Dishonesty over veracity, even when the truth is just as good

I noted earlier this week that the president went from being adamantly opposed to a troop escalation in Iraq to being adamantly supportive of a troop escalation in Iraq. Given the circumstances, it was imperative that Bush explain how and why he came to change his mind.

In remarks to troops at Fort Benning yesterday, the president gave it a shot.

“The [Iraqi] Prime Minister came and said, look, I understand we’ve got to do something about this violence, and here is what I suggest we do. Our commanders looked at it, helped fine-tune it so it would work….

“The commanders on the ground in Iraq, people who I listen to — by the way, that’s what you want your Commander-in-Chief to do. You don’t want decisions being made based upon politics, or focus groups, or political polls. You want your military decisions being made by military experts. And they analyzed the plan and they said to me, and to the Iraqi government, this won’t work unless we help them. There needs to be a bigger presence. …

“And so our commanders looked at the plan and said, ‘Mr. President, it’s not going to work until — unless we support — provide more troops.’ And so last night I told the country that I’ve committed an additional — a little over 20,000 more troops, five brigades of which will be in Baghdad.”

It’s an interesting explanation. It suggests to us that a) troop escalation was Maliki’s idea from the outset; b) U.S. commanders on the ground endorsed the plan; and c) Bush was just going along with what everyone else wanted to do. To believe this explanation is to believe that the president honored the wishes of his top military leaders and his White House was not responsible at all for creating the escalation plan in the first place.

Unfortunately, like so many other claims Bush has made about the war, all available information suggests none of this is even remotely true.

Dan Froomkin explains.

Previous reporting — see, for instance, Michael Abramowitz, Robin Wright and Thomas E. Ricks in The Washington Post on Wednesday) has made it abundantly clear that adding U.S. troops was not an idea that emerged from the American commanders — nor, for that matter, from the Iraqis. And, as it turns out, two stories in this morning’s New York Times add to the evidence.

Jim Rutenberg, David E. Sanger and Michael R. Gordon write: “A narrative pieced together from interviews with participants and from public testimony suggests that through much of the process, generals who had been on the ground in Iraq during the past year had favored that the new strategy begin with a substantially smaller force than the one that President Bush announced to the nation on Wednesday night. In the end, it was Mr. Bush who appeared to drive his commanders along to the conclusion that more troops were needed.”

They write: “White House officials were clearly sensitive on Thursday about any suggestions that the president countermanded his generals, and said his new plan had their full support. They said the generals sought and received assurances that the Iraqis would undertake political initiatives and end the practice of releasing militia figures who were friends of the government and captured by American or Iraqi forces.”

According to the New York Times, Bush didn’t necessarily start out pushing for escalation. “One senior official involved in the discussions said that Mr. Bush’s instinct toward the start of the review process — and that of others — was to consider a withdrawal from Baghdad, allow Iraqi-vs.-Iraqi fighting to settle itself, and dedicate United States forces to focus on pursuing Qaeda fighters….

As for Bush’s claim that this whole thing was Maliki’s idea, the president’s wrong on two counts. One, the original ideas came from NSA Stephen Hadley and were presented to Maliki, not the other way around. And two, Maliki actually wanted the opposite — a lower American profile in the war, not a bigger one.

What’s particularly odd about all of this is it’s transparently false. No one seriously believes Bush’s version of events at all, so there’s really no point in him even trying to mislead people, worse yet mislead the very troops who’ll be fighting the war. If everyone, including the president’s allies, freely accept that he’s bucked his generals and pushed this on Maliki, why bother creating a bogus narrative?

In this case, the truth was just as easy to tell as the lie, but for reasons that defy comprehension, Bush decided to go with dishonesty over veracity. When it comes to the war, lying just seems to come easier to him.

Secretary Rice has already admitted in her testimony before the Senate that the troop increase was NOT Maliki’s idea.

This Presidency is beyond redemption.

  • IMO, I think you are making this too complicated; Bush went for the one option that was not suggested by the ISG report.

    Bush thinks he’s speaking to history now–in 50-100 years, no one is going to believe that for 8 years a president of the United States drove a super power into the ditch for purely oedipal reasons.

  • He wants cover. If the plan doesn’t work he’ll blame Maliki and make a new plan to kill more of us.

  • Shorter Bush – I’m so far disconnected from reality I don’t know where the truth ends and begins.

  • Okay, America—this one’s for you. All along, you’ve complained about how “your fellow Americans” are’nt supporting the troops. You’ve whined, trembled, and fumed about how “some people” are handing this country over to some un-named enemy, because they “don’t support the troops.”

    American “Liberals” have never LIED to the troops; neither have American “Progressives.”

    But George W. Bush—the same George W. Bush whom you have placed upon a pedestal these last six years, has REPEATEDLY LIED to the troops.

    So here it is, America. Here’s the sixty-four-thousand-dollar question:

    Who will YOU choose to support—George W. Bush—or the troops?

