Posted on 07/12/2003 11:27:50 AM PDT by yonif
The Bush administration may already have hard evidence of Iraqi weapons of mass destruction that it is not sharing with the public, said Lt.-Gen. (ret.) Thomas McInerney, a military commentator for Fox News.
"The administration is willing to take the heat for now," McInerney yesterday told The Jerusalem Post, "then release the information next August." Doing so would put the Democrats who have been critical of the US president's policy on Iraq at a distinct disadvange in the run-up to the presidential election in November 2004.
Along with TV military commentators Maj.-Gen. (ret.) Paul Vallely and Col. (ret.) Jack Jacobs, McInerney came to Israel on Tuesday for a six-day study mission. The program was organized by the Foreign Ministry, the IDF Spokesman's Office, and the America-Israel Friendship League.
On Wednesday, the three commentators met with Deputy Defense Minister Ze'ev Boim. They are also scheduled to meet top IDF brass and tour the separation fence the goverment is building along the West Bank.
When the evidence of WMDs finally sees light, McInerney predicted that a number of countries, including France and Germany, will finds themselves in an uncomfortable diplomatic position.
"We know that these WMDs traveled through Syria," he said. "We know that a lot of these scientists had French passports."
A year before the Bush Administration planned for war in Iraq, McInerney and fellow Fox News analyst Vallely correctly predicted that the invasion would be an air-centered, technologically networked "war of liberation" that would last less than 30 days.
Both were critical of other ex-military officers such as former Army general Wesley Clark, who is now running for the Democratic presidential nomination who, they say, let political opinions paint a dire picture of the war.
"The credibility of CNN went way down," said Vallely.
Journalists traveling with soldiers were not the problem. McInerney said that, when properly used, embedded reporters proved of great value to commentators back in TV news studios.
"The embeds viewed the war through a straw," said McInerney, "but if you gathered up three or four of those straws, you got a general picture of what was going on."
But if one fails to pool together accounts from embedded reporters, the result is stories of a slowdown in the advance on Baghdad and a shortage of ammunition, neither of which happened. McInerney, Vallely, and Jacobs believe that negative coverage of the occupation stems from liberal circles disappointed with the success of the war.
"You have to remember that there's still leftover irritation from the election," said Jacobs, a Medal of Honor recepient and commentator for NBC. "If George Bush came out in favor of worldwide democracy, they would be against it."
Despite Wednesday night's killing of two American soldiers, one near Tikrit and the other near Baghad, Vallely said the occupation "is not going badly."
He notes buses are running, and students have gone back to school. In addition, oil is flowing, and the electrical and water utilities are being restored.
Nevertheless, all three men contend that an Iraqi interim government should have been established before the invasion a position long-advanced by the US Defense Department.
"But the CIA and State Department argued that you first have to get in-country and identify the players," said McInerney.
That Iraqi resistance exists at all, said Jacobs, is due to the rapid collapse of Saddam Hussein's army during the war. Coalition forces simply did not have the opportunity to hammer all his troops. "We are victims of our own success," he said. Jacobs went on to chide the Bush Administration for showing "insufficient ruthlessness" in rooting out pro-Saddam partisans hiding in the "Sunni triangle" of Tikrit, Baghdad, and Fallujah. Private arms held by the population must be confiscated with greater alacrity.
"It is inconceviable that you have people at a funeral shooting their AK-47s in the air," he said.
Vallely warned that Iraq is just one campaign in a larger American war against terrorism. "The next campaign may be against North Korea, Iran, or Syria," he said.
Commenting on Israeli-Palestinian peace negotiations, McInerney argued that the US-sponsored road map is a positive development but only as a first step.
"Hope isn't a strategy," the ex-USAF officer said. "You still have to go after the terrorists."
Two mites living together?
Tony Blair is coming to the U.S. next week to meet with President Bush AND address a joint session of Congress.
