, “[W]hen the President was told that we had some additional information, he was basically told: ‘Stand down; needs to be evaluated; we’ll come to you and tell you what we think it means.'”
Then, this morning, we saw this exchange:
Q: Are you saying at no point while the rhetoric was escalating, as World War III was making it into conversation — at no point, nobody from your intelligence team or your administration was saying, Maybe you want to back it down a little bit?
BUSH: No — I’ve never — nobody ever told me that.
The gang that can’t shoot straight looks even more ridiculous than usual here.
As for the president learning about the NIE’s assessment on Iran just last week, that is almost certainly false. The WaPo reported today that intelligence officials began briefing senior members of the Bush administration “in July.” Hadley was even more specific about Bush.
Hadley said Bush first learned in August or September about intelligence indicating Iran had halted its weapons program and was advised it would take time to evaluate.
So, let’s review what we’ve learned from the White House over the last 24 hours. The DNI told Bush there was important new information on Iran, but the president didn’t ask what it was. The president was, and was not, told to “stand down” when it came to Iran, advice he both ignored and did not receive. All the while, the White House was publicly making assessments of the Iranian threat, all of which contradicted the evidence they did, and did not, see.
Just when it seemed as if the Bush gang couldn’t get any more embarrassing, these guys manage to kick things up a notch. It’s almost impressive.