Brazening It Out
by
Jim Lobe
"The
reason I keep insisting that there was a relationship between Iraq
and Saddam and al-Qaeda," U.S. President George W. Bush told reporters
Thursday, is "because there was a relationship between Iraq and
Al Qaeda."
This
is what logicians call a tautology, or a "useless repetition," as
the dictionary defines it, but it is also an indication of how the
Bush administration is defending itself against a growing number
of scandals and deceptions in which it finds itself enmeshed.
Repetition
and blaming the media, an old standby, of which Vice President Dick
Cheney and Pentagon chief Donald Rumsfeld are particularly fond
dating back to their service under Presidents Richard Nixon and
Gerald Ford 30 years ago, are back in vogue.
Thus
it was that Cheney, the most aggressive administration proponent
of the theory that Saddam Hussein had not only been working hand
in glove with Osama bin Laden for years, but that he was also behind
the bombing of the World Trade Center in New York back in 1993,
complained that New York Times' coverage of the 9/11 Commission's
finding that there was no such link was "outrageous" and probably
"malicious."
And
thus it was that Rumsfeld charged that media coverage of the abuses
of detainees held by the U.S. in Iraq Abu Ghraib prison and elsewhere
was not only wrong, but dangerous.
"The
implication that's out there is the United States government is
engaging in torture as a matter of policy, and that's not true,"
he declared, despite the cascading leaks of Pentagon, Justice Department,
and White House memoranda suggesting ways in which domestic and
international bans on torture can be circumvented or ignored in
the "war on terror."
And,
in a distinct echo of the charges leveled by diehard hawks over
the U.S. withdrawal from Vietnam under the Nixon/Ford watch, he
suggested that reporters and editors, "sitting in an air-conditioned
room some place," not the military (and certainly not the policymakers)
would be to blame if Washington lost in Iraq.
"This
much is certain," he said Thursday. "Coalition forces cannot be
defeated on the battlefield. The only way this effort could fail
is if people were to be persuaded that the cause is lost, or that
it's not worth the pain – or if those who seem to measure progress
in Iraq against a more perfect world convince others to throw in
the towel."
The
tactic on which the administration appears to have settled in dealing
with what is clearly an unraveling of whatever shred of credibility
it retains is simply to insist – as it has for so long anyway –
that it never made any mistakes or exaggerated or misrepresented
or lied about anything in any way, and to hope that, if it repeats
itself sufficiently loudly and often, people will come to believe
it.
"At
this point, the White House position is just frankly bizarre," Daniel
Benjamin, a senior counter-terrorism official in the Clinton White
House, told the Los Angeles Times in response to Bush's declaration
about Al Qaeda and Hussein. "They're just repeating themselves,
rather than admit they were wrong."
Bush,
of course, was responding to the finding by the bipartisan 9/11
commission that, while bin Laden "explored possible cooperation
with Iraq" when he was based in Sudan through 1994, "Iraq apparently
never responded," and no "collaborative relationship" was ever established.
Proceeding
from his tautology, Bush insisted that "this administration never
said that the 9/11 attacks were orchestrated between Saddam and
al-Qaeda. We did say there were numerous contacts between Saddam
Hussein and al-Qaeda."
That
rendition, of course, raises a host of questions, among them definitional
– does the existence of "numerous contacts" amount to a "relationship,"
particularly when one side fails to respond to the other?
"When
I was 15 and kept asking Mary Beth for a date, and she would always
politely refuse, I think I would have been hard put to describe
that as a 'relationship' as much as I wanted to brag about one,"
noted one Congressional aide this week.
But,
more important, the Bush's statement simply flies in the face of
the record. Just before invading Iraq, for example, Bush himself
asserted that Iraq had sent bomb-making and document-forgery experts
to "work with al-Qaeda" and also "provided al-Qaeda with chemical
and biological weapons training" – a relationship that goes far
beyond mere "contacts."
And,
although he denied that his administration had ever suggested Hussein
connivance in the 9/11 attacks themselves, his March 19, 2003, letter
to Congress officially informing it that hostilities had begun asserted
that the war was permitted under legislation authorizing force against
those who "planned, authorized, committed, or aided the terrorist
attacks that occurred on September 11, 2001."
Cheney,
always the most aggressive in asserting a link between Hussein and
both al-Qaeda and 9/11, repeatedly made similar charges and last
fall endorsed the contents of an article in the neo-conservative
Weekly Standard – consisting largely excerpts of a classified
document prepared by the Pentagon's shady Office of Special Plans
(OSP) as "the best source of information" – that concluded that
"Osama bin Laden and Saddam Hussein had an operational relationship
from the early 1990s to 2003." Under pressure from the Central Intelligence
Agency, the Pentagon later issued a release describing the article's
conclusions as "inaccurate."
Cheney,
along with neo-conservative members of the Defense Policy Board,
the Wall Street Journal editorial writers, and The Weekly
Standard, also has been the administration's biggest champion
of the single-sourced Czech intelligence report of a meeting in
Prague between a senior Iraqi intelligence official and the ringleader
of the 9/11 hijackers, Mohammed Atta, five months before the attacks.
The
meeting, according to the commission, which had access to contemporaneous
video shots of Atta, his cell phone records, and the testimony of
the Iraqi official who has been in U.S. custody since last July,
never took place.
Yet
Cheney said Thursday that he was still not convinced, suggesting
cryptically that he may have access to intelligence the commission
was not able to see. "That's never been proven," he said. "It's
never been refuted."
Of
course, Cheney's treatment of this issue gets us right into the
epistemological puzzles in which Rumsfeld specializes – that "there
are known unknowns" and "unknown unknowns," which are those "we
don't know we don't know" – speculations that seemed increasingly
appropriate in light of the latest revelations by Human
Rights First that the U.S. is holding an unknown number of detainees
in as many as a dozen facilities in the Middle East, South Asia,
aboard naval vessels in the Indian Ocean and elsewhere whose existence
has not been disclosed to either the International Committee of
the Red Cross or to Congress.
Indeed,
Rumsfeld's angry admonitions against the dangers of media coverage
of torture and abuses in U.S.-run prisons came at a press conference
in which he admitted that one Iraqi prisoner – one of 13 so-called
"ghost detainees" tracked by Human Rights Watch – had been kept
off prison rosters for some seven months, apparently to keep the
Red Cross in the dark about whereabouts. If true, that would constitute
a clear violation of Article 75 of the Fourth Geneva Convention,
according to Deborah Pearlstein of Human Rights First. Rumsfeld
assured reporters that the detainee in question had been treated
"humanely" at all times.
Pressed
by the White House, the Republican leadership in Congress, meanwhile,
prevented Democratic lawmakers from issuing subpoenas for some of
the administration's memoranda on its interrogation and detention
policies and its contention, in at least two leaked memos, that
the president can overrule international conventions, U.S. laws,
and even the Constitution in his war-making powers as commander-in-chief.
Such
unconstrained power is, of course, entirely consistent with the
notion that a relationship between al-Qaeda and Hussein existed
because the president says so.
June
19, 2004
Jim
Lobe is Inter Press Service's correspondent in Washington, DC.
Copyright
© 2004 Inter Press Service
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