| Topic: |
Politics > Politics-USA |
| User: |
"Harry Hope" |
| Date: |
09 Aug 2007 08:07:49 AM |
| Object: |
Republican White House fears Colin Powell will finally tell the truth |
Powell is the White House's ticking-time-bomb scenario.
http://www.salon.com/opinion/blumenthal/2007/08/09/iraq_powell/
Aug. 9, 2007
The White House fears that the former secretary of state will finally
tell the truth about planning for the Iraq war.
By Sidney Blumenthal
....................................................................................................
As Gen. David Petraeus prepares to deliver his report in September on
the "surge" in Iraq, he is elevated into the ultimate reliable source,
just as former Secretary of State Colin Powell's sterling reputation
was exploited for his delivery of the case for invasion before the
United Nations Security Council on Feb. 5, 2003, a date that will live
in mendacity, for every statement he made was later revealed to be
false;
Powell regretted publicly that it was an everlasting "blot" on his
good name.
Meanwhile, during the dog days of August, the president's aides are
preparing the fall public relations campaign to envelop Petraeus'
report.
On cue, neoconservative organs spew out good news of "progress on the
ground" and thrash critics as "defeatist."
"Defeatists in Retreat" trumpets William Kristol's latest screed in
the Weekly Standard, repackaging old themes once again.
Behind the display of bravado, the West Wing is seized with anxiety.
Any rustle in the brush, any sudden noise, upsets the president's
aides.
As they try to regain their composure and confidence, recalling the
glory days when they constituted themselves as the White House Iraq
Group, or WHIG, a P.R. juggernaut before the invasion, they know who
and what they have buried along the way and fear their return.
The release of a documentary on the administration's failures in Iraq,
"No End in Sight," directed by Charles Ferguson, has the White House
spooked.
Bush's aides are not worried because the film is brilliantly shot and
edited, or because it is compelling, but because of what -- or whose
appearance -- it might augur to upset their September rollout.
The film features three former administration officials speaking on
camera as unreserved critics of prewar and postwar planning:
Powell's former chief of staff, Col. Lawrence Wilkerson;
Powell's former deputy secretary of state, Richard Armitage;
and former U.S. ambassador Barbara Bodine, a senior member of the
Office of Reconstruction and Humanitarian Assistance in Iraq, closely
aligned with Powell.
Wilkerson and Bodine have spoken out before.
But Armitage's debut in particular has the White House fuming and
fretting that it somehow signals Powell's emergence as a full-throated
critic in the middle of the September P.R. offensive.
National Security Advisor Stephen Hadley, according to sources close
to him, has voiced anger and concern about whether Powell will step
forward and what he might say, and other presidential aides are
wondering how to cope with that nightmarish possibility.
Two months ago, Powell declared the surge a near-certain failure.
On June 10, on NBC's "Meet the Press," he declared, "The current
strategy to deal with it, called a surge -- the military surge, our
part of the surge under General Petraeus -- the only thing it can do
is put a heavier lid on this boiling pot of civil war stew ... And so
General Petraeus is moving ahead with his part of it, but he's the one
who's been saying all along there is no military solution to this
problem. The solution has to emerge from the other two legs, the Iraqi
political actions and reconciliation, and building up the Iraqi
security and police forces. And those two legs are not -- are not
going well. That part of strategy is not going well."
Hadley and others are taking Powell's early skepticism toward the
surge and willingness to express it as a potential sign that he will
swoop down on them just after Petraeus asks for more forbearance for
the president's policy.
Powell is the White House's ticking-time-bomb scenario.
He was Petraeus before Petraeus, the good soldier before the good
soldier, window-dressing before window-dressing.
The White House aides' fear of Powell reflects their guilt, if not
their stricken consciences, over his disposal.
Powell was used, ruined and tossed overboard.
His warnings were ignored, his loyalty was abused, and when he no
longer served Bush's purposes he was unceremoniously discarded.
Throughout the excruciating years of his slow destruction, no one
served Powell less ably than Powell.
To the degree that his abusers and tormentors may be haunted, he is
more haunted.
Powell's aides are now on the front line of criticism against the
administration, while he obviously simmers, pretending to be happily
retired.
He travels the country delivering motivational speeches, a theater of
make-believe, as though he were the same Colin Powell as before Bush.
While he preaches his secrets of success, he can see the
neoconservative architects of failure in Iraq who demonized him
distributed among the leading Republican candidates for president.
There is not one among them who does not boast neocon dominance of his
foreign policy circle.
Powell's absence cedes the political terrain to those who ousted him
from office.
