Danner vs. Kinsley on the Memo and the War
by
Tom Engelhardt
by Tom Engelhardt
On May 15,
Tomdispatch posted a piece Mark
Danner wrote for the New
York Review of Books on the Downing Street Memo, the first
of a string
of secret documents leaked to the Times of London from
the upper reaches of the British government, which cumulatively
offered an unprecedented look inside the Bush administration as
it was preparing, 8 months ahead of time, to prosecute a war against
Iraq. By the time Danner wrote his piece, the memo, released by
the London Times on May 1, had already sped around the Internet,
but had still not seen the print light-of-day in the United States.
Neither the New York Times, the Los Angeles Times,
nor the Washington Post thought the notes of a meeting of
Tony Blair's war cabinet in which the head of M16, the British equivalent
of the CIA director, discusses recent high-level private talks in
Washington, a memo with a classic line "But the intelligence
and facts were being fixed around the policy." was fit enough
to print or even highlight on their front pages.
As a consequence,
the editors of the New York Review of Books took the adventurous
step of doing what major mainstream publications should obviously
have done. In their June 9th issue, a review of books, became
the first American publication to put the document in print. (In
this striking act, it was in one way typical. Along with bloggers,
websites like Juan Cole's Informed
Comment, and publications like the trade journal Editor &
Publisher, the academic publication The Chronicle of Higher
Education, and Comedy Central's The Daily Show, it broke
or highlighted a story that by all rights should have been major
news in the mainstream.)
Michael Kinsley,
editorial and opinion editor for the Los Angeles Times, then
wrote a piece typical of this mainstream moment in the Washington
Post, (No
Smoking Gun), discounting the importance of the Downing Street
Memos as, among other things, no more than "an encouraging sign
of the revival of the left. Developing a paranoid theory and promoting
it to the very edge of national respectability takes a certain amount
of ideological self-confidence." Danner, in
a second piece on the Downing Street Memos, also published in
the New York Review of Books, offered a critique of Kinsley's
piece and Kinsley responded in a letter to the Review in
which he again dismissed the original memo, this time as "fairly
worthless." Danner answers in the Review's upcoming August
11th issue (on newsstands next week). Their exchange follows below.
Danner writes
at one point of "the widening gap between what [Americans] are told
and what they see a gap that, when it comes to the Iraq war,
is becoming harder and harder to ignore." Kinsley's letter catches
something of the mood of what we are indeed being told. Another
recent example involves the Plame case. For the last week, as Special
Counsel Patrick Fitzgerald jailed a reporter and forced another
to talk, as journalists pelted White House spokesman Scott McClellan
with angry questions, the case spilled onto front pages everywhere,
but in a remarkably obtuse way. Back on July 11, 2003, we now know,
Time magazine's Matt Cooper had emailed his bureau chief
that, in
a conversation on "double super secret background," Karl Rove
told him "it was… wilson's wife, who apparently works at the agency
on wmd issues who authorized the trip." So the question of last
week became: Does identifying Joe Wilson's CIA agent/wife Valerie
Plame as "wilson's wife" count as naming her.
This exchange
on the July 12 Charlie Rose Show catches the near-comic tone
of the moment:
"CHARLIE
ROSE: So my question is, did Karl Rove ever name her specifically?
"[New
York Times correspondent] RICHARD STEVENSON: Well, what he
did was he alluded to her job and her role in getting her husband
this job, going to Africa, but he did not use her name specifically.
Whether that amounts to identifying her or not under the law is
something that we don't know, and will be up to initially the
special prosecutor in the case to make a judgment on, and then
ultimately, should it ever come to this, to a jury….
"CHARLIE
ROSE: OK. But let me just make this clear, and I think it's clear,
but Karl Rove, according to Matt [Cooper], never identified by
name Valerie, and, secondly Joe Wilson's wife and,
secondly, never said that she was a covert CIA operative. He simply
said that the wife of Joe Wilson was responsible for sending him
to Niger.
"RICHARD
STEVENSON: Yes, that is what Matt Cooper's e-mail to his bureau
chief said. And since that's all we have to go on, that's where
it stands right now."
