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Friday, January 13, 2006

Santorum: Media, Liberals Undermine Support for Iraq War Submitted by editor on January 13, 2006 - 2:04pm. Source: Associated Press

Sen. Rick Santorum on Thursday accused the media and liberals of undermining support for the Iraq war at a time when, he said, Islamic fundamentalists pose a serious threat to national security.

"The challenge for liberty today, the challenge for our generation is the spread of Islamic fascism," said Santorum, R-Penn Hills.

Speaking to more than 300 cadets at the Valley Forge Military Academy, Santorum said public support for the war has been difficult to maintain because of "biased coverage of the war and the political left demagoguery of the war."

He also urged President Bush to create an independent panel to examine progress in Iraq that should be a "look forward, not a look back." Last week, Santorum wrote a letter to Bush asking for the panel to be created.

Santorum expressed concern about the intentions of Syria and Iran and warned that if troops are withdrawn from Iraq, the countries' influence would spread into Iraq and a safe haven would be established for terrorists.

"I have very grave concerns about the future of the Middle East and our national security if we fail to succeed," Santorum said.

Santorum said Islamic fascists are going after the heart and will of the American public to fight the Iraq war with suicide attacks and roadside bombs in Iraq because they know that "you, us, we are the key to victory."

The deaths are tragic, but the media are making headlines with each death without telling the whole story, he said. He said returning soldiers have told him the nation is winning in Iraq and the Iraqi people are behind the effort.

"I don't know of any other war in American history where every casualty, every casualty is a headline and only the casualty is part of the story," he said.

Families of soldiers say that 'telling the last chapter of the soldiers' story does not tell the whole story,' but that is all that we hear," Santorum said. "It is a disservice to each of them and their service to this country to report only the end of the story."

The campaign of his likely opponent, State Treasurer Bob Casey Jr., released a statement saying Santorum should have offered a real critique of the administration's policies in Iraq instead of blaming the media.

"Santorum has voted with President Bush 98 percent of the time, and now he's trying to copy his PR tactics," said Larry Smar, a spokesman for Casey.
12:18:59 PM    comment []


8th grader shot by SWAT team. 8th grader shot by SWAT team [The Raw Story | A rational voice - Alternative news]
10:57:13 AM    comment []

Archaeologists reportedly find no proof of cannibalism at a campsite in California, used by members of the Donner Party. [Cursor.org]
10:56:12 AM    comment []

Rounding up evidence that 'Bush Authorized Domestic Spying Before 9/11,' Truthout's Jason Leopold writes that the NSA "kept a running list of the names of Americans." Plus: 'Pentagon grilled' over classified Counterintelligence Field Activity database of war critics. [Cursor.org]
10:55:10 AM    comment []

A Guardian op-ed argues that "If the Middle East was a jungle before" the U.S. invasion of Iraq, "it will be a wilder one afterwards ... even more anti-American," and 'Iran and Israel will be kings.' [Cursor.org]
10:54:30 AM    comment []

As Robert Dreyfuss raises the possibility that the November 2006 elections "might take place in the midst of yet another crisis manufactured by the Bush administration," Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice speaks of a "menu of possibilities" that may await Iran at the U.N., promising to draw from the "variety of tools at the disposal of the international community ... at a time of our choosing." [Cursor.org]
10:52:35 AM    comment []

The new Medicare drug plan, in effect since January 1, is said to have already caused "a major public health crisis," and "the spectacle of governors bailing out Washington, poor people unable to get their medications and pharmacists angry over not getting paid." [Cursor.org]
10:51:21 AM    comment []

NSA used WMD team on protest. NSA used WMD team on protest [The Raw Story | A rational voice - Alternative news]
10:40:37 AM    comment []

Ex-Gitmo prison. chief takes the fifth [The Raw Story | A rational voice - Alternative news]
10:39:49 AM    comment []

CIA counsel: Bush wiretaps likely illegal. CIA counsel: Bush wiretaps likely illegal [The Raw Story | A rational voice - Alternative news]
10:39:01 AM    comment []

Proof Bush Deceived America

Ray McGovern

January 13, 2006

Ray McGovern works with Tell the Word, the publishing arm of the ecumenical Church of the Saviour. A 27-year veteran of the CIA[base ']s analysis ranks, he is now on the steering group of Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity (VIPS).

James Risen[base ']s State of War: the Secret History of the CIA and the Bush Administration, may hold bigger secrets than the disclosure that President George W. Bush authorized warrantless eavesdropping on Americans.