Notwithstanding his tarnished reputation, he has a final chance to
regain his dignity and at least some of his previous standing by
stepping forward at the crucial hour.
Does he accept his marginalization as permanent?
He is Banquo's ghost, but will he make an appearance at Bush's
banquet?
Hadley and Co. worry that Powell may be secretly writing a memoir that
would expose their hidden history, though Powell has said he will not
produce a sequel to his inspirational autobiography.
One of the most significant stories for which Powell would be an ideal
narrator is his own mistreatment and misjudgments.
Were Powell to decide to stop serving his false friends and instead to
serve history, or if he were to decide simply to serve the truth
before Bush perpetrates more damage, he would have to start at the
beginning.
When did he realize that as secretary of state he was not the
principal foreign policy advisor to the president?
Was it when he was appointed in December 2000 as secretary-designate?
Being an experienced bureaucrat at the most senior levels of
government, having been national security advisor and chairman of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff, why did he not make common cause with Brent
Scowcroft and other experienced senior personnel with whom he had long
relationships to get an alternative point of view to a president whose
only policy choices were being filtered through ***** Cheney's neocon
structure?
As chairman of the President's Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board,
Scowcroft was politically isolated, forced to speak out occasionally
in Op-Ed pieces and interviews.
When Scowcroft published his Op-Ed in the Wall Street Journal on Aug.
15, 2002, "Don't Attack Saddam," where was Powell and what did he say
to Scowcroft?
Why did Powell not join Scowcroft in expressing concern about the
rehabilitation of Iran-Contra convicted felon Elliott Abrams,
appointed on June 1, 2001, as special assistant to the president and
senior director on the National Security Council for Near East and
North African Affairs.
And why did Powell make no effort to block Cheney's neocon takeover of
the administration?
On Oct. 5, 2004, two weeks before he was ousted by Bush as chairman of
the President's Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board, Scowcroft
objected to Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's advisor Dov
Weisglass' statement in favor of freezing the Oslo peace process.
Why didn't Powell step in to help Scowcroft against Abrams'
manipulation of information flowing to the president about what
Weisglass was saying?
Was Powell aware that Abrams was working with Weisglass?
Powell watched as the neocons filled strategic positions throughout
the administration.
Why did he agree to the appointment of John Bolton as undersecretary
for arms control and international security on May 11, 2001, and keep
him on instead of firing him for reporting to Cheney rather than to
him?
Why did he permit Bolton to hire neocon David Wurmser as a special
advisor?
On Sept. 17, 2001, one week after 9/11, Bush signed a "top secret"
document to begin planning the invasion of Iraq.
Powell was later reported to have said at meetings at the time, "Jeez,
what a fixation about Iraq."
In April 2002, Bush advised Condoleezza Rice that he was prepared to
move against Saddam.
Did he advise Powell?
When did Powell learn what Bush had told Rice?
Was he cut out?
In February 2003, Cheney, Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld and
Gen. Richard Meyers briefed Saudi ambassador Prince Bandar on the Iraq
war plans.
Had they already briefed Powell?
If he was cut out, what did he do subsequently?
On May 16, 2004, Powell stated on "Meet the Press" that his Feb. 5,
2003, presentation before the United Nations Security Council on
weapons of mass destruction was inaccurate.
When he agreed to make the administration's case, why did he take only
two personal staffers (Col. Wilkerson and executive assistant Craig
Kelly) to the CIA to review what Cheney, Scooter Libby and Paul
Wolfowitz had prepared and/or distorted, instead of bringing
knowledgeable members of his own intelligence service, the State
Department Intelligence and Research Bureau (INR), to protect him?
On Feb. 5, 2004, I quoted Greg Thielman, former director of the
Strategic, Proliferation and Military Affairs Office of INR, in Salon:
"He didn't have anyone from INR near him. Powell didn't want to know
what was true or not. He wanted to sell a rotten fish. At some point,
Powell decided there was no way to avoid war. His job was to go to war
with as much legitimacy as we could scrape up."
Why did Powell cut out his own people to his own ultimate detriment?
The documentary "No End in Sight" depicts the creation of the
multivolume "Future of Iraq" study prepared by Powell's State
Department staff for the reconstruction of Iraq after the war.
When Rumsfeld and Deputy Secretary of Defense Wolfowitz rejected the
study and blackballed Powell's staff, what did he do to counter them,
if anything?
Eventually, history will answer these questions.
But in September, Bush will attempt to impose his endgame for Iraq, a
continuation of his policy, until he hands off the disaster to his
successor.
Petraeus is Bush's agent, just as Powell had been.
