thaiboxerken
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Sep 17, 2001
- Messages
- 34,592
"misdirection" was practically instantaneous.
People believed it from the start, Bush just fanned the flame and kept mentioning 9/11 when talking about Iraq.
"misdirection" was practically instantaneous.
Zig already buried this lie, Ken. Have a look if you think your worldview can withstand the shock of an actual poll taken on 9/13/01... unless you're saying that the "misdirection" was practically instantaneous.
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showpost.php?p=1626938&postcount=302
Or maybe it was my mind-control abilities which induced him to post a claim which has already been demolished in order to humiliate him. I'm not telling which. People believed it from the start, Bush just fanned the flame and kept mentioning 9/11 when talking about Iraq.
Because the Bush administration used misdirection to lead the majority of the USA population and congress into thinking that Iraq had something to do with the 9/11 attacks
I'm devious like that. I rebutted his claims in this very thread before he even made them. It's my spooky time-traveling ESP.Or maybe it was my mind-control abilities which induced him to post a claim which has already been demolished in order to humiliate him. I'm not telling which.
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More on Rummy's imaginary WMD's
People believed it from the start, Bush just fanned the flame and kept mentioning 9/11 when talking about Iraq.
This thread is titled "Rumsfeld proven a liar. Twice." It is not titled "Rumsfeld proven wrong. Twice." Your quotes show Rumsfeld claiming somthing that appears to have been wrong. It does not demonstrate Rumsfeld lying about anything.
I know this is advanced logic for you, but being a liar is not synonymous with being wrong. Sorry, that may be too big a word: being wrong is not the same thing as being a liar.
Was Rumsfeld wrong?
Yes, it appears he was.
Did Rumsfeld lie?
I haven't seen a lie pointed out in this thread, so based upon current evidence I would conclude that no, he is not.
We were told that "we know where they are", yet they didn't exist. Now we're told "I never claimed I new where they were". That's a lie. Maybe they were mistaken about the WMD in Iraq, but for Rumsfeld to deny claiming that he knew where the weapons were is not a mistake. It is a lie. Rumsfeld said it. Then he denied saying it. And he still has a job.
You're still arguing the wrong point, and I'm beginning to suspect you're doing it on purpose now.
Precisely. That was the misdirection... playing on people's incorrect ideas that Iraq had something to do with 9/11 to create a segue from invasion of Afghanistan to invasion of Iraq. As a responsible head of state, Bush needed to ensure that any illusions the American people had about Hussein having anything to do with 9/11 were quashed. Instead, he found those beliefs convenient for getting people to accept the invasion of Iraq.
WMD was the primary, spoken reason for the invasion of Iraq. We were told that "we know where they are", yet they didn't exist. Now we're told "I never claimed I new where they were". That's a lie. Maybe they were mistaken about the WMD in Iraq, but for Rumsfeld to deny claiming that he knew where the weapons were is not a mistake. It is a lie. Rumsfeld said it. Then he denied saying it. And he still has a job.
You're still arguing the wrong point, and I'm beginning to suspect you're doing it on purpose now.
Just a few, simple sentences, thank you.Don't blame others because you couldn't make the point of your OP.
Just a few, simple sentences, thank you.
Of course he is, because otherwise, he'd have to admit that Rummy lied. That would go against his RNC dogma.
Ray McGovern: You said you knew where they were.
Donald Rumsfeld: I did not. I said I knew where suspect sites were...
And either way, to later claim that he was talking about "suspect sites" is a lie. That is not what he claimed. Nothing about "suspect sites" is in the transcript. If the word "suspect" had even passed his lips, I would gladly give him credit.
I've read the congressional authorization for military force against Iraq. I read it before it was passed. All the reasons provided are all well and good, but only justify invading Iraq if 1) Iraq has WMD, 2) they are/were involved in 9/11, or 3) they were planning some future attack against the U.S. Otherwise, there's no way it would be in the best interests of the United States to invade the country-- especially not with Bin Laden still at large. Turns out, none of the three justifications were met.
Rumsfeld mean WMD when he said "they". He was answering a question specifically about WMDs when he said "We know where they are. They're right up here in the area around Tikrit."

The point of contention is not over the word "suspect". It is whether "they" refers to sites, or whether "they" refers to WMD's. McGovern is claiming that "they" refers to WMD's. Rumsfeld replied that "they" refers to sites. The additional qualifier of "suspect" is quite secondary to that distinction. If you concede that Rumsfeld meant sites when he used "they", then the claim of him lying becomes very hard to maintain, regardless of the additional qualifier, because McGovern is simply wrong in his initial claim. If, as McGovern contends, "they" referred to WMD's themselves, then Rumsfeld lied even if you accept the use of "suspect". So you're not even getting the point of contention right.
Fine, that's a valid opinion, and there are arguments to be made for that point of view. Just as there are good arguments to be made that we were justified in invading even in the absence of definitive information about these topics. But that's getting into a wholely different debate, and even accepting your opinion on that topic, it doesn't lead to the conclusion that Rumsfeld or Bush lied.