    And those, dear America, are the only two choices.

    The troops now anxiously await your reply….

  • Another way to weasel out of taking responsiblity. He should have just admitted that he is Cheney’s bitch. It wouldn’t have sounded that much worse than saying he was just an errand boy for Maliki or even the generals whoever the hell they are anymore.

    What a scared little boy. Riffing on what bcinaz#2 said, Bush stole daddy’s car for a joy ride and now he’s trying get out of trouble.

    Although I really like Rosa Brooks column http://snipurl.com/17dz2 in the LA Times about the “decent interval” ploy. It might explain Bush’s conferring with Kissinger since Dr. Strangeshit was the one who worked the deal selling Vietnam out to China for giving Nixon a little time between when we pulled out of Vietnam and when the South was overrun. The strange fascist night creatures seem to live forever.

  • CB writes: “In this case, the truth was just as easy to tell as the lie, but for reasons that defy comprehension, Bush decided to go with dishonesty over veracity.”

    Bush believes that lying takes daily commitment, like exercise. And it’s simpler for the simpleton Decider not to have to decide when to lie. Lie always.

  • So Mr. President, who are the “commanders on the ground in Iraq, people who I listen to” that suggested an escalation? I want names.

    In any case, we’re spending too much time parsing Bush’s words, too little time building the impeachment case.

  • I just watched the movie Idiocracy. Lawless of Arabia is just 500 years before his time. He would be the perfect President for the Idiocracy. Bush to CB “Shut up.”

  • The commanders on the ground in Iraq, people who I listen to — by the way, that’s what you want your Commander-in-Chief to do.

    Anyone who reminds you of something so consistently, as Bush does in every speech he gives, is most likely completely full of shit.

  • “In this case, the truth was just as easy to tell as the lie, but for reasons that defy comprehension, Bush decided to go with dishonesty”

    He needs a scapegoat for when it fails miserably. If he told the truth those bodies would be on his ass, not Maliki’s and the generals..

  • Here we go again quibbling about who said the lies in the Bush administration and how big those lies were. Wake me up when someone tells the truth.

    One quote from above struck me, “One senior official involved in the discussions said that Mr. Bush’s instinct toward the start of the review process — and that of others — was to consider a withdrawal from Baghdad, allow Iraqi-vs.-Iraqi fighting to settle itself, and dedicate United States forces to focus on pursuing Qaeda fighters….”

    And I thought, wow, now there’s a billiant idea. But instead of just pulling out of Baghdad, how about getting rid of the Green Zone. If Maliki and the other leaders had to live with the same securiy concerns of the rest of Iraq, maybe then they’d get their act together on public safety. Of course we’ll have to come in periodically with bulldozers and bury all of the dead.

    As far as sending the troops off to find al Quaeda, great! They’re somewhere in Afghanistan, Pakistan and we think maybe Somalia. Watch out for that Aidid guy.

  • I can’t believe the Tightie Righties got pissed at Kerry for his stupid joke but they won’t say a word when the Demander-in-Chief talks to a bunch of soldiers like they’re particularly stupid four year olds.

    These guys know the score better than anyone (even the DiC) and that’s not including their experiences in Iraq and information any intelligent person can get from other forms of media. But BushMeister thinks he can tell the soldiers a bunch of lies and they will never think “That completely contradicts what I read/heard/saw/know you fucker.”

    He shows nothing but complete contempt for the men and women in uniform and I say well done to his captive audience for not storming the stage and squashing him like a bug.

  • tAiO,
    I have long felt that Bush views the entire American public with the contempt you describe above. He often speaks in a style that assumes his audience is as clueless as he is (or was before getting careful, patient, one-syllable-word briefings from someone right before taking to the podium). As doubtful @#10 notes, Bush often makes these cloying reminder /explanations in so many of his little chats with the “common folk.” It is insultling in the extreme – whether one is among his “target audience” or simply someone who respects them more than the president is capable of doing.

    Part of his spin yesterday was to reiterate that his latest “plan” is new. He stressed that it is important for everyone to know “this is new.” There it is: the telegraphed acknowledgement that it is the same old crap with a new ribbon around it. Bush and his minions know that the public is not going to bite (hell, they won’t even light) on this one. It is just too obvious that there is nothing new here. But, Bush, who fancies himself the Persuader as well as the Decider cannot resist telling us all what he so wants and needs us to know. This is new. This is new. This is new. If he had any respect for us, for our ability to discern something new from something old, for the working order of our BS meters, he would not even attempt this fraud.

  • If those are verbatim quotes, then his whole speech — the use of words, phrases, stories within stories, the whole 9yards — sounds more like a bedtime story told to a 3yr old than something given to adults to think on. The aim is to relax them and to lull them into peaceful sleep..

    In which case, the less true it is, the better it’s likely to be; let them dream of magic and wonders, not of reality.

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