Updates on For The Dream...
Nov. 8th, 2005 07:37 pmI have an update on For The Dream... it's long (over 3000 words) about Joseph Wilson.
Interesting fact: in all of the articles in which he's alleged to have lied about debunking the documents, he's never quoted directly on the matter. It's always someone else claiming that he did so. The one time he speaks about the documents in his own words, he insists he never saw them.
(So why did he suggest he may have misspoke to the Senate investigation? He hadn't seen the specific articles in a long time; he had no idea what they'd attributed to him at the time. The articles themselves are confusing, because they attribute unnamed officials speaking about an unnamed ex-ambassador... I'm not surprised he had a hard time remembering what he was supposed to have said, and who claimed he said it!)
It's really pretty scary how clean the story of Joseph Wilson once you do some real digging.
Interesting fact: in all of the articles in which he's alleged to have lied about debunking the documents, he's never quoted directly on the matter. It's always someone else claiming that he did so. The one time he speaks about the documents in his own words, he insists he never saw them.
(So why did he suggest he may have misspoke to the Senate investigation? He hadn't seen the specific articles in a long time; he had no idea what they'd attributed to him at the time. The articles themselves are confusing, because they attribute unnamed officials speaking about an unnamed ex-ambassador... I'm not surprised he had a hard time remembering what he was supposed to have said, and who claimed he said it!)
It's really pretty scary how clean the story of Joseph Wilson once you do some real digging.
no subject
Date: 2005-11-09 04:24 am (UTC)And from the red dot in your sea of blue (*smile*)
Date: 2005-11-09 06:37 am (UTC)http://www.opinionjournal.com/extra/?id=110007508
no subject
Date: 2005-11-09 06:41 am (UTC)Re: And from the red dot in your sea of blue (*smile*)
Date: 2005-11-09 08:06 am (UTC)"Moreover, Mr. Wilson had no intelligence background, was never a senior person in Niger when he was in the State Department, and was opposed to the administration's Iraq policy."
What was the administration's Iraq policy in February of 2002, when Joseph Wilson was sent?
See, this column, in the first few paragraphs, displays sloppy thinking. It's assuming facts that hadn't been established at the time he was sent.
Later, it claims that the VP's office hadn't been appraised of the trip, "as claimed by Mr. Wilson". Wilson never made that claim; he said that SOP would have been a report was delivered, perhaps orally.
Later, there's this:
More important than the inaccuracies (NB: *what* inaccuracies? He said there were tight controls that he didn't think someone could sneak a major purchase through; there are. Everything else he said was loaded with caveats) is that, if the CIA truly, truly, truly had wanted Ms. Plame's identity to be secret, it never would have permitted her spouse to write the op-ed. Did no one at Langley think that her identity could be compromised if her spouse wrote a piece discussing a foreign mission about a volatile political issue that focused on her expertise?
*This* assumes that his wife played a major role in his being sent. But all she did was mention that she knew someone who could do the job. Why would subsequent investigation lead to her?
See, it's assuming that she someone forced the CIA into giving him the job, that she was a key player, rather than someone who threw his hat into the ring. Well, we know that she *did*, in fact, just throw his hat into the ring.
If there was nothing bad about his wife throwing his hat into the ring, there's no reason to suspect her name will ever come up.
That the CIA and Joseph Wilson were angry that her name came up is evidence that they are either *really* sneaky (and yet, awfully stupid - her name was valuable!) *or* that Wilson's claim is true: she had no real, important part in sending him, past saying he could do the job, that the decision to send him was based on his ability to do the job, not her introduction.
See, this is the key mistake that the Wilson critics keep making. They keep making assumptions that didn't exist prior to Wilson's article.
If his wife had sent him... but she didn't. The only reason people speculated about that was Novak's column.
He was opposed to the administration's plans for war... but the war wasn't going to be fought for another 13 months. And who knew that fourteen months later, in May of 2003, they'd be trying to find the promised stocks of WMDs after the invasion?
Novak asks "why would a member of Clinton's national security council be sent?" Well... if it was a partisan mission, for partisan purposes, yes, Joseph Wilson would have been a terrible choice, if he'd served the Clinton administration. But if it was an investigative mission, if they were just trying to discern the truth... well, it's a pretty stupid question, isn't it? Clinton might not have been the best President ever, but he was competent, and if he picked Wilson, it was probably because Wilson was competent.
Re: And from the red dot in your sea of blue (*smile*)
Date: 2005-11-09 06:25 pm (UTC)She is hardly a sloppy thinker. Please note her credentials. Unlike many folks who are armchair-quarterbacking this affair (including thee and me), she has first hand knowledge of how the CIA works.
no subject
Date: 2005-11-09 06:26 pm (UTC)Moral: never trust the press (*ducks and runs*).
Re: And from the red dot in your sea of blue (*smile*)
Date: 2005-11-09 06:56 pm (UTC)Even the bit about the CIA having to review his article... his trip was (his words) discreet, but not secret.
no subject
Date: 2005-11-09 07:12 pm (UTC)The trip was not conducted as a political attack; there was no political attack to *make* in Febrary, 2002.
All of these speculation that there was something wrong with his wife throwing his hat into the ring is based upon knowledge that he wrote an article that raised some ugly questions.
But he hadn't written the article when he'd been sent. So why does she fall under suspicion? What motivation could she have had, other than offering someone who had the ability to do the job?
Can't you see? By saying she's guilty of something, or tainted by the situation, you're assuming that it's a political issue... back when it wasn't yet political.
The *only* way that we can say that she did something terrible by suggesting her husband is if everyone in Washington already knew that we were going to invade (no questions asked!) in February 2002, over a year before the invasion took place.
If the CIA knew in February of 2002 that we would invade, come hell or high water, well, Joseph Wilson's little piece about "did they overplay the uranium card?" isn't even the tip of the iceberg, it's an unrelated icicle.
And I'm sorry, I feel passionately about this, so if I'm coming across badly, I apologize. I just can't quite see how people can't *see* this.
What *was* going on in 2/2002 that would make Valerie about to engage in some kind of meaningful subterfuge? What made her role important, using the information we had available from 2/2002?
If the answer is "nothing", then the whole leak case falls apart, doesn't it? They were just trying to discredit a critic ("He's no one important, not anyone that is respected by the agency; he just got sent because his wife thought he could do it."), and did so in a horribly reckless way, and then covered it up.
no subject
Date: 2005-11-09 10:06 pm (UTC)I'm as surprised that you can't see what's perfectly clear to me as you are surprised that I can't see what's perfectly clear to you. A fault of our isms, most likely, with the truth somewhere in between.
Meanwhile in Iraq, the military continues to roll up the insurgents' nests up the Euphrates and up to the Syran border, and the Iraq army is increasingly taking the lead with us increasingly falling back to a supporting role. I wish I could get a good look at the campaign news from the national media instead of having to trawl the warblogs.
no subject
Date: 2005-11-10 12:47 am (UTC)The war is one thing; I can deal with people supporting the war. I think they're wrong, they think I'm wrong, hey, life is like that.
The rest... well, we'll just be repeating ourselves, and the best we can do there is annoy each other I imagine.
Can I offer to buy you a virtual drink, with a promise of a real one, if/when we're next together?
no subject
Date: 2005-11-10 02:11 am (UTC)