As with the
famed Clinton electoral campaign mantra, "It's the economy, stupid,"
right now reporters for major papers should just hang a giant sign
over their collective computer, "It's the war, stupid." Because
they haven't done so, and because the larger constitutional crisis
that lurks behind the war in Iraq is little thought about, the leaking
of the Downing Street Memos, the revving up of the Plame case, and
other such events are dealt with, except in rare instances (as in
Frank Rich's most recent New York Times column, Follow
the Uranium) as discrete, unconnected events, and so all larger
meaning is sucked out of them. (And then the same reporters get
on television and opine that the American people won't give a fig
about the complex ins-and-outs of such matters.) In this way, we're
left with bizarre media spectacles like the endless discussion about
whether Rove "named" Plame. (Homer Simpson would know how to respond
to that one: Doh!)
I'm sorry
but what planet are we on? It's like watching Medieval monks arguing
over those angels on the head of a pin or the size of the camel
that might indeed fit through the eye of the needle, while the world
out there is actually riotously visible. And then, of course, if
you want to find out why the media is this way, you have
to turn to Mark Danner or Michael Massing in the New York Review
of Books or Orville
Schell at this site, or perhaps Jay Rosen, the creator of the
PressThink blog, who just posted a
remarkable piece on the Bush administration's unprecedented
"rollback" policy in relation to the media; how it has "succeeded
in changing the terms of engagement with journalists"; and why the
sudden media assertiveness at White House press briefings is no
special sign of renewed courage. (Answer, unlike the press, it's
not so easy to rollback a special counsel.)
In the meantime,
the largest of events are transpiring. While there is officially
no means for the Bush administration to implode (impeachment not
being a political possibility), nonetheless, implosion is certainly
possible. If and when the unraveling begins, the proximate cause,
whether the
Plame affair or something else entirely, is likely to surprise
us all but none more than the members of the mainstream media.
Facing the
most mobilized administration in memory, possibly the greatest gamblers
in American history since Jefferson Davis, men (and a woman) who
give them credit look at the world through a distinctly
oversized geopolitical lens, the press has, for almost four years,
essentially demobilized itself. It has been incapable
of connecting the dots, and so has been left arguing over whether
Joe Wilson's wife and Valerie Plame were one and the same, and whether
the Downing Street Memo provides "proof" of George Bush's state
of mind. Fortunately, Mark Danner does exist and the New York
Review of Books whose editors have been kind enough once
again to let Tomdispatch post his latest work is around to
print his pieces. ~ Tom
The Memo,
the Press, and the War
An Exchange
between Michael Kinsley and Mark Danner
Writing
about the Iraq war and the Downing Street memo in the July 14th
issue of the
New
York Review of Books, Mark Danner commented on a recent column
by Los Angeles Times editorial and opinion editor Michael Kinsley,
No
Smoking Gun.1 Mr. Kinsley
has now responded. His letter and Mark Danner's reply appear below.
To the
Editors:
It's easy
to appreciate the frustration of "Downing Street Memo" enthusiasts
like Mark Danner. They think they have documentary proof that President
Bush had firmly decided to go to war against Iraq by July 2002.
Yet some people say the memo isn't newsworthy because the charge
is not true, while others say the memo isn't newsworthy because
the charge is so obviously true. A smoking gun is sitting there
on the table, but he's going to get away with murder because everyone
for different reasons won't pick it up.
And I think
Danner is right to resent the whole "smoking gun" business
an artifact of Watergate which comes close to establishing
the old Chico Marx joke, "Who are you gonna believe: me or your
own two eyes," as a serious standard of proof. Not every villain
is going to tape record his villainy. George W. Bush, as I noted
in the column that Danner objects to, is especially good at insisting
that reality is what he would like it to be, and the smoking-gun
standard helps him to get away with this.
But the DSM
is worthless if it is not a smoking gun not because I need
a smoking gun to be persuaded (a "cynical and impotent attitude,"
Danner says), but precisely because people who don't require a smoking
gun are already persuaded. And the document is just not that smoking
gun. It basically says that the conventional wisdom in Washington
in July 2002 was that Bush had made up his mind and war was certain.
"What," Danner asks, "could be said to establish ‘truth'
to ‘prove it'?" I suggested in the column that it would have been
nice if the memo had made clear that the people saying facts were
fixed and war was certain were actual administration decision-makers.
