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Paul O'Neill tells the truth – Bush doesn't (O'Neill Bombshell: How Damaging?)
WorldNetDaily.com ^ | Friday, January 16, 2003 | Bill Press

Posted on 01/16/2004 4:39:34 AM PST by JohnHuang2

Who's telling the truth, Paul O'Neill or President Bush? It's up to us to decide. When he named him Treasury secretary, President Bush praised O'Neill as a "straight shooter." But now the White House says O'Neill is a big liar. Click here for full article

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O'Neill Bombshell: How Damaging?

In a bombshell revelation that has Washington reeling in shock, former Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill told CBS News that Bush was no great admirer of Saddam Hussein, with the President even hinting sinisterly the ousted Iraqi leader was a 'bad person.' (O'Neill memo to Bush: Saddam had enough enemies already! He didn't need another one!)

Oddly enough, "from the very beginning, there was a conviction that Saddam Hussein was a bad person" and that this 'bad person' "needed to go," even before the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, a flabbergasted O'Neill, the main source for a new book, told "60 Minutes" in an interview aired Sunday. (Saddam gassed thousands, raped and pillaged, invaded neighbors, aided terrorism, plotted Bush (41's) failed assassination; just who in their right mind would suspect Saddam's a bad person anyway?)

Even more damning, the White House appeared to believe Saddam was a threat to peace and stability before 9/11. (About Saddam, Bush should keep his unfair opinions to himself! What's Bush thinking, he's Treasury Secretary or somethin'?) O'Neill, a threat to peace and stability in the market before and after 9/11, shockingly added that the White House had contingency plans for a possible U.S. invasion of Iraq, accusing the President of not ignoring the threat of terrorism and developing a winning strategy to deal with it from the get go, among other very damaging allegations. (After the U.N. gave Saddam only 12 years to turn a new leaf, Bush took only 2 years to rush to war). More damning still, credible reports suggest the Bush White House plot against Saddam predates the Bush White House, with 'Regime Change' having been U.S. policy since 1998 -- indicating Bush's nefarious influence, as governor of Texas, reached deep into the Clinton administration and Congress, which mandated Regime Change that year. All of this plotting and scheming by Bush falls right in line with Bush being completely disengaged, detached, passive, lethargic, and really, really dumb -- as O'Neill depicts him. (During Cabinet meetings in the Clinton White House, I bet Bush was like a blind man in a roomful of deaf people).

On "60 Minutes," O'Neill recalls his first Cabinet meeting with Bush this way: "I went in with a long list of things to talk about and, I thought, to engage (him) on...it turned out to be me talking and the president just listening." (O'Neill then spends the next 2 years just listening to the President talk non-stop about his plan to invade Iraq, enough to fill 19,000 pages of documents. Or are these the same documents Howard Dean sealed up in Vermont?)

As Treasury Secretary for 23 rocky months, O'Neill recalls seeing no convincing evidence that Saddam possessed WMD. (For 23 rocky months, I recall seeing no convincing evidence the U.S. possessed a Treasury Secretary).

That said, I'll confess the "60 Minutes" interview was devastating. Sorry -- I'm not going to paper over this, nor coat it with candy. O'Neill shows how a crucial gap in intelligence could lead to misguided thinking on Iraq. Where was this crucial intelligence gap, precisely? From the interview, I concluded the intelligence gap was the empty space between O'Neill's ears. Small wonder Bush canned him. (When O'Neill heard the Mars Rover had landed, he probably called it 'a really huge leap -- the notion that the U.S. has the unilateral right to do whatever we decide to do.' If book sales falter, brace for his next shocker: How Bush began planning to invade Mars within days of taking office. In a related note, Wesley Clark may have questioned why the Mars probe could not be conducted from 15,000 ft. up and Howard Dean may have wondered whether this was predicted in the Old or New Testament and Al Sharpton may have questioned why no signs of blacks nor Hispanics on a planet of color (red) and Dennis Kucinich may have hoped to gain momentum from this tour of his homeland. I'd wager John F. Kerry may have checked to see if Dean ever spoke in support of legislation giving Bush authority to invade Mars. Joe Lieberman may have wondered whether the Rover was Al Gore in a flight suit).

Perhaps most damning of all, O'Neill claims to have seen irrefutable evidence that politics played a role in the Bush White House, which came as a terrible shock to O'Neill, a veteran of the Nixon and Ford administrations. His experience with Bush may have scarred O'Neill for life. He has not adjusted well. To relieve the emotional upheaval of seeing politics occur in Washington, O'Neill talked to former Wall Street Journal reporter, Ron Suskind, author of a new book, The Price of Loyalty, offering up those 19,000 documents. "The biggest difference between (Nixon-Ford) and (Bush-Cheney) is that our group -- (Nixon-Ford) -- was mostly about evidence and analysis," whereas the Bush people seem "mostly about politics," O'Neill told Mr. Suskind. Clearly, other than Watergate, Enemies lists, the Plumbers, wage and price controls, Kissinger's 'Peace in our time,' nixing Bretton Woods, etc., politics was something that never happened in the Nixon and Ford administrations.

