'No President has lied so baldly and so often and so demonstrably'

Even the American intelligence community is up in arms about the deception and lies of this administration. An administration which lies and cheats all the time.

‘No President has lied so baldly and so often and so demonstrably’](http://news.independent.co.uk/world/americas/story.jsp?story=461946)

“The intelligence process is a bit like virginity,” says Ray McGovern, who worked as a CIA analyst for 27 years. "Once you prostitute it, it’s never the same. Your credibility never recovers.

“Watching what has happened with Iraq over the past several months has been like watching your daughter being raped.”

Such is an indication of the extraordinary depth of feeling within the US intelligence community as the Bush administration’s basis for the war in Iraq - the weapons of mass destruction, the dark hint of links between Saddam Hussein and al-Qa’ida - has been shown to have been built on air.

Mr McGovern worked near the very top of his profession, giving direct advice to Henry Kissinger during the Nixon era and preparing the President’s daily security brief for Ronald Reagan. Now he is co-founder of a group of former CIA employees called Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity, or Vips for short.

What the Bush White House has done, he believes, is far worse than the false premise that dragged the United States into the Vietnam War - a reported second attack on a US destroyer in the Gulf of Tonkin which later turned out not to have taken place. “The Gulf of Tonkin was a spur-of-the-moment thing, and Lyndon Johnson seized on that. That’s very different from the very calculated, 18-month, orchestrated, incredibly cynical campaign of lies that we’ve seen to justify a war. This is an order of magnitude different. It’s so blatant.”

Mr McGovern accuses Mr Bush of an extraordinary act of chutzpah - taking advantage of his authority as President of the United States to make people believe there must be something to his insistent allegations that Iraq possessed potentially devastating weaponry.

"Many of us felt there had to be something there … If this had been another country, one would have written a convincing analysis that this guy is lying through his teeth, that there are no weapons in Iraq. But people thought, the President can’t say he knows something if he doesn’t. That was persuasive, in a way.

“Now we know that no other President of the United States has ever lied so baldly and so often and so demonstrably … The presumption now has to be that he’s lying any time that he’s saying anything.”

It will, Mr McGovern believes, take a change of president and a change of CIA director to even begin to repair the damage done by what he sees as an overt politicisation of the intelligence business. But even that may not be enough.

“Unless what has happened in the past year and a half is recognised as a scandal, in which the CIA has been badly abused, then there’s no hope,” he said. “I pin my hopes mostly on the press these days. Turns out, surprise surprise, that even the US press doesn’t like to be lied to.”

Case for war confected, say top US officials](http://news.independent.co.uk/world/americas/story.jsp?story=461953)

An unprecedented array of US intelligence professionals, diplomats and former Pentagon officials have gone on record to lambast the Bush administration for its distortion of the case for war against Iraq. In their view, the very foundations of intelligence-gathering have been damaged in ways that could take years, even decades, to repair.

A new documentary film beginning to circulate in the United States features one powerful condemnation after another, from the sort of people who usually stay discreetly in the shadows - a former director of the CIA, two former assistant secretaries of defence, a former ambassador to Saudi Arabia and even the man who served as President Bush’s Secretary of the Army until just a few months ago.

Between them, the two dozen interviewees reveal how the pre-war intelligence record on Iraq showed virtually the opposite of the picture the administration painted to Congress, to US voters and to the world. They also reconstruct the way senior White House officials - notably Vice-President Dick Cheney - leaned on the CIA to find evidence that would fit a preordained set of conclusions.

“There was never a clear and present danger. There was never an imminent threat. Iraq - and we have very good intelligence on this - was never part of the picture of terrorism,” says Mel Goodman, a veteran CIA analyst who now teaches at the National War College.

The case for accusing Saddam Hussein of concealing weapons of mass destruction was, in the words of the veteran CIA operative Robert Baer, largely achieved through “data mining” - going back over old information and trying to wrest new conclusions from it. The agenda, according to George Bush Senior’s ambassador to Saudi Arabia, Chas Freeman, was both highly political and profoundly misguided.

“The theory that you can bludgeon political grievances out of existence doesn’t have much of a track record,” he says, “so essentially we have been neo-conned into applying a school of thought about foreign affairs that has failed everywhere it has been tried.”

The hour-long film - entitled Uncovered: The Whole Truth About the Iraq War - was put together by Robert Greenwald, a veteran TV producer in the forefront of Hollywood’s anti-war movement who never suspected, when he started out, that so many establishment figures would stand up and be counted.