Danner asks, Who else could the head of British intelligence, reporting
on the mood and gossip of "Washington," be talking about if not
"actual decision-makers"? He has got to be kidding.
In short,
the DSM will not persuade anyone who is not already persuaded. That
doesn't make it wrong. But that does make the memo fairly worthless.
Michael Kinsley
Los Angeles Times
Mark Danner
replies:
For more than
two years the United States has been fighting a war in Iraq that
was launched in the cause of destroying weapons that turned out
not to exist. One might have thought such a strange and unprecedented
historical event which has thus far cost the lives of nearly
eighteen hundred young Americans, and counting might attract
the strong and sustained interest of a free press. It has
in Great Britain.
In the United
States when it comes to this central issue of our politics we have
in general been treated to the vaguely depressing spectacle of a
great many very intelligent people struggling very hard to make
themselves stupid. Such has been the
general plot line of the press reception of the so-called Downing
Street memo and the other government documents associated with it,
which tell much about how the Iraq war actually began.2
I'm afraid the admirable Michael Kinsley, in dismissing the memo
as "worthless" (he later promotes it to "fairly worthless"), once
again rather exemplifies this trend.
Though leaders
in the United Kingdom and the United States have tried hard to cast
the memo as something exotic and recondite "people...take
bits out here of this memo or that memo, or something someone's
supposed to have said at the time," as Prime
Minister Tony Blair put it in Washington last month3
in fact the document is nothing more than the record of a meeting
Blair had with his highest officials at 10 Downing Street on July
23, 2002. Despite Blair's dismissal of the memo, no one, including
him, has suggested that the minutes of the meeting the equivalent
of a National Security Council meeting in the United States
are anything but genuine. The Downing Street memo is an actual record
of what Britain's highest officials were saying, in private, about
the coming Iraq war eight months before the war started.
The meeting
began as indeed most National Security Council meetings begin
with a summary of the current intelligence. Sir Richard Dearlove,
the head of MI6, Britain's equivalent of the CIA, had just returned
from high-level consultations in the United States. To begin the
discussion, then, Sir Richard "reported on his recent talks in Washington."
Here once again, in its entirety, is the report Sir Richard gave
to his prime minister and his colleagues:
"There
was a perceptible shift in attitude. Military action was now seen
as inevitable. Bush wanted to remove Saddam, through military action,
justified by the conjunction of terrorism and WMD. But the intelligence
and facts were being fixed around the policy. The NSC had no patience
with the UN route, and no enthusiasm for publishing material on
the Iraqi regime's record. There was little discussion in Washington
of the aftermath after military action."
Mr. Kinsley
contends that here Sir Richard is reporting on "the mood and gossip
of ‘Washington'" as opposed, he says, to the views of "actual
administration decision-makers." I am unsure whom Kinsley thinks
the head of British intelligence sees when he takes a secret trip
to Washington to consult with his country's most important ally
about a coming war. We know Sir Richard met with Director of Central
Intelligence George Tenet, his opposite number, who, as a cabinet
member who briefs the President personally every morning, would
presumably be considered an "actual administration decision-maker."
We can assume that the other calls that the head of British intelligence
paid during his "talks in Washington" were at a comparably high
level.
Of course,
none of Sir Richard's colleagues, including his prime minister,
demand to know who his sources were. And yet they go forward with
the meeting, taking Sir Richard's central points that war
is inevitable, that intelligence is being fixed to prepare for it
and for a "justification" based on "the conjunction of terrorism
and WMD," and that the United States will resist going "the UN route"
as the point of departure, setting off a discussion (the
true heart of the memo) of the need to persuade the United States
to "go the UN route" to give some clothing of legality to a war
the legal case for which, as the foreign secretary says, is quite
"thin." Why is it, one might ask, that the prime minister and the
highest security officials of Great Britain do not demand that Sir
Richard reveal his sources why is it, in other words, that
these officials are so much more credulous than Michael Kinsley?
Could it be
because the prime minister and other officials think Sir Richard
on his return from Washington is bringing from officials at the
highest levels of the American government ("actual administration
decision-makers") information of the highest reliability
information, no doubt, that echoes what the cabinet ministers themselves
have been hearing from their own Washington opposite numbers?
