OPINION

The Administration "Re-Wronging" History

Written by AmeriPundit
Published November 30, 2005
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Subjective journalism, feeding the rage, a racket, and having their cake and eating it too. One can not argue with their success.

The Robbins and Kristol articles (and others like them) did not address Sam Tannenhaus' explanation of his Vanity Fair interview with Paul Wolfowitz. Tannenhaus gave an interview to CNN about the piece; the raw CNN transcript is dated May 30, 2003, and a relevant excerpt follows:

CNN's DARYN KAGAN: ...[Y]our piece kind of goes on and on, but this is the nugget that's getting people talking.

SAM TANNENHAUS, VANITY FAIR: Yes, it seems to happen with this sort of story.

KAGAN: Let's go ahead. I know we saw all of it. So let's go ahead and put it up on the screen, what we've taken out of — There we go.

"For bureaucratic reasons we settled on one issue, weapons of mass destruction, because it was the one reason everyone could agree on."

Now, the Pentagon, you just saw in [CNN senior Pentagon correspondent] Jamie [McIntyre]'s piece, is saying he is taking that out of context. Did he say that? Did he not say that and what was the nuance that you took it as, as you talked to Paul Wolfowitz?

TANNENHAUS: Well, what's important to know is that this comment of the deputy secretary's came out of a slightly earlier discussion we had in the same interview. It was a very long interview. In fact, I was told it may have been the longest uninterrupted interview he's given, about 90 minutes, the third of three sessions.

And in it the deputy secretary discussed how there were aspects of the war in Iraq that were being overlooked, that its benefits that had come from the war that no one was talking about.

One of them was that America could now remove its troops from Saudi Arabia because Saddam Hussein was no longer there as a threat.

KAGAN: Well, I want to get to that point in just a second. But to me, it sounds like when you say this came from an earlier part of the interview. Are you saying it was taken out of context?

TANNENHAUS: Oh, no. Actually, what I'm about to say is that the secretary's comments are as striking as the way the article presents them, if not more so because what he goes on to say is, after citing that as a very important attribute, a benefit of the war, he then goes on to say, when I asked him if that had been part of the strategic thinking all along, yes, the truth is for these questions of bureaucracy, we agreed on weapons of mass destruction, that was the one issue everyone could agree on, which means they didn't agree on the others.

KAGAN: You're standing by what is in Vanity Fair there and in your article?

TANNENHAUS: Absolutely.

KAGAN: We have that. We also have more. Jamie mentioned in his piece that the Pentagon posted the transcripts.

TANNENHAUS: Yes.

KAGAN: So we actually have that we can put up, too. This is how the Pentagon says. They say it was like this: "The truth is that for reasons that have a lot to do with US government bureaucracy we settled on the one issue that everyone could agree on, which was weapons of mass destruction as the core reason" — I think we have more up there — "but there have always been three fundamental concerns. One is weapons of mass destruction, the second is support for terrorism and the third is criminal treatment of the Iraqi people.

It doesn't show up like that in Vanity Fair.

TANNENHAUS: No, although what the piece says is that there are several reasons and the trouble is actually what this transcript says is that there were many reasons when, in fact, what we were told that many thought, particularly in Europe, the countries that signed onto this despite opposition from their own people was that there was compelling evidence of weapons of mass destruction.

Now, turn the clock back a few weeks ago, to when I spoke with the deputy secretary. May 10 was when this long interview occurred. What was he trying to do? He was trying to explain how, even though no smoking gun had surfaced, this was a war still worth fighting. Why? Because other benefits accrued.

Hence, he says the truth is weapons of mass destruction were not the sole compelling reason.

KAGAN: So in your eyes he seemed comfortable with the idea, well, yes, we said that, but really, the greater good has taken place. You've seen the US military moving. They're moving out of Saudi Arabia. The fall of Saddam Hussein. This is all taking place, it's all kind of happening like it was supposed to.