“My attitude was, wow, CIA people, I thought these were the bad guys,” Mr Greenwald said. “Not everyone agreed on everything. Not everyone was against the war itself. But there was a universally shared opinion that we had been misled about the reasons for the war.”

Although many elements in the film are not necessarily new - the forged document on uranium sales from Niger to Iraq, the aluminium tubes falsely assumed to be parts for nuclear weapons, the satellite images of “mobile biolabs” that turned out to be hydrogen compression facilities, the “decontamination vehicles” that were in fact fire engines - what emerges is a striking sense of professional betrayal in the intelligence community.

As the former CIA analyst Ray McGovern argues with particular force, the traditional role of the CIA has been to act as a scrupulously accurate source of information and analysis for presidents pondering grave international decisions. That role, he said, had now been “prostituted” and the CIA may never be the same. “Where is Bush going to turn to now? Where is his reliable source of information now Iraq is spinning out of control? He’s frittered that away,” Mr McGovern said. “And the profound indignity is that he probably doesn’t even realise it.”

The starting point for the tarnishing of the CIA was a speech by Vice-President Cheney on 26 August 2002, in which he told the Veterans of Foreign Wars in Nashville that Saddam was reconstituting his nuclear weapons programme and was thus threatening to inflict “death on a massive scale - in his own region or beyond”.

According to numerous sources, Mr Cheney followed up his speech with a series of highly unorthodox visits to CIA headquarters in Langley, Virginia, in which he badgered low-level analysts to come up with information to substantiate the extremely alarming - but entirely bogus - contents of his speech.

By early September, intelligence experts in Congress were clamouring for a so-called National Intelligence Estimate, a full rundown of everything known about Iraq’s weapons programmes. Usually NIEs take months to produce, but George Tenet, the CIA director, came up with a 100-page document in just three weeks.

The man he picked to write it, the weapons expert Robert Walpole, had a track record of going back over old intelligence assessments and reworking them in accordance with the wishes of a specific political interest group. In 1998, he had come up with an estimate of the missile capabilities of various rogue states that managed to sound considerably more alarming than a previous CIA estimate issued three years earlier. On that occasion, he was acting at the behest of a congressional commission anxious to make the case for a missile defence system; the commission chairman was none other than Donald Rumsfeld, now Secretary of Defence and a key architect of the Iraq war.

Mr Walpole’s NIE on Iraq threw together all the elements that have now been discredited - Niger, the alumin- ium tubes, and so on. It also gave the misleading impression that intelligence analysts were in broad agreement about the Iraqi threat, relegating most of the doubts and misgivings to footnotes and appendices.

By the time parts of the NIE were made public, even those few qualifications were excised. When President Bush’s speechwriters got to work - starting with the address to Congress on 7 October that led to a resolution authorising the use of force against Iraq - the language became even stronger.

Mr Tenet fact-checked the 7 October speech, and seems to have played a major role in every subsequent policy address, including Colin Powell’s powerful presentation to the United Nations Security Council on 5 February. Of that pivotal speech, Mr McGovern says in the film: “It was a masterful performance, but none of it was true.”

The Bush Adminstration tried to mislead the entire world by using lies about WMD as their basis for going to war against Iraq.

Bush ‘Lied About Saddams Threat’](http://www.dailyrecord.co.uk/news/news/page.cfm?objectid=13796958&method=full&siteid=89488) Daily Record, Scotland Edit URL

PRESIDENT George Bush yesterday stood accused of duping Americans into supporting war against Iraq. A report said the White House ‘‘systematically misrepresented’’ the threat from Saddam.

& Bush Admits Misleading on WMD](http://www.axisoflogic.com/artman/publish/article_4853.shtml) Axis of Logic 27 Jan 04

Less than a year after declaring there was “no doubt the Iraqi regime continues to possess the most lethal weapons ever devised,” President Bush and the White House began to openly “back away from its WMD assertions today.” The New York Times reported, “White House officials are no longer asserting that stockpiles of banned weapons would eventually be found” after their weapons inspector, David Kay said he “doesn’t think [WMD] existed” after the 1991 Gulf War. Full Article

'No President has lied so baldly and so often and so demonstrably'

baldly? boldly? badly?

he's been caught with rogain, he's toast.

Monkey and his mini me blair are shamless scums... Even now they repeat the same sh!t.

“I think the intelligence community owes the president [an apology] rather than the president owing the American people.”

:rotfl: That is just too amusing.

