Joseph Wilson, still right after all these years

I’m probably a couple of days behind on this one, but the editorial in the latest issue of The New Republic, headlined “Revisiting Wilson,” raises an important point that’s worth emphasizing.

When the Bush gang and their cohorts go after Joseph Wilson, they tend to underscore two points — that Wilson had claimed that Dick Cheney had requested Wilson’s trip to Niger and that Wilson’s conclusions about Bush’s uranium claims were wrong.

The first point has been debunked, repeatedly. The second point, which RNC Chairman Ken Mehlman, among others, has been emphasizing, was highlighted by the TNR editorial.

After the war began, and no weapons of mass destruction turned up, Wilson started telling people that the Niger story had been bogus–first through leaks to reporters, then in a New York Times op-ed he wrote under his own name. As both the Los Angeles Times and Newsweek have reported, that’s when administration officials looked into Wilson’s background, discovered he was married to Plame, and publicized her CIA role. This, in turn, prompted Fitzgerald’s investigation.

As that investigation has spilled onto the front pages in the last few weeks, supporters of the administration have picked up where they left off two years ago, saying that Wilson was unqualified for the Niger investigation and declaring that his credibility is in tatters. It’s true that Wilson has made himself an easy target for such accusations by posing with his wife for Vanity Fair magazine and taking a very public role advising the Kerry campaign last fall. But the most serious charge that Wilson’s critics level against him is the allegation that he was wrong in his assessment of Iraq’s dealing with Niger. Supporters of Rove have revived this accusation in an effort to claim that, when Rove spoke to reporters about Plame, he wasn’t trying to disparage Wilson so much as warn them off a “bad story.” But what, exactly, was “bad” about Wilson’s story?

Both the national security adviser and the CIA director at the time (Condoleezza Rice and George Tenet, respectively) issued public apologies for the Niger claim, admitting it was unsubstantiated. And the most authoritative report on the matter comes from the Iraq Survey Group (ISG), which spent a year combing the Iraqi countryside for alleged weapons of mass destruction. Its conclusion: “ISG has not found evidence to show that Iraq sought uranium from abroad after 1991 or renewed indigenous production of such material.”

How can the administration and its allies be so cavalier about the truth?

I ask myself the same question every day.

Some weeks back, I concluded that it’s not worth responding to the attacks on Wilson because that’s the debate the right wants us to have — away from Rove and Libby.

But the point raised by the TNR editorial is significant because it emphasizes the bigger picture. We all know this, but it bears repeating every day — Wilson was getting in the White House’s way by exposing their bogus claims as lies, so they had to go after him. And they’re still claiming that Wilson was wrong about Iraq, despite reality — as documented by the administration-created Iraq Survey Group.

As Digby recently noted:

It’s two years later, we have a definitive report from the ISG, and people are still saying that Wilson was a flake, he was sent by his wife, he was trying to set up the Republicans, whatever. In a normal world, that fact that Wilson’s conclusions (along with others) were correct would have some salience in this argument — particularly since the Republicans are basing theirs on the mistaken premise that Wilson’s credibility is in question when quite clearly, he was right.

But this isn’t normal; it’s Bush’s America.

The right doesn’t have anything to stand on when debating the White House’s tactics, so they turn to Wilson. But they don’t have anything to stand on here either, and they have no where left to turn. It seems only a matter of time before they start claiming that Saddam really did have WMD and anyone who says differently is wrong.

I can appreciate that Bush defenders are having trouble coming up with a compelling defense for the White House in the Plame scandal. I sometimes wonder what I’d come up with if I were in their shoes. I don’t see much room for spinning this one. From the sound of it, neither do they.

If I recall correctly, Wilson’s investigation was the THIRD debunking of the Niger claims, with the first two being done by the State Department and (I think) the NSA or maybe the IAEA. But, at the about the same time as Wilson’s investigation the British ALSO did a report, and my recollection is that THAT BRITISH report is the one that Bush apologists still rely on to claim that Wilson got it wrong.

Supposedly, this British report did not rely on the forged documents angle to prove/debunk the Saddam-Niger claims, but had some other source — a single person — who the British (apparently) still claim was much more reliable than anything that Wilson or his investigative predecessors looked at, and their source says “yes,” Saddam DID “recently seek yellowcake from Africa.” I think it’s garbage, since the British — to my knowledge — have never disclosed their source to U.S. intelligence agencies or certainly to both political parties.