On Bush's policy of tax cuts, O'Neill took a dim view, accusing Bush of fiscal irresponsibility. (I wouldn't too quickly dismiss O'Neill's economic credentials, though. Recall all the jitteriness as investors watched the DOW plummet in '02? To reassure the markets, O'Neill launched an African AIDS awareness tour with Bono, traveling the whole of Africa. The DOW leapt 25 percent afterwards -- in the 12 months since Bush sacked him for such outstanding work. (From the beginning, there was a conviction in the market that O'Neill was a bad person for the job and that he needed to go).

O'Neill says his 'going public' has nothing to do with being a bitter and disgruntled former employee; he has no ax to grind, no hard feelings for being forced from his post summarily -- really! (Next he'll say he began planning to remove himself from office days after taking office. To be fair, O'Neill has grounds for complaining: Saddam had 24 years before being ousted for screwing things up; O'Neill had 23 months before being ousted for screwing things up).

(Facing a backlash, O'Neill said Tuesday he didn't really mean all that stuff about Bush being blind and that he didn't really mean there was anything wrong with contingency planning for possible war with Iraq and that he didn't really mean to use "vivid" langauge quoted in the book and that he didn't really mean to imply he would not vote for Bush in November. "I don't see anyone who is better prepared or more capable" than Bush, he told NBC's "Today" show, adding that the whole thing was just some big misunderstanding -- really! -- and that if he "could take it back," he "would take it back," referring to the blind man quote. He also denied any classified documents were used -- the subject of a new Treasury Department probe -- or that he doesn't think so, or that he doesn't think so but can't be sure because he never even checked the material before giving it to Mr. Suskind. He denied taking any agency documents. "The truth is, I didn't take any documents at all," he told Katie Couric. The spine-chilling truth is that these documents were stalking O'Neill. That's right. Everywhere he went, the documents followed. All 19,000 pages. I hate when that happens!)

Shocked at evidence Bush early on considered using force to topple Saddam (even planning for the postwar), Democrats jostling for their party's presidential nomination were quick to pounce.

Massachusetts Sen. John F. Kerry, who served in Vietnam, called the charges "very serious," noting that the "White House needs to answer these charges truthfully because they threaten to shatter (its) already damaged credibility as never before" -- even stretching back to the days when John F. Kerry served in Vietnam.

Evidence of an early invasion and postwar plan shows that "the American people were presented with misleading or manufactured intelligence," said Howard Dean.

Evidence of an early invasion plan and extensive postwar planning is damning enough, but Democrats also complain the White House lacked an adequate invasion plan and pursued no extensive postwar planning.

At a news conference Monday at Monterrey, Mexico, Bush noted that "Like the previous administration, we were for regime change."

Any questions?

Anyway, that's
My two cents...
"JohnHuang2"



TOPICS: Editorial; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: pauloneill
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Friday, January 16, 2003

Quote of the Day by OldFriend

1 posted on 01/16/2004 4:39:35 AM PST by JohnHuang2
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To: JohnHuang2
LOL!

I'm no fan of GW, but this O'Neill is a major jackass schmuck.

2 posted on 01/16/2004 4:43:02 AM PST by AAABEST
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To: xm177e2; mercy; Wait4Truth; hole_n_one; GretchenEE; Clinton's a rapist; buffyt; ladyinred; Angel; ..
Have a great weekend, y'all -- take care!
3 posted on 01/16/2004 4:43:20 AM PST by JohnHuang2 ("GW is driving the Rat Lunatics into a deeper (QUAGMIRE OF) insanity every day," says Grampa Dave)
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To: AAABEST
;-)
Have a great weekend, my friend. See ya soon.
4 posted on 01/16/2004 4:44:09 AM PST by JohnHuang2 ("GW is driving the Rat Lunatics into a deeper (QUAGMIRE OF) insanity every day," says Grampa Dave)
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To: JohnHuang2
THe things O'Neil said (esp after the retractions) were barely newsworthy. The media just want to pretend regime change was not Clinton's policy.
5 posted on 01/16/2004 4:45:13 AM PST by Williams
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To: JohnHuang2
I've read that this goes back much further. George W. Bush's 3rd grade teacher was quoted as saying, "little George was obsessed with Saddam even at the tender age of 9. George would talk for 15 minutes on current events day about regime change in Iraq. While the other kids were concerned much more local issues."

I wish I could find the article.

CG
6 posted on 01/16/2004 4:49:10 AM PST by Conspiracy Guy (Freepers are the best.)
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To: JohnHuang2
I think O'Neill is smitten, blinded by love, head over heels for Bono.
7 posted on 01/16/2004 4:52:30 AM PST by Cincinatus' Wife
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To: JohnHuang2
Brilliant, John, just Brilliant!!!
8 posted on 01/16/2004 4:53:07 AM PST by maica (Laus Deo)
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To: JohnHuang2
PS: I did not waste my (failing) eyesight on the Bill Press part of this thread. Some authors are must reads - JH2 is one of them, BP is definitely not!
9 posted on 01/16/2004 4:55:25 AM PST by maica (Laus Deo)
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To: maica; JohnHuang2
O'Neil's back tracking and assumed innocence doesn't mean squat. According to the editor-in-chief of the New Yorker, David Remnick, Suskind allowed O'Neil to vet every word in that book.
10 posted on 01/16/2004 5:13:29 AM PST by Carolinamom
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To: maica; JohnHuang2
Some authors are must reads - JH2 is one of them...