Indeed, if,
as Mr. Kinsley contends, what Sir Richard tells his prime minister
and his colleagues represents not the views of "actual administration
decision-makers" but the "mood and gossip of ‘Washington,'" then
does it not seem rather odd that the highest officials of Great
Britain, America's closest ally, would rely on it to make their
own most vital decisions of national security? Does it not seem
rather more plausible to believe what Prime Minister Blair and his
ministers all seem to believe: that what Sir Richard says in his
report represents the definitive views of "actual administration
decision-makers" and not the speculations of journalists or cab
drivers? As Michael
Smith, the London Times reporter and strong Iraq
war supporter who first published this document, said when
asked about the authority and sources of Sir Richard Dearlove,
"This
was the head of MI6. How much authority do you want the man to have?
He has just been to Washington, he has just talked to George Tenet.
He said the intelligence and facts were being fixed around the policy.
That translates in clearer terms as the intelligence was being cooked
to match what the administration wanted it to say to justify invading
Iraq. Fixed means the same here as it does there."4
Who
in Kinsley's phrase has got to be kidding?
There is,
of course, the further point, not a minor one, that pretty much
everything Sir Richard says in his little summary turns out to be
true. America and Britain did go to war to remove Saddam. Military
action was justified by the conjunction of terrorism and WMD. The
U.S. did have no idea what to do in "the aftermath after military
action." And the intelligence and facts were fixed around the policy.
Of course,
according to the rules under which Kinsley, and much of the rest
of the American press, profess to be playing, one cannot say this;
after all, this is the case that the Downing Street memo, all by
itself, must be shown to prove. But the requirement is purely artificial.
Though, scandalously, the country has had no properly constituted
investigation, congressional
or otherwise, empowered to look into policymakers' use of intelligence
before the Iraq war indeed, such
investigations as there have been have explicitly excluded precisely
this central issue5 an avalanche
of other proof has shown how the administration "fixed the facts"
around its policy of invading Iraq.
It is plain
by now that the intelligence the CIA and other U.S. agencies produced
on Iraq and its weapons programs was poor, and was built on shockingly
shallow information. It is also plain that Bush administration officials,
far from pressing the agencies for the best, most reliable intelligence,
instead relentlessly and blatantly exaggerated the slender intelligence
that the government did possess, in order to make its case for war.
Though thus far the administration has managed to block a true investigation
of this misuse of intelligence by policymakers, and the Republican-controlled
Congress has gone along, many examples of it are already known to
the public.
One could
cite President Bush's insistence on telling the world that "Saddam
Hussein recently sought significant quantities of uranium from Africa,"
when the CIA had explicitly warned him that it could not confirm
this information. One could point to the administration's doctoring
of the declassified version of the National Intelligence Estimate
on Iraq given to Congress in October 2002, in which all of the considerable
qualifiers included in the original report were removed. One could
quote the repeated references by Vice President Cheney, Condoleezza
Rice, and other officials to "reconstituted nuclear weapons" and
a "smoking gun becoming a mushroom cloud," when the administration
had little or no real evidence to prove Iraq had an ongoing nuclear
program.
The fact is
that the administration blatantly exaggerated the intelligence it
was given to convince the country to go to war "rolling out
the new product," as White House Chief of Staff Andrew Card called
the coming public relations campaign in August 2002 and then,
after the fall of Baghdad, when the weapons of mass destruction
refused to turn up, the President and other administration officials
blamed the CIA and other agencies for supplying intelligence that
was "misleading." Having politicized the intelligence before the
war, administration officials turned around and blamed the intelligence
agencies for misleading them with the very intelligence that
they themselves had politicized.
That the Republican
Congress and notably the Senate Intelligence Committee
has failed to fully investigate this is not news; as I wrote in
my article, the committee first separated the question of "policymakers'
use of intelligence" from the question of the performance of the
intelligence agencies themselves, then helpfully postponed its investigation
of the first question the critical question until
after the election; now the promised report has been abandoned altogether.
Still, the administration's "fixing of the facts and intelligence
around the policy" has been quite well documented in other
public sources.6 Indeed, one catches
glimpses of it even in the severely circumscribed reports that Congress
and the administration have allowed to be produced.7
That is, if anyone still needs to be convinced; as Kinsley writes
in his original column, "we know now that was true and a half. Fixing
intelligence and facts to fit a desired policy is the Bush II governing
style, especially concerning the war in Iraq."