Bush and his White House dread the "mockery" of Powell's "horrible
shadow."
If Powell remains silent in September it will be his last act of
acquiescence as a spectral being.
____________________________________________
Harry
.
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| User: "Harry Dope" |
|
| Title: Re: Republican White House fears Colin Powell will finally tell the truth |
09 Aug 2007 08:27:23 AM |
|
|
Oh boy folks, the democrats are getting desperate.
--
Eight years before 9/11, on Feb. 26, 1993, Osama bin Laden and his al-Qaida
terrorist network declared war against the United States with a deadly
attack on the World Trade Center. Al-Qaida continued to wage war on the U.S.
throughout the Clinton administration, attacking Khobar Towers in 1996, two
U.S. embassies in East Africa in 1998, and the U.S.S. Cole in 2000.
"Harry Hope" <rivrvu@ix.netcom.com> wrote in message
news:2d4mb3t2m4v2l8334c1ms2sfufth25u31m@4ax.com...
Powell is the White House's ticking-time-bomb scenario.
http://www.salon.com/opinion/blumenthal/2007/08/09/iraq_powell/
Aug. 9, 2007
The White House fears that the former secretary of state will finally
tell the truth about planning for the Iraq war.
By Sidney Blumenthal
...................................................................................................
As Gen. David Petraeus prepares to deliver his report in September on
the "surge" in Iraq, he is elevated into the ultimate reliable source,
just as former Secretary of State Colin Powell's sterling reputation
was exploited for his delivery of the case for invasion before the
United Nations Security Council on Feb. 5, 2003, a date that will live
in mendacity, for every statement he made was later revealed to be
false;
Powell regretted publicly that it was an everlasting "blot" on his
good name.
Meanwhile, during the dog days of August, the president's aides are
preparing the fall public relations campaign to envelop Petraeus'
report.
On cue, neoconservative organs spew out good news of "progress on the
ground" and thrash critics as "defeatist."
"Defeatists in Retreat" trumpets William Kristol's latest screed in
the Weekly Standard, repackaging old themes once again.
Behind the display of bravado, the West Wing is seized with anxiety.
Any rustle in the brush, any sudden noise, upsets the president's
aides.
As they try to regain their composure and confidence, recalling the
glory days when they constituted themselves as the White House Iraq
Group, or WHIG, a P.R. juggernaut before the invasion, they know who
and what they have buried along the way and fear their return.
The release of a documentary on the administration's failures in Iraq,
"No End in Sight," directed by Charles Ferguson, has the White House
spooked.
Bush's aides are not worried because the film is brilliantly shot and
edited, or because it is compelling, but because of what -- or whose
appearance -- it might augur to upset their September rollout.
The film features three former administration officials speaking on
camera as unreserved critics of prewar and postwar planning:
Powell's former chief of staff, Col. Lawrence Wilkerson;
Powell's former deputy secretary of state, Richard Armitage;
and former U.S. ambassador Barbara Bodine, a senior member of the
Office of Reconstruction and Humanitarian Assistance in Iraq, closely
aligned with Powell.
Wilkerson and Bodine have spoken out before.
But Armitage's debut in particular has the White House fuming and
fretting that it somehow signals Powell's emergence as a full-throated
critic in the middle of the September P.R. offensive.
National Security Advisor Stephen Hadley, according to sources close
to him, has voiced anger and concern about whether Powell will step
forward and what he might say, and other presidential aides are
wondering how to cope with that nightmarish possibility.
Two months ago, Powell declared the surge a near-certain failure.
On June 10, on NBC's "Meet the Press," he declared, "The current
strategy to deal with it, called a surge -- the military surge, our
part of the surge under General Petraeus -- the only thing it can do
is put a heavier lid on this boiling pot of civil war stew ... And so
General Petraeus is moving ahead with his part of it, but he's the one
who's been saying all along there is no military solution to this
problem. The solution has to emerge from the other two legs, the Iraqi
political actions and reconciliation, and building up the Iraqi
security and police forces. And those two legs are not -- are not
going well. That part of strategy is not going well."
Hadley and others are taking Powell's early skepticism toward the
surge and willingness to express it as a potential sign that he will
swoop down on them just after Petraeus asks for more forbearance for
the president's policy.
Powell is the White House's ticking-time-bomb scenario.
He was Petraeus before Petraeus, the good soldier before the good
soldier, window-dressing before window-dressing.
The White House aides' fear of Powell reflects their guilt, if not
their stricken consciences, over his disposal.
Powell was used, ruined and tossed overboard.
His warnings were ignored, his loyalty was abused, and when he no
longer served Bush's purposes he was unceremoniously discarded.
