March 20, 2004

Press Coverage - Clinton vs. Bush

When Clinton was president the press referred to him as "Mr. Clinton". When the press talks about Bush they refer to him as "The President" or - at least "President Bush". They do this even though Clinton won the election by a landslide and Bush lost the election and was appointed president by the Supreme Court.

You see how the bias works? I remember there was a joke going around at the time - it went like this. "The Pope and Clinton were fishing and the Pope's hat blew off. Clinton walked across the water and fetched the Pope's hat. A reporter saw the even and went off to write the story. The headline - CLINTON CAN'T SWIM!"

Posted by marc at 03:48 PM | Comments (2) | TrackBack

Wag the Dog - Bin Laden in 1998

Republicans posing as being "tough on terrorism" seem to have a short memory of what they were saying back when Clinton was going after Bin Laden. Here's what the Republican controlled press (CNN 08/21/1998) was saying about the war on terrorism at the time:

'Wag the Dog' Back In Spotlight

LOS ANGELES (AllPolitics, Aug. 21) -- A president embroiled in a sex scandal in the Oval Office tries to save his presidency by distracting the nation with a made-for-TV war far from American soil in an obscure country.

It's not the latest news out of Washington, but the plot of the movie "Wag the Dog." In the 1997 movie, a shadowy spin doctor played by Robert De Niro recruits a Hollywood producer (Dustin Hoffman) to invent a war against Albania.

The film came out just before the Monica Lewinsky scandal broke -- and no doubt benefited at the box office and then at the video store from the publicity. Now, the film is all the buzz again because of President Clinton's announcement -- three days after admitting for the first time an inappropriate relationship with Ms. Lewinsky -- that he ordered military strikes in two countries.

From the moment Clinton went on live television Thursday to announce the bombings in Afghanistan and Sudan, "Wag the Dog's" producer-director Barry Levinson and producer Jane Rosenthal were inundated with requests for comment.

"The world's media right now are giving the filmmakers far too much credit for being clairvoyant," said their spokesman, Simon Halls. "The filmmakers put together a movie that was entertainment, and it was well received, but that's what it was: entertainment. Anything that is happening in the world today really has nothing to do with the movie."
A reference point

But the movie is serving as a reference point in the debate over Clinton's motivations.

"Look at the movie 'Wag the Dog.' I think this has all the elements of that movie," Rep. Jim Gibbons said. "Our reaction to the embassy bombings should be based on sound credible evidence, not a knee-jerk reaction to try to direct public attention away from his personal problems."

Massachusetts acting Gov. Paul Cellucci, a Republican and a movie buff, said: "It popped into my mind, but I do hope that that's not the situation and I trust that it isn't."

One of the first questions asked of Defense Secretary William Cohen at a nationally televised Pentagon was how he would respond to people who think the military action "bears a striking resemblance to 'Wag the Dog."'

"The only motivation driving this action today was our absolute obligation to protect the American people from terrorist activities," Cohen said. "That is the sole motivation."

The movie's title comes from an old joke, shown in the opening credits of the film: "Why does a dog wag its tail? Because a dog is smarter than its tail. If the tail were smarter, the tail would wag the dog."

--------------------

It makes you wonder - if the Republican press wasn't harassing Clinton about sex and focused on terrorism - would 9-11 have happened? With reporting like this I have to say that the press is partially responsible of 9-11 and the illegal Iraq war.

Posted by marc at 03:39 PM | Comments (2) | TrackBack

Rumsfield wanted to attack Iraq on 09/12/2001

This Yahoo Story tells an amazing tale that should shock all Americans to their core. The day after 9-11 Rumfield wanted to attack Iraq even though he knew Iraq had nothing to do with the attack. Here's the story:

By TED BRIDIS, Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON - Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld almost immediately urged President Bush (news - web sites) to consider bombing Iraq (news - web sites) after the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks on New York and Washington, says a former senior administration counterterrorism aide.

Richard A. Clarke, the White House counterterrorism coordinator at the time, recounts in a forthcoming book details of a meeting the day after the terrorist attacks during which top officials considered the U.S. response. Even then, he said, they were certain that al-Qaida was to blame and there was no hint of Iraqi involvement.