If Kinsley
is convinced that it is "true and a half" that the Bush "governing
style, especially concerning the war in Iraq," is to "fix intelligence
and facts to fit a desired policy," then what exactly was the evidence
that convinced him? On this point he is silent. Presumably he has
gained this conviction after reading various accounts of the decision-making
leading up to the war, notably Bob Woodward's and Richard Clarke's;
after examining certain documents, such as those I have cited; and
after watching the progress of events during the last several years.
Presumably the Downing Street memo would bolster these conclusions
by shoring up the various secondhand and other sources with the
actual recorded words of "actual decision-makers" who are discussing
the decisions themselves during the months preceding the war. By
insisting on applying an artificially and narrowly legalistic standard
to the Downing Street memo, Kinsley discards as "worthless" a higher
order of historical evidence than has yet been made public. To reduce
serious analysis to a legalistic game in this way impoverishes the
attempt to chronicle the real history of a war in which Americans,
and Iraqis, are still dying. It means, in effect, deliberately blindfolding
ourselves.
We come by
information incrementally, and give it sense by placing it in a
context we have already constructed; that is why Kinsley's "test"
for whether or not the Downing Street memo is "worthless" is so
misguided. Those who do look at the memo's account of the cabinet
meeting with some honesty and I urge readers to go to the
memo itself; it is barely three pages long and the New York
Review of Books has published it in full8
will find it confirms a precise historical narrative of the
run-up to the war. It is clearly written and, notwithstanding the
comments of Kinsley and others, unambiguous.
What is most
deadening and in the end saddening about Kinsley's letter and earlier
article is the attitude they exemplify toward history; we see here
a deliberate impoverishment, a turning of inquiry and, at bottom,
of curiosity into a dull and sterile game of black and white, played
by rules that fail to reflect what anyone actually believes. Such
rules dovetail perfectly with the grim and gray shutting down of
information elsewhere in the Republic, as evidenced most prominently
by the Republican-controlled Congress, which, having endorsed a
war in the name of destroying weapons that turned out not to exist,
has responded by forbidding any thorough investigation into precisely
how such a strange set of events could come to pass. Kinsley, like
many others in the American press, wants to judge the memo's "worth"
on whether or not it contains, as he says, "documentary proof that
President Bush had firmly decided to go to war against Iraq by July
2002." As I have written, such "documentary proof" if we
are talking about firm and incontrovertible evidence of what was
in Mr. Bush's mind at the time is destined to prove elusive;
the President can always claim, all appearances and outward evidence
to the contrary, that he "hadn't made up his mind." And so he has
claimed.
The fact is
that this is not what is most important about the memo and about
the documents that have accompanied it. What the memo clearly shows
is that the decision to "go to the United Nations" was in large
part a response to the British concern that "the legal case for
war" was "thin," in the words of British Foreign Secretary Jack
Straw. In other words, securing the blessing of the United Nations
Security Council was thought to be the only way to give the war
a legal clothing. It is worth quoting this passage in full, for
Straw puts the matter with admirable concision:
"It
seemed clear that Bush had made up his mind to take military action,
even if the timing was not yet decided. But the case was thin. Saddam
was not threatening his neighbours, and his WMD capability was less
than that of Libya, North Korea or Iran. We should work up a plan
for an ultimatum to Saddam to allow back in the UN weapons inspectors.
This would also help with the legal justification for the use of
force."
The original
idea of "the UN route," as set out by the foreign secretary and
prime minister, was to issue an ultimatum to Saddam that he allow
into Iraq a new team of UN inspectors and then, when he refused
the ultimatum, to use his refusal as a justification to invade the
country under Security Council mandate. It "would make a big difference
politically and legally," as Prime Minister Tony Blair observes
in the meeting, "if Saddam refused to allow in the UN inspectors."
What the memo made clear, as I wrote, is that "the inspectors were
introduced not as a means to avoid war, as President Bush repeatedly
assured Americans, but as a means to make war possible."
On these matters
Mr. Kinsley says nothing, either in his original article or in his
letter, because he is concerned only with a single question: Does
the memo offer "documentary proof that President Bush had firmly
decided to go to war against Iraq by July 2002"? Having decided
that the memo falls short of passing this stern test, he deems the
document "worthless." Like many in the American press, he is so
obsessed with finding the "smoking gun" that he pretty much manages
to miss the point of what is in front of him.