Throughout the excruciating years of his slow destruction, no one
served Powell less ably than Powell.
To the degree that his abusers and tormentors may be haunted, he is
more haunted.
Powell's aides are now on the front line of criticism against the
administration, while he obviously simmers, pretending to be happily
retired.
He travels the country delivering motivational speeches, a theater of
make-believe, as though he were the same Colin Powell as before Bush.
While he preaches his secrets of success, he can see the
neoconservative architects of failure in Iraq who demonized him
distributed among the leading Republican candidates for president.
There is not one among them who does not boast neocon dominance of his
foreign policy circle.
Powell's absence cedes the political terrain to those who ousted him
from office.
Notwithstanding his tarnished reputation, he has a final chance to
regain his dignity and at least some of his previous standing by
stepping forward at the crucial hour.
Does he accept his marginalization as permanent?
He is Banquo's ghost, but will he make an appearance at Bush's
banquet?
Hadley and Co. worry that Powell may be secretly writing a memoir that
would expose their hidden history, though Powell has said he will not
produce a sequel to his inspirational autobiography.
One of the most significant stories for which Powell would be an ideal
narrator is his own mistreatment and misjudgments.
Were Powell to decide to stop serving his false friends and instead to
serve history, or if he were to decide simply to serve the truth
before Bush perpetrates more damage, he would have to start at the
beginning.
When did he realize that as secretary of state he was not the
principal foreign policy advisor to the president?
Was it when he was appointed in December 2000 as secretary-designate?
Being an experienced bureaucrat at the most senior levels of
government, having been national security advisor and chairman of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff, why did he not make common cause with Brent
Scowcroft and other experienced senior personnel with whom he had long
relationships to get an alternative point of view to a president whose
only policy choices were being filtered through ***** Cheney's neocon
structure?
As chairman of the President's Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board,
Scowcroft was politically isolated, forced to speak out occasionally
in Op-Ed pieces and interviews.
When Scowcroft published his Op-Ed in the Wall Street Journal on Aug.
15, 2002, "Don't Attack Saddam," where was Powell and what did he say
to Scowcroft?
Why did Powell not join Scowcroft in expressing concern about the
rehabilitation of Iran-Contra convicted felon Elliott Abrams,
appointed on June 1, 2001, as special assistant to the president and
senior director on the National Security Council for Near East and
North African Affairs.
And why did Powell make no effort to block Cheney's neocon takeover of
the administration?
On Oct. 5, 2004, two weeks before he was ousted by Bush as chairman of
the President's Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board, Scowcroft
objected to Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's advisor Dov
Weisglass' statement in favor of freezing the Oslo peace process.
Why didn't Powell step in to help Scowcroft against Abrams'
manipulation of information flowing to the president about what
Weisglass was saying?
Was Powell aware that Abrams was working with Weisglass?
Powell watched as the neocons filled strategic positions throughout
the administration.
Why did he agree to the appointment of John Bolton as undersecretary
for arms control and international security on May 11, 2001, and keep
him on instead of firing him for reporting to Cheney rather than to
him?
Why did he permit Bolton to hire neocon David Wurmser as a special
advisor?
On Sept. 17, 2001, one week after 9/11, Bush signed a "top secret"
document to begin planning the invasion of Iraq.
Powell was later reported to have said at meetings at the time, "Jeez,
what a fixation about Iraq."
In April 2002, Bush advised Condoleezza Rice that he was prepared to
move against Saddam.
Did he advise Powell?
When did Powell learn what Bush had told Rice?
Was he cut out?
In February 2003, Cheney, Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld and
Gen. Richard Meyers briefed Saudi ambassador Prince Bandar on the Iraq
war plans.
Had they already briefed Powell?
If he was cut out, what did he do subsequently?
On May 16, 2004, Powell stated on "Meet the Press" that his Feb. 5,
2003, presentation before the United Nations Security Council on
weapons of mass destruction was inaccurate.
When he agreed to make the administration's case, why did he take only
two personal staffers (Col. Wilkerson and executive assistant Craig
Kelly) to the CIA to review what Cheney, Scooter Libby and Paul
Wolfowitz had prepared and/or distorted, instead of bringing
knowledgeable members of his own intelligence service, the State
Department Intelligence and Research Bureau (INR), to protect him?
On Feb. 5, 2004, I quoted Greg Thielman, former director of the
Strategic, Proliferation and Military Affairs Office of INR, in Salon:
"He didn't have anyone from INR near him. Powell didn't want to know
what was true or not. He wanted to sell a rotten fish. At some point,
Powell decided there was no way to avoid war. His job was to go to war
with as much legitimacy as we could scrape up."