NEW YORK In the wake of the latest revelations from weapons inspector David Kay, many of the largest U.S. newspapers are belatedly pressing the Bush administration for an explanation of how it could have gotten the question of weapons of mass destruction in Iraq so wrong in the march to war last year. A growing number are raising the possibility that Bush and his team may have “cooked” the intelligence to support their case for war.

**Editorials Question Bush’s Role in ‘Cooking’ Up a War **](http://209.11.49.220/eandp/news/article_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=2077477) Editor & Publisher, 28 Jan 04

*The Atlanta Journal-Constitution (Click for QuikCap) also stated that while intelligence was faulty, "the evidence also seems overwhelming that the Bush administration pushed existing evidence well beyond its breaking point, exaggerating threats and claiming specific knowledge of Iraqi WMD where in reality no such knowledge existed." The paper also came down hard on the administration for linking Saddam Hussein directly to al Qaeda -- which was in opposition to intelligence reports.
*

Good to see large sections of the American press now finally taking Bush the liar to task.

Excerpt says it all… The CIA told the Bushiites back in 2002 before Bush invaded Iraq that the “intelligence” provided by untrustworthy Iraqi exiles was garbage, and yet the neocons took said garbage and sold it to the American people as evidence of Saddam’s wickedness.

Calling Bush to Account for Neo-Con Lies](http://progressivetrail.org/articles/040131Nimmo.shtml) Progressive Trail 03 Feb 02

by Kurt Nimmo Published by Another Day in the Empire

Like the main character in Christopher Nolan’s noir film Memento, members of the House and Senate intelligence committees seem to have lost their short-term memory. They can’t remember who exactly pedaled Bush’s lies about Saddam’s illusory weapons of mass destruction. They recall Iraq had WMD at one time, although they say nothing about who provided those weapons (the US government did).

Looking around for scapegoats to cover Bush’s calculated lies, or rather the calculated lies of his neocon advisors – Bush only repeats what these advisors tell him – members of the intelligence committees are determined to blame the CIA for “bad intelligence,” for the absurd contrivances repeated by the president. …

The CIA and the spooks are the fall guys for this President, who rather pathetically wants people to believe that he invaded a foreign country and killed 10,000 civilians on the basis of "faulty" intelligence.

*The question now is whether this administration will get by with yet more lies. *

In a Tight Spot on Iraq, Bushies Just Lie](http://www.commondreams.org/views04/0209-06.htm) Common Dreams 09 Feb 04

Don’t look now, but you’re about to see this administration pull another fast one on an all too gullible American public. Now that the claims about Saddam Hussein’s weapons of mass destruction and his supposed ties to al-Qaida have been debunked, George Bush’s cadre of handlers has come up with another idea: It wasn’t our fault, it was the CIA’s.That’s the message that Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld, Wolfowitz and the devious Karl Rove will try to drive home as the nation gets close to next fall’s presidential election.

David Kay, the U.S. weapons inspector who had been hand-picked by the Bush team to find those weapons of mass destruction, got this strategy rolling when he testified before Congress a few days ago. **That was when he made the dramatic announcement that not only are there no weapons of mass destruction there now, they were most likely destroyed a decade ago, if not by the first Iraq war, then by the bombing raids carried out by the Clinton administration. “We were all wrong,” he remarked, but then quickly added that it wasn’t the president’s fault, but the nation’s intelligence apparatus that gave him faulty information. **

That was the cue for the Bushies to announce the president had now shifted his position on weapons of mass destruction and was appointing an independent commission to take a thorough look at the country’s intelligence agencies. Oh, and by the way, it won’t report back until after the November elections.

What the administration hopes is that this tactic will divert attention from long-running accounts detailing how the Bush people demanded that the CIA and other intelligence sources give them information that could be used to make the case to attack Iraq. Last fall, in fact, acclaimed journalist Seymour Hersh detailed in the New Yorker how Cheney and Rumsfeld set up an independent intelligence unit in the Pentagon that would serve as a place where the “right” intelligence reports would be funneled to the White House.

[QUOTE]
*Originally posted by Malik73: *
The CIA and the spooks are the fall guys for this President, who rather pathetically wants people to believe that he invaded a foreign country and killed 10,000 civilians on the basis of "faulty" intelligence.
[/QUOTE]

Is pic worth a 1000 words.

[thumb=E]oil6846_9395812.JPG[/thumb]

[QUOTE]
*Originally posted by Abdali: *

Is pic worth a 1000 words.