Risen[base ']s book also confirms the most damning element of the British Cabinet Office memos popularly called the [base "]Downing Street memos;[per thou] namely, that [base "]the intelligence and the facts were being fixed around the policy.[per thou] The result is that it is no longer credible to maintain that the failures in the Iraqi intelligence were the product of a broken intelligence community. The Bush administration deliberately fabricated the case against Iraq, lying to Congress and the American people along the way.

Risen, a senior reporter for The New York Times, reports that British Prime Minister Tony Blair had an urgent need in the summer of 2002 to get the equivalent of a [base "]second opinion[per thou] regarding Bush[base ']s plans for war in Iraq[~]insight independent of his own telephone conversations with the president and independent of what Blair was hearing from his own foreign office.

During his April 2002 visit to Crawford, Blair had gone out on a limb in pledging to support war on Iraq. The following months saw him getting nervous. So he chose what intelligence parlance calls a [base "]back channel,[per thou] and sent the chief of British intelligence, Richard Dearlove, to Washington to sound out his counterpart: the garrulous CIA director George Tenet, who he knew to be very close to the president.

The highly revealing Downing Street memo contained the minutes of Dearlove's briefing of Blair and his top advisers upon his return from Washington on July 23. But what the memo left unanswered was the question of who gave Dearlove the confidence to say this to his prime minister:

Military action was now seen as inevitable. Bush wanted to remove Saddam, through military action, justified by the conjunction of terrorism and WMD. But the intelligence and the facts were being fixed around the policy.

When the Sunday Times published the minutes of that key briefing on May 1, 2005, it seemed a safe bet that Dearlove[base ']s source was Tenet, and I said so.

Now we have the confirmation. Risen writes that George Tenet was reluctant to receive Dearlove, but acquiesced when the British made clear that Blair considered the back-channel meeting urgent. Tenet then rose to the occasion[~]with a vengeance. Risen, quoting a former senior CIA official who helped host the British for a session that lasted most of Saturday, July 20, 2002, reports that Tenet and Dearlove had a 90-minute one-on-one conversation, during which Tenet was [base "]very candid.[per thou]

Risen adds that by the time of this [base "]intelligence summit,[per thou] senior CIA officials had concluded that [base "]the quality of the intelligence on weapons of mass destruction didn[base ']t really matter,[per thou] since war was inevitable. That perverse attitude certainly prevailed two months later, when the fabricated National Intelligence Estimate on Iraq and WMD was produced by Tenet[base ']s National Intelligence Council in a successful attempt to deceive Congress into voting for war.

A former CIA official told Risen that after the conversation with Tenet, Richard Dearlove could certainly [base "]figure out what was going on; plus, the MI6 station chief in Washington was in CIA headquarters all the time, with just about complete access to everything.[per thou] In any case, we now know that Blair got what he wanted out of the visit[~]the inside scoop from someone enjoying the complete trust of, and daily access to, President Bush.

The president now says that he does not want his political opposition to dwell on how he lied to Congress and the American people in order to invade a country and kill tens of thousands of Iraqi civilians and more than 2,200 U. S. troops[~]not to mention the many thousands maimed for life. Perhaps he knows that Risen's book could do as much damage to his administration by calling renewed attention to the Downing Street memos as is likely to be done by the revelations of the secret NSA wiretapping.

One world leader recognizes the extreme danger of official lies told to a nation in the service of an aggressive war. He also happens to be a leader who survived the horrors of fascism in the last century. In a Jan. 1 address to the world, Pope Benedict XVI spoke about the consequences of lies such as these, in what can only be a thinly veiled reference to the president of the United States:

[sigma]Sacred Scripture, in its very first book, Genesis, points to the lie told at the very beginning of history by the animal with a forked tongue, whom the Evangelist John calls ''the father of lies'' (Jn 8:44). Lying is also one of the sins spoken of in the final chapter of the last book of the Bible, Revelation, which bars liars from the heavenly Jerusalem: ''outside are... all who love falsehood'' (22:15). Lying is linked to the tragedy of sin and its perverse consequences, which have had, and continue to have, devastating effects on the lives of individuals and nations. We need but think of the events of the past century, when aberrant ideological and political systems wilfully twisted the truth and brought about the exploitation and murder of an appalling number of men and women, wiping out entire families and communities. After experiences like these, how can we fail to be seriously concerned about lies in our own time, lies which are the framework for menacing scenarios of death in many parts of the world.

The ethos of the Central Intelligence Agency in which my contemporaries and I worked was chiseled into the marble at the entrance of CIA headquarters: [base "]You will know the truth, and the truth will set you free.[per thou]

Sadly, the agency has come a long way.
9:40:30 AM    comment []


© Copyright 2006 Patricia Thurston.



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