This gets back into the parsing of words again. Bush calls Wilson a liar, or at least incompetent, because lapdog Blair says, in effect, “we’ve got a different source that trumps your source, but we can’t tell you who, or what, it is.” How convenient. All liars, and all using “national security” to shield themselves from serious public scrutiny.

As Wilson said last Friday, where is a Republican who is willing to stand up and investigate this? It sure won’t be Roberts, or McCain, or L. Graham, or Lugar — they’ve all bought in so deep that they have to look up to see the gutter. How sad and pathetic.

  • If I’m getting this, it’s lies on top of lies, used in order to cover up other bigger lies.

    How can the administration and its allies be so cavalier about the truth? Good question.

  • The only skill this administration has ever had was in political trickery, i.e., putting lipstick on a pig and somehow being able to convince enough of the voting public that the pig was a really hot person of whatever gender got their motor running. Karl Rove has made a career of applying the same dirty tricks he learned in college on a national scale, and that’s still all he really knows how to do.

    Now, finally, dirty tricks are not enough to avoid the consequences of a corrupt and incompetent administration. The people and the media are not letting themselves be distracted as they always have before, and the idiots in the White House have no Plan B to fall back on.

    It reminds me of the old joke about the American aircraft carrier who picked up a radar signal in heavy fog. The captain got on the radio and told the unknown vessel, “This is the U.S.S. Whatever, a large and powerful warship. Change course or we will run you down.”

    The answer came back, “This is a lighthouse. It’s your choice.”

    The choices for Bush and Rove are: accept the responsibility and the consequences for their actions, or let the ship of state run aground against an indomitable obstacle and sink to the bottom. Either way, I’m having a really good day just thinking about it. 🙂

  • I’m getting confused now, between the official White
    House response to the entire Wilson affair, and the lies,
    distortions and distractions from the right wing
    propaganda machine.

    I don’t see a very robust defense from the Bush
    administration – I’m talking the official line, not
    the behind the scenes dirty tricks going on.

    Correct me if I’m wrong, but I don’t recall the
    White House making claims that Wilson was wrong,
    that Plame masterminded the whole thing, or that
    no misdeed was committed in the first place.
    Seems to me, they’ve simply denied the involvement
    of Rove and others, which implies they accept the
    fact that some crime or unethical leak occurred.
    I don’t remember them trying to discredit Wilson’s
    conclusions. And now, their official position is one
    of stony silence. Wait until the prosecutor’s
    investigation is concluded, they say.

    Isn’t it significant that the official, and I emphasize
    official, White House response is so timid and
    defensive? Didn’t Bill Clinton come right out and
    tell Jim Leher that he did not have sex with that
    woman?

    Or am I just missing something?

  • Hark, the White House is closed up tighter than Fort Knox because they know there is no deniablility factor to spin here. None at all. They let their hired guns like Ken Mehlman and the RNC spew the lies, distortions and distractions so they don’t have to. That’s the biggest indicator yet that they truly understand how close to prison food they really are. So you’re not missing a thing.

  • Well, now the “official line” is, “wait for the investigation to be over, the president can’t make a decision on this issue of national security.”

    I’d like to see people hammer this point: George W. Bush cannot make a decision. He is afraid to act. National Security has been compromised and GWB is terrified to do anything about it. They don’t even need to make the obvious connection to Rove being the puppet master—just hang GWB out as the coward he is.

  • It’s obvious that the White House (i.e., Cheney and Rove) have absolutely no respect for “truth, justice and the American way”. They have all the power they need to do exactly what they like and no fear whatever of anybody (especially the press) being able to do anything about it. And they see things correctly. The only way to get these bastards now would be through blackmail of underling insiders, and I don’t think today’s so-called journalists (a kiddie korps with a college education but absolutely no street smarts) knows how.

  • ‘Truth’ and ‘falsity’ are outdated concepts.

    Utility to the Party has replaced ‘truth’.

    And because of its vanguard role in the Revolution, the Party before all else needs to be preserved.

    Defense of the Party is the highest form of the defense of the Revolutionary State.

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