The way the media is behaving we'll be lucky to see it on tv since they are ignoring it----but I'm sure when the time comes the cables will cover it.
I find this address to Congress by Blair very significant since the latest "get Bush" tactic is taking after him for his reference to British intelligence.
Um..no.. I've cited public polling. If the polls indicated otherwise, then my speech would indicate likewise..
You claim the American President is elected by referendum. This is absolutely not true.
Oh please, gimme a break. If it's not obvious what I'm doing in that remark, then look up over your head...
You have a stake in this argument just like anybody else. Your stake (altough you have declined to name it to me) will inevitably drag your objectivity down.
Whatever my stake would not extend so far as dismissing poll results simply because they disagree with my preferred version of reality. I could cite innumerable polls that contradict that which I wish were true about public opinion...
...We won't invade Iran, North Korea or even Syria for the simple reason that they probably won't be such pushovers.
Wow. That's huge. What's the distinction between that and a bully?
The Iraqi people clearly hated their regime more than they distrusted us.
Not sure I agree here, but anyway time will tell.
Well that's fair enough. If we want to get into semantics. The sun doesn't rise until officially announced? I don't mean to be sarcastic, but our policy in Iraq hasn't been exactly super top secret or anything. It matters not whether Congress passes an "Official Act" and reads Saddam the riot act before the news cameras. Our policy has been fairly overt to all but the willfully blind.
Call it what you will, this has been our policy whether one acknowledges it or not. Congress authorizes the funds and the President commands the troops. Both those branches have been involved with this policy for years and years. That's the way it is. Saddam is gone. That was inevitable. It's silly to quibble. This isn't a courtroom where either of us are looking for some "letter of the law" loophole to wriggle free with.
I think this is spot on. I also think they won't wait until August---just until every viable Dem nominee has raised their voices to a fever pitch and tried to make the race about WMD. Then, W comes out with the evidence and totally sinks their boats. Suddenly all Dems are left with their pants down going "Uh... what did I do with that medicare idea I had...." It's going to be brilliant.
That's not the way to look at it. We're bullies as far as dictators who bully their own people are concerned. But not all bullies can be dealt with like Saddam, because the American people won't tolerate casualties beyond a certain point. Furthermore, not all dictators are hated enough by their people to the extent that most of them would prefer foreign occupation as the lesser of two evils. But with Saddam, that was exactly the case.
My research has been duly cited, and the statement was the polling indicates what it indicates. That is not an opinion, the evidence of my veracity is posted for all to see.
Opinions are like a__holes. Every one has at least one, and it usually stinks.
Then by all means spare me any further insight into yours.
Again, I'm not sure this is the case.
Wasn't obvious to me. Direct election of the President is a specific democratic platform.
Whatever my stake would not extend so far as dismissing poll results simply because they disagree with my preferred version of reality.
The polls mean squat and you know this. You knew in 1991, that whether you wanted us to or not- we would eventually have to take Saddam down. This was obvious. It's just like going to work in the morning, wanting to or not is a side issue.
I'm sure if I were the head of one of the leftist media and given any amount of time, I could manipulate public opinion any way I wanted. It doesn't matter. It doesn't matter. We don't run this country based on one of Dan Rather's latest polls. Show me in the Constitution where it says the latest opinion poll has any bearing whatsoever. We are not a democracy and hopefully we never will be. Mob rule has no place in America.
I still reject your assertions. I believe America is reflective enough to know that Saddam had to go. I believe they knew it even more so after 9/11 and I believe they would supported this President in this mission with or without the WMD. The WMD have always been a foregone conclusion though. It's a silly argument. Everybody knows Saddam had these weapons. Everydody (you included) knows that it is only the opponents of the war or opponents of Bush that are clamouring for the weapons now. You know this. Saddam had them. Those weapons are out there somewhere. They will turn up. And when they do, people using them for their own little petty arguments are going to look awfully stupid.
Republican actually. If we still did not retain the last vestiges of the great Republic, Al Gore would be President.
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