In the event,
of course, Saddam Hussein did not, as was hoped, reject the inspectors
out of hand. He admitted them, and President Bush and Prime Minister
Blair found themselves forced to demand their withdrawal
against the wishes of the Security Council and before they had completed
their task in order to begin the invasion of Iraq. The UN
route, as it turned out, was messy; it meant arguing publicly with
Hans Blix and other UN officials, fighting for and ultimately failing
to secure a second Security Council resolution that would have blessed
an invasion of Iraq, and finally withdrawing the inspectors when
they had examined barely one hundred of the six hundred or so suspect
sites leaving the inspections to be concluded only after
the fall of Baghdad, when the American Iraqi Survey Group finally
ascertained what the UN team might have concluded before the war:
that Saddam had destroyed his weapons of mass destruction long before.
Of course,
in retrospect, the plot line would have been much "cleaner" if Saddam
had obliged the British and the Americans by refusing to allow in
the inspectors in the first place, as Prime Minister Tony Blair
had hoped he would. President Bush had clearly hoped the same thing;
indeed, in absent moments, he apparently goes on hoping it. Several
months after the fall of Baghdad, sitting beside UN Secretary General
Kofi Annan in the Oval Office, the
President offered this version of his pre-war policy toward
Saddam Hussein:
"We
gave him a chance to allow the inspectors in, and he wouldn't let
them in. And, therefore, after a reasonable request, we decided
to remove him from power."9
It seems unlikely
that President Bush had failed to notice that Saddam had admitted
the inspectors into his country. More plausibly, the President is
simply making a slip of the tongue of the sort anyone could make
a slip prompted by a bit of wish fulfillment, with the President
substituting what he and Tony Blair had wished would happen for
what actually, in the event, did happen.
History is
rich in this sort of thing, of course; understanding "what actually
happened" is an ongoing task, demanding a constant reformulation
of what we believe based on what we know. What is most dispiriting
about the reception of the Downing Street memo and the other documents
associated with it is the general willingness of reporters and commentators
in this country to perform a complicated and willful act of shutting
down their own minds and obliterating their own curiosity. Michael
Smith, the London Times reporter, described the strange attitude
of his American colleagues:
"There
was a feeling of, ‘Well, we said that way back when.' Then of course
as the pressure mounted from the outside, there was a defensive
attitude. ‘We have said this before, if you the reader didn't listen,
well, what can we do.' ...[But] it is one thing for the New York
Times or the Washington Post to say that we were being
told that the intelligence was being fixed by sources inside the
CIA or Pentagon or the NSC and quite another to have documentary
confirmation in the form of the minutes of a key meeting with the
Prime Minister's office. ...This was the equivalent of an NSC meeting....
They say the evidence against Saddam Hussein is thin, the Brits
think regime change is illegal under international law so we are
going to have to go to the UN to get an ultimatum, not as a way
of averting war but as an excuse to make the war legal.... Not reportable,
are you kidding me?"
A good deal
of this "defensive attitude," certainly, as Smith implies, derives
from the shortcomings of American reporting during the run-up to
the war, when
newspapers and broadcast stations showed very little skepticism
about administration claims of Saddam's supposedly threatening arsenal
of weapons of mass destruction.10 Though
in the months since, the country's most influential newspapers,
including the New York Times and the Washington Post,
in an unprecedented step, have explicitly apologized for their pre-war
reporting, it is less clear that individual reporters feel that
they made any mistakes, and many bristle at any implication that
they did. The Downing Street memo serves, among other things, as
a not very subtle reminder that much of the press was duped by the
government in a rather premeditated and quite successful way. No
one likes to be reminded of this, certainly not reporters and the
institutions they work for; claiming the memo is "not reportable,"
in Smith's words, not only avoids revisiting a painful passage in
American journalism but does so by asserting that the story "had
already been covered" that is, that it had never been missed
in the first place. When it comes to the war, much of American journalism
has little more institutional interest in reexamining the past than
the Bush administration itself.
We must be
grateful that the American polity is broader and more complex than
the American press. Kinsley claims that the Downing Street memo
"will not persuade anyone who is not already persuaded. That doesn't
make it wrong. But it does make the memo fairly worthless." But
it is Kinsley who is quite demonstrably wrong on this question.
