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Politics : Stockman Scott's Political Debate Porch

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To: jlallen who wrote (21571)7/6/2003 9:25:43 PM
From: Mannie  Read Replies (2) of 89467
 
Trust Is Important

Five and a half days after a U.S. strike against a convoy of vehicles
on the road near the Iraq-Syria border, the chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff and the secretary of defense claimed they had no
details of the action.

That's not believable.

This attack was deemed so important that the president was
notified of it in advance, so it is simply not believable that a full
report of the incident had not been sent up the chain of command.
Private journalists had already interviewed survivors and reported
that the convoy, instead of carrying high-ranking Iraqi officials,
contained nothing more than common sheep smugglers. U.S.
forces in a nearby village also killed a young mother and a little
girl. The Pentagon was probably too embarrassed to admit that
they killed innocent people for no good reason.

That is no excuse for lying. If there are national-security reasons
for not discussing the incident, all Gen. Richard Myers and Defense
Secretary Donald Rumsfeld have to say is, "No comment."

Instead, they stood there and expected the press to believe that
some junior officer who no doubt commanded the raid had not filed
an after-action report five and a half days after it was completed, or
if he had, it had not gone up the chain of command — connected,
of course, electronically. Bull.

Lying, directly or indirectly, is a mortal sin for a public official in a
free society. It erodes trust, which is the glue that holds society
together. And it is entirely unjustifiable. When I was flacking for
politicians, I always told my clients they had two, and only two,
choices if asked a question: tell the truth or say "No comment." It
was part of my agreement from the get-go that I would give them
the best advice I could, but I would never, under any
circumstances, lie for them.

Unfortunately, most Americans don't seem to care if their public
officials lie to them. Many seem to expect it. No wonder we are
coming unglued at the seams of our society. Trust is imperative.
And trust is based on truth.

We have no right to expect public officials to be infallible or
omniscient, but we do have the right to demand that they always
tell us the truth. That means that when they say something, they
themselves must believe it to be true even if it turns out later to be
in error. That is an honest mistake. A lie is when they tell us
something that they know at the time of the telling is not true.

I have no respect for Rumsfeld. He's arrogant and contemptuous of
the American public. His claim not to know the details of the raid is
typical of his style. It's pointless for anyone to attend or listen to a
Pentagon briefing. Officials never tell the public anything important.

While it's true that Iraq might be better off without Saddam
Hussein, it's also true that the United States is much worse off if it
turns out that the Bush administration persuaded Americans to go
to war by deceiving them. The administration said Iraq was an
imminent danger to the United States. It implied cleverly that Iraq
had ties to al-Qaida. Nine weeks after the major combat is over,
there is not a thimbleful of evidence to support either proposition.
On the contrary, the evidence is that the regime in Iraq was far, far
weaker than we thought. Even Saddam's palaces turn out to be
ersatz. I read one report that said the chandeliers are plastic, not
crystal, and the floors are concrete with only a thin veneer of
marble. Saddam, it turns out, had more in common with the Wizard
of Oz than with a real menace like Hitler or Stalin.

The Republicans in the House and Senate, to their discredit, are
blocking a real investigation of the claims that led up to the war.
They and the administration folks are slip-sliding all over the place.
Pretty soon they will be saying, "We never said Saddam had
weapons of mass destruction." Bull again.

As far as I'm concerned, the Bush administration has lost all of its
credibility, and an administration no one can believe is an
administration that needs to be replaced.

© 2003 by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
reese.king-online.com
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