Posted on 08/15/2003 9:14:01 PM PDT by Pokey78
Wesley Clark's Imaginary Friend
Does Wesley Clark have an imaginary friend? The retired NATO commander and possible Democratic presidential candidate has been muttering darkly for several months that opportunists in the White House seized September 11 as a pretext to take out Saddam Hussein. Clark maintains that he received a call at home the afternoon of September 11, 2001, urging him to say on CNN that the attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon were connected to Iraq. But Clark has now provided three versions of this story, and they don't add up.
Version One: On "Meet the Press" on June 15 of this year, Clark asserted that intelligence about the Iraqi threat had been hyped. "Hyped by whom?" asked moderator Tim Russert.
CLARK: "I think it was an effort to convince the American people to do something, and I think there was an immediate determination right after 9/11 that Saddam Hussein was one of the keys to winning the war on terror. Whether it was the need just to strike out or whether he was a linchpin in this, there was a concerted effort during the fall of 2001 starting immediately after 9/11 to pin 9/11 and the terrorism problem on Saddam Hussein."
RUSSERT: "By who? Who did that?"
CLARK: "Well, it came from the White House, it came from people around the White House. It came from all over. I got a call on 9/11. I was on CNN, and I got a call at my home saying, 'You've got to say this is connected. This is state-sponsored terrorism. This has to be connected to Saddam Hussein.' I said, 'But--I'm willing to say it, but what's your evidence?' And I never got any evidence. And these were people who had--Middle East think tanks and people like this, and it was a lot of pressure to connect this and there were a lot of assumptions made. But I never personally saw the evidence and didn't talk to anybody who had the evidence to make that connection."
That was an astonishing accusation of corruption in the White House, and unsurprisingly it caught the eye of several astute observers. Sean Hannity followed up two weeks later on Fox's "Hannity and Colmes": Referring to the Russert transcript above, Hannity said of the call, "I think you owe it to the American people to tell us who."
Version Two: Clark replied, "It came from many different sources, Sean."
HANNITY: "Who? Who?"
CLARK : "And I personally got a call from a fellow in Canada who is part of a Middle Eastern think tank who gets inside intelligence information. He called me on 9/11."
HANNITY: "That's not the answer. Who in the White House?"
CLARK: "I'm not going to go into those sources."
New York Times columnist Paul Krugman also understood that Clark was playing with live political ammunition, and he wrote a July 15 column attacking the White House and headlined, "Pattern of Corruption."
"Gen. Wesley Clark says that he received calls on Sept. 11 from 'people around the White House' urging him to link that assault to Saddam Hussein," wrote Krugman.
Last week, rather belatedly, the New York Times published a July 18 letter from Clark purporting to "correct" the record.
Version Three: "I would like to correct any possible misunderstanding of my remarks on 'Meet the Press' quoted in Paul Krugman's July 15 column, about 'people around the White House' seeking to link Sept. 11 to Saddam Hussein," Clark wrote to the Times.
"I received a call from a Middle East think tank outside the country, asking me to link 9/11 to Saddam Hussein. No one from the White House asked me to link Saddam Hussein to Sept. 11. Subsequently, I learned that there was much discussion inside the administration in the days immediately after Sept. 11 trying to use 9/11 to go after Saddam Hussein.
"In other words, there were many people, inside and outside the government, who tried to link Saddam Hussein to Sept. 11."
In other words, and let's have a show of hands here: How many of you believe Gen. Clark really got that call?
If you read version three carefully, you will see that Clark has now exonerated the White House of his most serious accusation. Much as he wants to put a sinister spin on the matter, all Clark is saying is that the White House was more sensitive to the Iraqi threat after 9/11.
That leaves the question of the call. It's true that journalists protect sources all the time. But there are also times when a source deserves to be burned, and this is one of them. We're not talking about a normal journalist-source relationship here. We're talking about someone who urged the former supreme allied commander of NATO to go on national TV on 9/11 and assert a provocative untruth.