Indeed!

As is OldFriend's marvelous 1/16/2004 Quote of the Day that JH2 references above and which I quote here for posterity:

The first time Kennedy complained that President Bush didn't have an exit strategy for Iraq I called his office and asked if he had an exit strategy for Mary Jo when he shoved his car off the bridge with her in it.

The aide was not amused. ~OldFriend

ROTFLMAO!

11 posted on 01/16/2004 5:15:41 AM PST by jigsaw (Infidel-American.)
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To: JohnHuang2
He has not adjusted well.

Make that, "He is not well adjusted."

12 posted on 01/16/2004 5:16:46 AM PST by mtbopfuyn
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To: AAABEST
After taking in all this news about the "shocking revelation" from former Treasury Secretary, Paul O'Neill, who in a 60 Minutes interview, said that President Bush in his first cabinet meeting, stressed that removing Saddam was a top priority, I did a little objective studying on the subject. Was this just sour grapes from a fired cabinet member or was Paul O’Neill really reveling some damaging news against his former boss?
What I found was that this first cabinet meeting was written about in another book that came out nearly a year ago, The Right Man, written by former Whitehouse speech writer, David Frum, who said Bush, in this first meeting, spoke of his determination to dig Saddam out of power.
Why is it breaking news when it was already in print in a (pro-Bush) book for many months? And why does no one remember the words spoken in the Vice Presidential debates by Al Gore that a regime change in Iraq would be a top priority of a Clinton/Gore administration?
My conclusion is, yes it is just sour grapes and an attempt to sale a book.
I for one am glad Bush planned and then completed an objected unfulfilled by the previous administration.
13 posted on 01/16/2004 5:19:42 AM PST by USNFighting31st
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To: JohnHuang2
What a spot on piece. Well done.
14 posted on 01/16/2004 5:28:21 AM PST by cyncooper ("We call evil by its name")
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To: USNFighting31st
Really.

I had a lot of mixed feelings about the war - being that I fought the first one, but who could not rejoice at the capture of Saddam?

That's my moron test. If the person is for any reason upset about the capture of Saddam (and I've come across a few), that person is a jaundiced moron.

15 posted on 01/16/2004 5:30:32 AM PST by AAABEST
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To: JohnHuang2
The Army War College, hardly a bunch of lefties, issued a report criticizing the White House for what it called an "unnecessary" war in Iraq.

This line from Press is blatantly FALSE. Report was done by a visiting Prof and was disavowed by the Army War College

16 posted on 01/16/2004 5:45:11 AM PST by LavaDog
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To: JohnHuang2
OMG that picture is tooo funny. They both look like beachballs!
17 posted on 01/16/2004 5:45:14 AM PST by areafiftyone (Democrats = the hamster is dead but the wheel is still spinning)
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To: JohnHuang2
O'Neill's bombshell was a dud, as you have so masterfully pointed out.

His statements the last few days, in light of his interview, have been amazing and makes him look the fool (that he is for ever giving that interview).

Bush's prosecution of the war on terror abroad have been inspiring and spot on IMHO...I only wish he would be as inspiring with a number of his domestic moves (CFR, AWB, Immigration, health care, etc)....but sadly, they are not.

18 posted on 01/16/2004 5:47:11 AM PST by Jeff Head
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To: JohnHuang2
How could O'Neill have broken the law when the only documents he took with him were those the Treasury Department's chief counsel gave him to help write the book?

Easy, he gave Mr. Suskind OTHER documents not contained on the CD.

Legislation signed by Clinton in 1998 was to fund opposition groups inside Iraq to overthrow Saddam Hussein – not to send in the Marines.

Is this true? Or is Mr. Press misleading to make his story work?

The Army War College, hardly a bunch of lefties, issued a report criticizing the White House for what it called an "unnecessary" war in Iraq.

No, Mr. Press, a single professor at the Army War College issued an essay. The 'deans' at the AWC found it appropriate to ALLOW the essay to be released under the 1st Amendment. They did not ENDORSE it.

There's one more reason to believe Paul O'Neill: He refused to lie before, even when he was fired.

Huh? A non-liar would never lie? That is a fallacy.

BTW John, you ARE fun to read!

19 posted on 01/16/2004 5:49:17 AM PST by RedWing9 (No tag here... Just want to stay vague...)
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To: JohnHuang2
YOU JUST KNOW SACREDCOWBURGERS WASN'T GOING TO MISS OUT ON THIS OPPORTUNITY.


20 posted on 01/16/2004 6:08:22 AM PST by areafiftyone (Democrats = the hamster is dead but the wheel is still spinning)
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