When it comes to the war in Iraq, part of the president’s problem is that he manipulated information, removing context and meaning, in order to get the results he wanted. So, now that he’s under fire, how does he defend the war? As Ryan Lizza noted in a terrific TNR piece today, Bush’s new strategy depends on manipulating information, removing context and meaning, in order to get the results he wants.
A key component of the new White House offensive, for example, is using quotes from Dem senators. Unfortunately, he’s not using them well.
For example, Bush quoted Sen. Carl Levin (D-Mich.) at a speech yesterday in Alaska. Bush told U.S. troops that Levin said, “The war against terrorism will not be finished as long as Saddam Hussein is in power.” But is that all Levin said? Not so much. Here’s the full context from December 2001:
“The war against terrorism will not be finished as long as he is in power. But that does not mean he is the next target.
“And the commitment to do that, it seems to me, could be disruptive of our alliance that still has work to do in Afghanistan. And a lot will depend on what the facts are in various places as to what terrorist groups are doing, and as to whether or not we have facts as to whether or not the Iraqis have been involved in the terrorist attack of September 11, or whether or not Saddam is getting a weapon of mass destruction and is close to it. So facts will determine what our next targets are.”
Bush — or, more accurately, the people who tell Bush what to say — took Levin’s comments and changed the meaning entirely. Levin, who voted against the Iraq resolution in 2002, wanted the emphasis to remain on Afghanistan and had real doubts about WMD in Iraq. And yet, to the president tell it, Levin is now a hypocrite because he has concerns about the war and the intelligence upon which it was based. What’s more, Bush says Levin “reached the same conclusion” on Iraq as Bush — which is painfully ridiculous.
Of course, Levin wasn’t Bush’s only victim.
Bush quoted Harry Reid as saying, “Saddam Hussein, in effect, has thumbed his nose at the world community. And I think the President is approaching this in the right fashion.” But what was the context for the remarks? Here’s what Reid said in September 2002:
“As you know when his father went into Iraq, we had a very good debate. Some said one of the best debates in the last 40 years in Congress. We’re going to have a debate. But I think we have to acknowledge what’s gone on in Iraq. Saddam Hussein, in effect, has thumbed his nose at the world community. And I think that the president’s approaching this in the right fashion. He’s now trying to get the international community to join. Secretary Powell is basically living in New York, working with international community. And we have made progress.”
As Lizza noted, Reid was expressing support for diplomacy at the U.N. — which happened to be the path Bush abandoned so he could launch his invasion.
The irony is rich. To defend his rhetorical deceptions, Bush has to resort to rhetorical deceptions.
What a tangled web Bush weaves…