headscratcher4
Philosopher
- Joined
- Apr 14, 2002
- Messages
- 7,776
Ok, so, recently, the explaination to excuse the Bush Administration's relience of faulty intelligence in the run-up to the invasion of Iraq runs along these lines:
Saddam was a threat. Every one agreed. Even Bill Clinton and his national security team thought he had the WMDs or was actively trying to secure them. So, our mistake, such as it was, was understandable...let's move on to the glory of removing a terrible dictator from power.
All right. This is not an entirely disreputable argument. The Clinton people did, clearly, also fear Saddam and his believed search for WMDs.
And, reasonable mistakes do occur, especially dealing with the murky world of intelligence gathering in the MiddleEast.
My own bias against the Bush people aside -- my belief that in many instances they knowingly inflated the threat and essentially lied to the world and the American public about it -- the excuse, explaination, etc. has some validity.
Here's what gets me in this effort, however. My recollection is that one of the things that the Bush campaign in 2000 was about was not only reputiating Clinton and his foriegn policy, but suggesting its incompetence. So, it would seem that the question back at the Administration when it says "Clinton thought so too" is, why did you accept that intelligence as valid, given your low opinion of the Clinton Whitehouse? or, to put it in Shcool yard terms..."If little Billy Clinton jumps off a bridge, will you do it too?"
But, the great thing about Politics, is that you can have it exactly both ways....
Saddam was a threat. Every one agreed. Even Bill Clinton and his national security team thought he had the WMDs or was actively trying to secure them. So, our mistake, such as it was, was understandable...let's move on to the glory of removing a terrible dictator from power.
All right. This is not an entirely disreputable argument. The Clinton people did, clearly, also fear Saddam and his believed search for WMDs.
And, reasonable mistakes do occur, especially dealing with the murky world of intelligence gathering in the MiddleEast.
My own bias against the Bush people aside -- my belief that in many instances they knowingly inflated the threat and essentially lied to the world and the American public about it -- the excuse, explaination, etc. has some validity.
Here's what gets me in this effort, however. My recollection is that one of the things that the Bush campaign in 2000 was about was not only reputiating Clinton and his foriegn policy, but suggesting its incompetence. So, it would seem that the question back at the Administration when it says "Clinton thought so too" is, why did you accept that intelligence as valid, given your low opinion of the Clinton Whitehouse? or, to put it in Shcool yard terms..."If little Billy Clinton jumps off a bridge, will you do it too?"
But, the great thing about Politics, is that you can have it exactly both ways....