The Lone Fortress
*** Defending Truth from Conventional Wisdom ***


Wednesday, April 27, 2005
 
Operation Iraqi Freedom?
The Instapundit nails the NY Times for lying about WMD -- the NY Times declares that Bush only "seized upon" Democracy after the claims of WMD proved "fictitious".
The only plausible reason for keeping American troops in Iraq is to protect the democratic transformation that President Bush seized upon as a rationale for the invasion after his claims about weapons of mass destruction turned out to be fictitious. If that transformation is now allowed to run off the rails, the new rationale could prove to be as hollow as the original one.
I'll go farther than the Instapundit -- Actually the NY Times managed to sneak 3 lies into one sentence!

  1. That Bush only "seized" upon Democracy after no WMD were found. Wrong! Refuted by the Instapundit.

  2. Bush intentionally deceived America with the claims of WMD.
    "fictitious":
    adjective
    1. false: not true or genuine, and intended to deceive
    Wrong! There is no evidence that Bush was lying, and there is "slam dunk" evidence to the contrary.

  3. With respect to the WMD, we went to war because Iraq had WMD. Wrong again!

    The US went to Iraq because Iraq refused to comply with a) the Gulf War I cease-fire, and b) the 16 or 17 UN resolutions, i.e. Saddam did not demonstrate to us that they had no WMD -- in fact he seemed intent on being deceptive.

    I suppose the NY Times editors hate Bush too much to see the difference.

Monday, April 25, 2005
 
More Good News
Chrenkoff has more Good News from Iraq, including this refutation of the Conventional Wisdom:
Kaban, 31, electrical engineer from Baghdad: "There have been many changes since the fall of Saddam's regime, but the most important change was that we feel free... However, those who say that security was better in the past are completely wrong. It is true we did not have suicide car bombings in Saddam's era, but our homes did not feel safe from the intrusion of Saddam's security men, who came in the middle of the night to kidnap, kill or rape."

Thursday, April 21, 2005
 
NY Times: Eternally Biased
Jay Nordlinger reports a nice quote from the NY Times:
[The President] is lucky it was not the constitution of the English language and the laws of English grammar that he was called upon to support.
But it seems this quote is circa 1860, and the President in question was Abraham Lincoln.

Their arrogance endures.
 
France supports War!
It took long enough, but France has finally come around to the idea of pre-emptive war. But it seems they have limits -- you see, they don't support wars to overthrow inhuman murderous tyrant to install a democracy, but they do support a war to overthrow a democracy to install a tyranny:
During a state visit to China, French Premier Raffarin threw support behind a law allowing China to attack Taiwan and continued to push for a lift of the EU arms embargo.

At the outset of a three-day visit to China, French Prime Minister Jean-Pierre Raffarin said he supported Beijing's "anti-secession" law on Taiwan, and vowed to keep pushing for an end to an EU arms embargo that could open the door for Paris to sell weapons to the Asian giant.
Just when I thought I couldn't be more disgusted by the behavior of the French government. Can we finally stop referring to the French as "our allies"? They are not friends to the Free World. I don't think they are necessarily anti-democratic (though we'll see if they attempt to jam the French people with the new EU Consitution without popular ratification). But I do think they can be bought on the cheap, first by Saddam and now by China:
Raffarin also signed or finalized major business deals with Beijing valued at around $3.2 billion (2.4 billion euros).
To find the French, follow the money. When you get there, you may even find the Canadians and the UN.
Friday, April 01, 2005
 
Bergergate Roundup
Gratefully many bloggers are as outraged as I am: Captain Ed, Instapundit, INDC Journal, Powerline and The Corner. Bloggers unite! We cannot let them get away with this whitewash!

And Balloon Juice takes us back thru the history and reminds us of Bill Clinton's rather weak attempt to downplay the controversy.
Former president Bill Clinton defends his embattled national security advisor as a man who "always got things right," even if his desk was a mess.

"We were all laughing about it," Clinton said about the investigation into Sandy Berger for taking classified terrorism documents from the National Archives. "People who don't know him might find it hard to believe. But ... all of us who've been in his office have always found him buried beneath papers."
Does this implicate Bill in the cover-up? Or did he really, honestly believe pilfering and destroying confidential documents from the National Archives is funny? I hope not, but I wouldn't be suprised if he did.

And a great comment for those who think there is still some chance the destruction of documents wasn't a premeditated cover-up:
"The ambiguity is did he steal the documents in order to cover something up, or did he take them home for legitimate reasons, albeit a criminal action since they were classified, and for whatever reason destroy two and lie about it? The first is pretty damn serious. The second isn't, except for Sandy Berger, although his sentence seems to be pretty light."