[thumb=E]oil6846_9395812.JPG[/thumb]
[/QUOTE]

Quite telling, and very tragic.

This is now all about a lying deceitful Adminstration trying every trick up its sleeve in order to defend its claims about WMD in Iraq!

Bush still not coming clean on Iraq](http://www.suntimes.com/output/jesse/cst-edt-jesse10.html) Chicago Sun Times 10 Feb04

President Bush went on ‘‘Meet the Press’’ to explain his policies in light of a continuing bloody and costly occupation in Iraq and a jobless recovery at home. He made his case largely without interruption from the respectful interviewer. But he once more misled the American people and gave them every reason to question his leadership.

The president’s major theme is that he is a ‘‘wartime president.’’ He used the word ‘‘war’’ more than 30 times in the interview, turning the horrors of Sept. 11 from a call to action to a catchall excuse: for a bad call on Iraq, for a bad economy, for a record budget deficit, for racking up unprecedented national debt. On the war, the president persists in misleading the American people. He admitted, grudgingly, that his inspectors couldn’t find weapons of mass destruction in Iraq. But he insisted that rushing to war was justified anyway. After all, Saddam Hussein was a ‘‘madman,’’ a ‘‘grave and gathering threat,’’ and America’s defense could not be based on ‘‘trusting’’ him.

But that is a shameful distortion of the choice the president faced. Saddam wasn’t a ‘‘grave and gathering threat.’’ He was, as United Nations inspectors had reported at the time, a diminishing and minor threat. Contrary to the president’s claims at the time, he had no active nuclear weapons program, no weapon that could even reach these shores. The president claimed that he relied on the intelligence he had, but, contrary to what Bush said on Sunday, the CIA had reported that Saddam was hostile to the Sept. 11 terrorists, and wasn’t about to give them weapons except if he faced ruin upon a U.S. invasion.

Moreover, the choice wasn’t to ‘‘trust Hussein’’ and do nothing or invade alone. U.N. inspectors were on the ground and pleading for more time, having discovered nothing. Iraq was under sanctions, export-import controls, air occupation and constant monitoring. Saddam’s weapons capacity had been dismantled by U.N. inspections over the course of a decade. Bush says containment doesn’t work with a madman, but containment, sanctions, inspections and air occupation had worked for more than a decade and had dismantled Saddam’s arsenal.

There was no imminent threat. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld lied when he said, ‘‘We know where the weapons are.’’ Bush, Vice President Dick Cheney, National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice and Secretary of State Colin Powell distorted and hyped the intelligence reports, alarming Americans with warnings about a ‘‘mushroom cloud’’ over America. We had time to build an international consensus for continued intensive inspection – which Saddam was allowing – or on the need to topple Saddam for defying the international community.

*Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld lied when he said, ''We know where the weapons are.'' *

Maybe he was remembering the period in the 1980's when he was shaking hands and dining with Saddam, at a time when that dictator was using such weapons?

[QUOTE]
Originally posted by Malik73: *
**Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld lied when he said, ''We know where the weapons are.'' *

[/QUOTE]

He was talking about his ass or was he talking through his ass

Lying Us Into War: Exposing Bush and His “Techniques of Deceit”](Exposing Bush and His "Techniques of Deceit" | Scoop News) Scoop, New Zealand. By Dennis Hans

President George W. Bush and his foreign-policy team have systematically and knowingly deceived the American people in order to gain support for an unprovoked attack on Iraq. Before I catalog the Bush administration’s “Techniques of Deceit,” let me acknowledge that no U.N. resolution requires the president to be honest with the American people. The fine print of Resolution 1441 imposes no obligation to treat Americans as citizens to be informed rather than suckers to be conned. He may mislead, distort, suppress, exaggerate and lie to his heart’s content without violating a single sentence in 1441.

So if compliance with 1441 is all that matters to you, read no further. Turn on the TV and tune in Brokaw, Rather, Jennings, Blitzer or Lehrer, to name five of the journalistic imposters who control what you hear and see, who seem psychologically incapable of conceiving of Bush as a liar, and who wouldn’t have the guts to call him one even if they reached that conclusion.

But if you are an American citizen who believes in the bedrock democratic principle of “the informed consent of the governed,” read on.

Lied?

What do you expect from someone with his I.Q.

Bushwhacker obviously believes that Truth means Lie Or Lie means Truth.

Calling Friedman fans… and those who love Rumsfield.

This you gotta see (if you have not already). Click on the link, and then wait till it loads.
**
Caught on Tape**