Why did Powell cut out his own people to his own ultimate detriment?
The documentary "No End in Sight" depicts the creation of the
multivolume "Future of Iraq" study prepared by Powell's State
Department staff for the reconstruction of Iraq after the war.
When Rumsfeld and Deputy Secretary of Defense Wolfowitz rejected the
study and blackballed Powell's staff, what did he do to counter them,
if anything?
Eventually, history will answer these questions.
But in September, Bush will attempt to impose his endgame for Iraq, a
continuation of his policy, until he hands off the disaster to his
successor.
Petraeus is Bush's agent, just as Powell had been.
Bush and his White House dread the "mockery" of Powell's "horrible
shadow."
If Powell remains silent in September it will be his last act of
acquiescence as a spectral being.
____________________________________________
Harry
.
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| User: "Winston Smith, American Patriot" |
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| Title: Re: Republican White House fears Colin Powell will finally tell the truth |
09 Aug 2007 08:37:45 PM |
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"Harry Dope" <HHHA@aol.com> wrote in alt.politics.bush:
Oh boy folks, the democrats are getting desperate.
The Democrats are smart not to impeach Gonzales, Bush, or President Cheney.
They will be Barack's, Hillary's, John's and Dennis' campaign ads all the
way to November.
You can get no better endorsement for the Democrats controlling the
government for the next 40 years than corrupt Republicans staying right
where they are: as a gaping, inflamed, oozing sore representing the filth
of government.
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| User: "SO WHAT?" |
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| Title: Re: Republican White House fears Colin Powell will finally tell the truth |
09 Aug 2007 08:59:37 AM |
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"Harry Dope" <HHHA@aol.com> wrote in message
news:46bb165e$0$29691$4c368faf@roadrunner.com...
Oh boy folks, the democrats are getting desperate.
The sweat flop from the Bush Nazis is powering Fox News' generators.
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| User: "Bokonon" |
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| Title: Re: Republican White House fears Colin Powell will finally tell the truth |
09 Aug 2007 04:57:52 PM |
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"Harry Dope" <HHHA@aol.com> wrote in message
news:46bb165e$0$29691$4c368faf@roadrunner.com...
Oh boy folks, the democrats are getting desperate.
Yeah, that huge surge in the popularity of Republicans must be really
frightening them.
LOL.
Damn, you unAmerican terrorist-loving right-wing radicals sure are some
stupid motherfuckers. Thank God you and your twisted amoral sociopathic
values represent such a small minority in this country and are far, far from
the mainstream so that traitors like you can never ever again gain political
power in this country.
--
"History! Read it and weep!"
-Bokonon
_______________________________________________
When your only tool is a hammer, everything looks like a nail.
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| User: "ThePhisherKIng Locker@BusStation" |
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| Title: Re: Republican White House fears Colin Powell will finally tell the truth |
09 Aug 2007 09:25:19 AM |
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"Harry Dope" <HHHA@aol.com> wrote in news:46bb165e$0$29691
$4c368faf@roadrunner.com:
Oh boy folks, the democrats are getting desperate.
Umm, perhaps you can explain how so. Looks to me like Bush is going to
justifiably get his ***** reamed by is own guys. HeeHee.
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| User: "Peacenik" |
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| Title: Re: Republican White House fears Colin Powell will finally tell the truth |
10 Aug 2007 11:42:28 PM |
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"Harry Hope" <rivrvu@ix.netcom.com> wrote in message
news:2d4mb3t2m4v2l8334c1ms2sfufth25u31m@4ax.com...
Powell is the White House's ticking-time-bomb scenario.
http://www.salon.com/opinion/blumenthal/2007/08/09/iraq_powell/
Aug. 9, 2007
The White House fears that the former secretary of state will finally
tell the truth about planning for the Iraq war.
Thre's nothing the Bushies fear more than the truth.
--
Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com
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| User: "Baldin Lee Pramer" |
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| Title: Re: Republican White House fears Colin Powell will finally tell the truth |
09 Aug 2007 08:54:02 PM |
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On Aug 9, 7:07 am, Harry Hope <riv...@ix.netcom.com> wrote:
Powell is the White House's ticking-time-bomb scenario.
http://www.salon.com/opinion/blumenthal/2007/08/09/iraq_powell/
Aug. 9, 2007
The White House fears that the former secretary of state will finally
tell the truth about planning for the Iraq war.
Time for a little call to G. Gordon Liddy. He probably still has some
contacts...
BLP
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