TANNENHAUS: Not only in my eyes. If you look also at the Defense Department's link where transcripts are reproduced, you'll see an earlier interview he did with a Washington Post reporter who was picking up on my story. ...There, the Washington Post reporter quoted precisely as I worded it the phrase about bureaucracy and the deputy has not backed down from it at all. It was only after this became a scandal, a concern in Europe, that the Defense Department realized that the deputy secretary had been too candid and that's always a price to pay.

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The Administration "Re-Wronging" History
Published: November 30, 2005
Type: Opinion
Section: Politics
Writer: AmeriPundit
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Comments

#1 — November 30, 2005 @ 10:28AM — Liberal

"There can be no doubt that Iraq has weapons of mass destruction." Dick Cheney

"Saddam has chemical weapons." Colin Powell

"Saddam has biological weapons." G. W. Bush

"We know he has these weapons and we know where they are." Donald Rumsfeld.

"He tried to obtain uranium from Africa." G.W. Bush

"Would I lie to you? Would I lie to you honey? Would I say something that wasn't true." Annie Lenox

#2 — November 30, 2005 @ 10:39AM — tommyd

This is the most despicable administration in US History. The filthiest, corrupt lying jackals to ever sit in DC and yet people still think these guys are just swell and are "protecting Merrika".
They are all war criminals. They have hurt the US so badly that it's beyond full repair. They're responsible for 9/11. They're responsible for the illegal wars of aggression in Afghanistan and Iraq. They're responsible for the continued selling out and hollowing out of America's middle class. They continue to allow millions of Third Worlders into America when we don't need them.

The Bush Adminstration is putting the final nails in America's coffin. Just wait and see. It's going to get worse and worse in this country.

#3 — November 30, 2005 @ 13:54PM — Nancy

Jeee-sus H. Christ! They don't even operate in "reality" - that's for the rest of us who live in the Real World. We're fucked.

#4 — November 30, 2005 @ 14:21PM — RedTard

"Just wait and see. It's going to get worse and worse in this country." - TommyD

Thanks for expressing your side's wishes in a clear, concise format.

#5 — November 30, 2005 @ 14:38PM — tommyd

ReTard, it's not my "my side's wishes" that thing's get worse in this country, it's just the realistic and logical outcome of a government gone really, really bad. Anyone one with the gift of free thought can see that the US's current policies can not, and will not, end in a good or beneficial way for the vast majority of American citizens. Empires never end well, but always with great and swift collapse.

But I guess you'll turn on FOX News tonight and believe whatever they tell you, so I might be wasting my time here.

Why is it so hard for people to see the truth of what's happening in this country and why it needs to change now!?!?!

#6 — November 30, 2005 @ 14:44PM — Nancy

Redtard & his ilk are members of a hard-core decreasing minority, as even the half-wits who voted for Bush in 04 are waking up & smelling the stench of corruption on The Hill & in the WH.

#7 — November 30, 2005 @ 15:02PM — tommyd

Nancy, you're right. The cheerleaders for war are so desperate to retain a little bit of their self-dignity after being so utterly defeated by the reality of America's illegal Iraq invasion that they're just lashing out at anyone who speaks up about the awful reality that this nation finds itself in because of following the insane delusions of grandeur by insane politicians.

Nancy, they're weak. They thought that they could boost their faux machismo by cheerleading the US military into "killing all dem Ay-rabs" when these guys know in their heart of hearts that they could never muster the bravery to actually put the rubber to the road and hook up with the front lines in Iraq.

It's all psychological with these guys. Shattered they all are.

#8 — November 30, 2005 @ 17:54PM — RedTard

I'm no cheerleader or chickenhawk, I was a member of the US armed forces and have been to Kuwait. I risked my life to disarm leftover Iraqi and US munitions so that little kids could play outside without fear of blowing themselves up.

I've been there and I know people very well who are over there now. They tell a different story than what you guys spew. I have to take personal experience and eyewitness accounts over propaganda from radicals angry because they lost in the last election.

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