Whether or not the memo will "persuade anyone who is not already
persuaded" is of course an empirical question and I know myself
a number of people who have been so persuaded. And the fact that
more
than half of all Americans now believe the President and his
administration intentionally "misled the American public before
the war" seems a rather strong suggestion that, as a matter of persuasion
and of politics, the Downing Street memo is very far from worthless.11
The number
of Americans who hold this view is likely to continue to grow. These
are simply people who have begun to notice the widening gap between
what they are told and what they see a gap that, when it
comes to the Iraq war, is becoming harder and harder to ignore.
I would not call these people, in Kinsley's phrase, "Downing Street
memo enthusiasts." Better to adopt a denigrating phrase from a Bush
administration adviser and dub them members of the "reality-based
community."12 Their ranks are growing,
and it may be that in the coming days some in the press will leave
off the increasingly hard work of avoiding recent history and come
and join them.
Notes
- See
the Washington Post, June 12, 2005.
- See my article,
"The Secret
Way to War," The New York Review, June 9, 2005.
- In an
interview with Gwen Ifill on the NewsHour with Jim
Lehrer, June 7, 2005.
- See "The
Downing Street Memo," the Washington Post, June 16,
2005; interview with Michael Smith, Washington Post online.
- For example,
the Commission on the Intelligence Capabilities of the United
States Regarding Weapons of Mass Destruction, commonly known as
the Robb-Silberman Commission, notes that the executive order
which established it "did not authorize us to investigate how
policymakers used the intelligence they received from the Intelligence
Community on Iraq's weapons programs." This prohibition, also
included in the Republican-controlled Senate Intelligence Committee's
report, derived, as the Times remarked on the report's
release, "from the mandate [the President] gave it more than a
year ago, when the White House feared the issue could affect the
election." See Scott Shane and David Sanger, "Bush
Panel Finds Big Flaws Remain in US Spy Efforts," the New
York Times, April 1, 2005.
- See, for
publicly available documents, the excellent early report, "WMD
in Iraq: Evidence and Implications" (Carnegie Endowment for International
Peace, 2003), and also John Prados, Hoodwinked:
The Documents That Reveal How Bush Sold Us a War (New
Press, 2004).
- Even the
Robb-Silberman report notes, in the words of an unidentified national
intelligence officer, "a ‘zeitgeist' or general ‘climate' of policymaker
focus on Iraq's WMD that permeated the analytical atmosphere"
and "was formed in part, the NIO claimed, by the gathering conviction
among analysts that war with Iraq was inevitable...." Elsewhere
the commissioners conceded that "it is hard to deny the conclusion
that intelligence analysts worked in an environment that did not
encourage skepticism about the conventional wisdom." See the Report
of the Commission on the Intelligence Capabilities of the United
States Regarding Weapons of Mass Destruction, pp. 190
and 11.
- The text
can also be found widely online, including at downingstreetmemo.com.
- See "President
Reaffirms Strong Position on Liberia," July 14, 2003.
- See Michael
Massing, "Now
They Tell Us," the New York Review, February 26, 2004.
- The exact
number is 52 percent, an increase of nine points in three months.
See The Washington Post/ABC poll, and the report by Richard
Morin and Dan Balz, "Survey
Finds Most Support Staying in Iraq," the Washington Post,
June 28, 2005.
- See Ron
Suskind, "Without
a Doubt," the New York Times Magazine, October 17,
2004.
This exchange
will appear in the August 11 issue of the New York Review of
Books.
July
21, 2005
Tom
Engelhardt [send him mail]
is editor of TomDispatch.com,
a project of the Nation
Institute. He
is the author of several books, including The
Last Days of Publishing: A Novel and The
End of Victory Culture. Mark Danner, a longtime New Yorker
Staff writer and frequent contributor to the New York Review
of Books, is Professor of Journalism at the University of California
at Berkeley and Henry R. Luce Professor at Bard College. His most
recent book is Torture
and Truth: America, Abu Ghraib, and the War on Terror, which
collects his pieces on torture and Iraq that first appeared in the
New York Review of Books. His work can be found at markdanner.com.
Copyright
© 2005 Mark Danner
Tom
Engelhardt Archives
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