"Rumsfeld was saying we needed to bomb Iraq," Clarke said. "We all said, 'But no, no, al-Qaida is in Afghanistan (news - web sites)."

Clarke, who is expected to testify Tuesday before a federal panel reviewing the attacks, said Rumsfeld complained in the meeting that "there aren't any good targets in Afghanistan and there are lots of good targets in Iraq."

This is amazing. From the very next day the Bush administration saw 9-11 as an opportunity to go after Iraq's oil.

A spokesman for Rumsfeld said he couldn't comment immediately.

Clarke makes the assertion in a book, "Against All Enemies," that goes on sale Monday. He told CBS News he believes the administration sought to link Iraq with the attacks because of long-standing interest in overthrowing Saddam Hussein (news - web sites); Clarke appears Sunday night on the network's "60 Minutes" program.

"I think they wanted to believe that there was a connection" between Iraq and the al-Qaida attacks in the United States, Clarke said in an interview segment that CBS broadcast Friday evening. "There's just no connection. There's absolutely no evidence that Iraq was supporting al-Qaida."

Clarke also criticized President Bush for promoting the administration's efforts against terrorism, accusing top Bush advisers of turning a blind eye to terrorism during the first months of Bush's presidency.

The Associated Press first reported in June 2002 that Bush's national security leadership met formally nearly 100 times in the months prior to the Sept. 11 attacks yet terrorism was the topic during only two of those sessions.

What's clear here is that none of this has anything to do with fighting terrorism. In fact - Bush is completely indifferent to terrorism. He uses it merely as a phrase for political posturing. In fact - terrorism works to Bush's political advantage.

The last of those two meetings occurred Sept. 4 as the security council put finishing touches on a proposed national security policy review for the president. That review was finished Sept. 10 and was awaiting Bush's approval when the first plane struck the World Trade Center.

"Frankly, I find it outrageous that the president is running for re-election on the grounds that he's done such great things about terrorism," Clarke told CBS. "He ignored it. He ignored terrorism for months, when maybe we could have done something."

There have been earlier published accounts of the administration's suspicion during the week after the 2001 attacks that Iraq might have been involved, but none by a direct participant in such senior-level meetings and none that suggested there was a push to attack Iraq so soon afterward.

A discussion among President Bush and Cabinet members at Camp David. Md., on Sept. 16, for example, included remarks about whether it was prudent to attack Iraq after the terror attacks.

Bush told reporter Bob Woodward of The Washington Post that he decided not to heed advice on Iraq by some officials who also had served his father's administration during the first Gulf War (news - web sites).

"One of the things I wasn't going to allow to happen is, that we weren't going to let their previous experience in this theater dictate a rational course for a new war," Bush told Woodward for his 2002 book, "Bush at War." He said discussion later that day "was focused only on Afghanistan."

Clarke retired early in 2003 after 30 years in government service. He was among the longest-serving White House staffers, transferred in 1992 from the State Department to deal with threats from terrorism and narcotics.

Clarke previously led the government's secretive Counterterrorism and Security Group, made up of senior officials from the FBI (news - web sites), CIA (news - web sites), Justice Department (news - web sites) and armed services, who met several times each week to discuss foreign threats.

------------

So - who are the bad guys here?

Saddam is a bad guy. But Saddam had nothing to do with terrorism. Saddam is a brutal dictator who murdered tens of thousands of his own people. But his terrorism was local. And - because he was a dictator - he could keep the Muslims and Kurds from killing each other and he kept real terrorists like Bin Laden out. Saddam and Bin Laden are sworn enemies. Now Bin Laden can bring terror to Iraq without Saddam there to stop him.

Yes - Bin Laden is a bad guy. He's the real enemy - the one who actually was behind 9-11. While Bush was going after Iraq's oil under the pretence of fighting terrorism he turned a blind eye to Bin Laden allowing him to build his power. Bush dragged America into an unjust and unprevoked war and alienated both our alies and enemies and strenthened the real terrorists. America is far weaker today and our enemies are stronger. We are losing the war.

The real enemy is Bush. Bush is far more dangerous to the world than Bin Laden and we are on track for World War 3.

Posted by marc at 03:02 PM | Comments (1) | TrackBack