Well, duh!! Since he purposfully destroyed 3 'copies' instead of just taking them back....they must have had some comments written on them - otherwise you are asking us to believe that he comitted, what he knew to be a crime as National Security Advisor, a crime for nothing???? Does this even make sense to you?

Nixon didn't erase those 8 minutes off of the tape because they weren't important and Berger didn't shred these documents because they were just copies....to belive [sic] that is just ridiculous!

 
Intimidation in Kalamazoo
Free speech for me, but not for thee.
 
The Democrats' Watergate
It's not the crime, it's the cover-up, right? Well in this case, we may never know what the crime was, because it seems the cover-up was largely successful.

Sandy Berger, National Security Advisor under Bill Clinton, has admitted to illegally removing classified documents relevant to the 9/11 attacks and shredding them by hand, and to making false statements to cover himself.

The Washington Post reports this morning,

Samuel R. "Sandy" Berger, a former White House national security adviser, plans to plead guilty to a misdemeanor, and will acknowledge intentionally removing and destroying copies of a classified document about the Clinton administration's record on terrorism....

The deal's terms make clear that Berger spoke falsely last summer in public claims that in 2003 he twice inadvertently walked off with copies of a classified document during visits to the National Archives, then later lost them....

The terms of Berger's agreement required him to acknowledge to the Justice Department the circumstances of the episode. Rather than misplacing or unintentionally throwing away three of the five copies he took from the archives, as the former national security adviser earlier maintained, he shredded them with a pair of scissors late one evening at the downtown offices of his international consulting business.

The document, written by former National Security Council terrorism expert Richard A. Clarke, was an "after-action review" prepared in early 2000 detailing the administration's actions to thwart terrorist attacks during the millennium celebration. It contained considerable discussion about the administration's awareness of the rising threat of attacks on U.S. soil.
I am very interested to hear how this offensive obstruction of justice (with respect to the Congressional investigation) will be reported to America by our media. If Condaleeza Rice or Paul Wolfowitz were caught red-handed shredding National Security documents relating to the 9/11 attacks, we would probably already be hearing talk of impeachment of the President, Watergate style.

So let's take review first reports this morning:

CBS and CNN report only the AP version, which actually forgets to mention the hands-on shredding and implies that there is still some doubt about his guilt and the whole situation is the Republicans' fault anyway:
[Berger] called the episode "an honest mistake," and denied criminal wrongdoing....

Many Democrats, including former President Clinton, suggested politics were behind disclosure of the probe only days before the release of the Sept. 11 commission report, which Republicans feared would be a blow to President Bush's re-election campaign.

ABC News has a different AP story which also forgets to mention the shredding, but does note that a "sensitive after-action report on the Clinton administration's handling of al-Qaida terror threats" is still missing.

NBC at MSNBC news has no reference, and apparently doesn't consider destroying classified government documents from the National Archives concerning 9/11 to be a "top story".

The NY Times does mention the shredding, but only to put the Berger spin on it with no counterpoints:
On Sept. 2, 2003, in a daylong review of documents, Mr. Berger took a copy of a lengthy White House "after-action" report that he had commissioned to assess the government's performance in responding to the so-called millennium terrorist threat before New Year's 2000, and he placed the document in his pocket, the associate said. A month later, in another Archives session, he removed four copies of other versions of the report, the associate said.

Mr. Berger's intent, the associate said, was to compare the different versions of the 2000 report side by side and trace changes.

"He was just too tired and wasn't able to focus enough, and he felt like he needed to look at the documents in his home or his office to line them up," the associate said. "He now admits that was a real mistake."

Mr. Berger admits to compounding the mistake after removing the second set of documents on Oct. 2, 2003, the associate said. In comparing the versions at his office later that day, he realized that several were essentially the same, and he cut three copies into small pieces, the associate said. He also admitted to improperly removing handwritten notes he had taken at the Archives, the associate said.

Two days later, staff members at the Archives confronted Mr. Berger, and he now admits to misleading the Archives about what had happened. He indicated that the removal was inadvertent, and though he returned the two remaining copies of the report, he said nothing about the three he had destroyed, the associate said.
Yes, he inadvertenly removed the documents in order to review them at home. And then shredded them because they were all the same. Now I get it.

An "embarassing" "mistake"? Actually a treacherous crime.

Update
Not suprisingly, the Instapundit has more, including a link to Jim Geraghty:
[T]here were some facts out there that were so damning, Sandy Berger was willing to break the law to make sure the public never saw them.



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