What conceivable reason can Clark have for protecting this joker? This is not someone he called for information. This is someone who called him--who wanted to use Clark--to plant a phony story. And why is this grossly irresponsible "fellow in Canada who is part of a Middle Eastern think tank" privy to "inside intelligence information"? You would think Clark has a positive duty to expose the man. But that assumes he exists.
Terry McAuliffe, Mythmaker
Normally, THE SCRAPBOOK wouldn't bother to parse the statements of Democratic national chairman Terry McAuliffe. He's the man who "guaranteed" last year that Jeb Bush wouldn't be reelected governor of Florida (Bush won by 13 points). He supported campaign finance reform, then set out to circumvent it. Now he's waxing insanely optimistic about 2004: Recently, as he left a building near Capitol Hill, McAuliffe spotted a Fox News correspondent and shouted, "Bush is gone!"
But McAuliffe is pushing a new conspiracy theory that deserves scrutiny. In a nutshell: The Clinton impeachment, the 2000 presidential election, Texas reapportionment, and the California recall are part of a "pattern," says McAuliffe--a pattern of Republicans' undermining democracy.
Well, let's go to the videotape. Impeachment? That turned out to be a political loser for Republicans. And even if impeachment had succeeded in ousting Clinton, Al Gore would have succeeded him. Even worse for Republicans, had Gore been running in 2000 as the incumbent, he'd probably have defeated George W. Bush.
But what about the 2000 race? Sure, Democrats are mad the U.S. Supreme Court decided the outcome. They wanted the low-wattage Florida Supremes to make the call. Most independent surveys have concluded Bush would probably have won under any reasonable statewide recount in Florida.
Then there's Texas, now an overwhelmingly Republican state. All statewide elected offices are held by Republicans. Both houses of the state legislature are Republican-controlled. The only exception is the U.S. House delegation, which is 17-15 Democratic as a result of a Democratic gerrymander in 1991. Democrats naturally want to hold this advantage, though it's unrepresentative and undemocratic. To block a Republican redistricting bill, Democrats fled the state to prevent a vote in the legislature. Who's undermining democracy?
Finally, California. The recall provision was put in the state constitution in 1911 by Progressives, the liberals of the day. It was for use should special interests grow too influential with officials in Sacramento. Today they have, especially the government employees' unions. In the 1960s, Democrats failed to get a recall of then-governor Ronald Reagan on the ballot. Now, 1.6 million voters--Republicans and Democrats--have signed petitions for a recall of Democratic governor Gray Davis. This is democracy at its grass-roots finest, with more elections and more accountability.
McAuliffe has a problem, but it's not a Republican conspiracy. It's the decline of the Democratic party on his watch. A new poll by Mark Penn, a Democratic pollster, finds public identification with the party at its lowest point since before the New Deal. Good work, Terry.
Speaking of California
THE DAILY STANDARD's special correspondent Bill Whalen--a fellow at the Hoover Institution--will be providing regular (and excellent, if we may say so) coverage of the recall campaign at weeklystandard.com.
This is a must-read...great find.
I could be wrong, but I'm thinking the White House had more important things on their minds then running to the phone and calling Wesley Clark
If I recall every one in the White House was evacuated on 9/11 because they thought a plane was heading their way.
Shouldn't there have been a congressional hearing into this?
Democrats could have called it Bush's "9/11-Gate."
I'd love to have heard Clark's testimony.
Yu Quanyu, director of the Chinese Academy of Social Studies, writes in the latest issue of "Ideological and Political Work Studies," a Communist Party propaganda primer, that Hillary should serve as a role model for effective use -- or is it abuse? -- of language."Communist Party cadres," Mr. Yu writes, "should study the speeches of Hillary Clinton because she offers a very good example of the skills of propaganda."
What the party apparatchiks say they love most about Hillary's rhetoric is a matter of technique more than content.
"Her sentences are short and stimulating," says Yu. "That's why she gets a lot of applause. But Chinese people have a habit of giving long speeches in which the sentences are long and tedious." 1
Ain't it the truth? And, if we ever had any doubt about General Wesley Clark's political affiliation, we now know he is a bald-faced liar and, thus, a natural Democrat.
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