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Classified Session of Congress Called
The dems forced a classified session where they discussed prewar intelligence and missinformation. Apparently the dems called for a new stage 2 investigation. All I can say is about time. We have a duty to investigate this and find out if we were lied to and missled anyone not wanting this is obstructing justice.
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Yes, I agree it's about time. The only thing I'm wondering is why they are doing it behind closed doors? Are the senators that afraid of the administration and/or american people?
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I'm guessing that there might be some discussion of classified materials that can't be made public.
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Oh man I wish it wasn't closed! I want to hear this so bad. I really hope it's not just some fake crap to keep the democrats happy.
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A closed door session may be positive given that there would be no need for public "posturing" by either party. I found the following article some days ago which I think is related to the Phase II investigation mentioned in the OP. The public's trust in congress and the administration needs repairing with some definitive action, and both parties must realize it. If a closed session can produce some unified movement in moving the country forward, I'm all for it.
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I think what will happen depends on the indictments and the charges against Libby (and perhaps Rove and others). And what more comes out of these.
If the polls show the people want heads to roll, then heads will roll and the GOP will deny anything and claim it's the Dems doing it all (to save face and keep the hate alive), and the Dems. will claim they are holding accountable those who are responsible. Both sides will postulate and pose and so on and such. However, if the polls remain divided and nothing more damaging comes up, Bush made peace with the Conservatives with the Alita nomination. So they'll just keep claiming it's all partisan and laugh it off. Basically, it all comes down to everything else in Washington, what do the polls say and what do the partisan leaders tell you to do. And I love polls you can elicit the answer you want simply by the phrasing of the question or the "randomness" of the phone calls. I can say and show I had a poll of 5,000 GOP and 5,000 dems and the vast majority wanted this..... but, did I mention the 5,000 GOP I called were moderates at best and claimed they would vote for who they wanted not down party lines... whereas the 5,000 Dems were strictly Dem and wouldn't vote for an office if they had to vote for anyone but a Dem. But polls have a purpose...... follow the leader and show what "everyone else thinks so you don't have too". Easily manipulated and easily believed by enough to change an election. |
the motion itself is a parlimentary tactic...it may or may not have been a classified discussion.
but it takes time, and can't be overturned immediatly. read the procedure. Motion, and second...and it closes down business w/o a vote or cloture. Then, the cameras are shut off, galleries cleared, and security sweep performed. How long you wanna bet that takes? It's a fillibuster in a jar. |
Mind-boggling. In what alternate universe can the theory that Congress was duped into authorizing the President of the United States to go to war be feasible? What could have made powerful, intelligent, connected Democratic leaders like Harry Reid and John F. Kerry side with hawkish Republicans like Dick Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld? Can one honestly believe that these people, these Democratic leaders, don't make decisions of life and death, war and peace without reading between the lines? Could it be that certain Democrats, such as those who voted in favor of war, sold their souls in hopes of becoming President by siding with the Republicans to appear "unified" in the eyes of the American People, post 9/11?
And now that Bush won the election, and things are difficult in Iraq, and the body count is rising, and the economy is suspect and gas prices are high and people are getting restless and demonstrating in front of Bush's ranch, could it be that these same war-mongering Democrats are living to regret their outpouring of "opportunistic goodwill", and are playing the role of the Scorned to the hilt? An indictment here! An indictment there! We have nothing to show for siding with the Republicans pre-election!! Lash out, strike down, revenge!!! I say BULLSHIT the Congress didn't know what the score was in Iraq when they authorized Bush to go to war. I could list scores of quotes from Democrats - PRIOR to the 04 election! - saying how Hussein was a threat to National Security, a threat to the entire region, a (past/present/future) safe haven for muslim radicals, a terrorist black market, that he needed to be stopped before doing something drastic, blah blah blah. Now after losing the election, its all sour grapes and politicizing the Politicization of the war. If one thinks its entirely the Republicans' fault for the hardships of the country these days - without any Democratic complicity, duplicity and bald-faced pandering - they are misjudging the situation imho. |
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It's been two years and three months since the Roberts Senate Select committee started it's investigation. It's been one week short of 16 months since Roberts made his "commitment", quoted above, to finish "Phase II" of his investigation. This is the report on what the white house "knew", vs. what it said in the lead up to invading Iraq, and about how it "fixed the facts" to "match the policy. You had your rant, the progress of the Roberts committee in regard to producing Phase II of it's investigation, speaks for itself. Reid was correct in what he did today to move the focus of the media away from Bush's "catapulting the propaganda" about "Bird Flue", and his distraction attempt yesterday with the smokescreen "Scalito" SCOTUS appointment. The indignation that you diplayed here is misplaced. 1245 or more American families of our military will have an empty seat at their Thanksgiving dinner table than they would have on July 9, 2004, when Roberts and Rockefeller were quoted, above. For what????? |
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You have to remember Bush and company had even Colin Powell believing we needed to go to war. That's what's at issue how much did Bushco use the CIA and forged documents and misinformation to promote the war? It wasn't so much the Dems swallowing the Bush Kool Aid as it was all the intelligence information that said Hussein had WMD's and the public in general buying into it and wanting the war and Bush was very popular at the time. When the truth started coming out the Dems did start to back off, but again polls rule what politicians do and the polls were in favor of the war until recently. There were many that didn't want to go to war but were laughed at, had their patriotism questioned and were bullied. Those that were vocal against the war weren't covered as much by the press and were treated as lepers even by their hometown presses. Bush's tactics were horrendous and destructive. So, imho, the Dems. didn't have much choice they were boxed into a corner. The problem now is they are fighting back and have the ammo but the GOP still have both houses and Bush and until the Libby trial starts and the truth of how much manipulation BushCo did of the facts, the Dems. still have to be careful. If they push too hard it could backfire, making them look foolish as they chase smoke and mirrors making claims they can't back up and if they don't push enough they get blamed for just following the GOP into a needless war. The Dems. aren't the ones in power right now and there are news agencies and talking heads that get good ratings (those ratings and their power are decreasing though) that are also very influential. I think the Dems have been sitting back waiting for enough evidence and enough firepower to fight back. They have it now. It'll be interesting to see how Bush and the GOP try to spin all the problems that come out. I honestly can see the GOP splitting as a party because of Bush and if the Dems play their cards well this can eventually be the breaking point. But again, they play them wrong it could strengthen the GOP's bonds and resolution and have it as a "them vs. us" effect. I don't really see much coming from any of this until May or June of next year in time for the debates and mid term elections, when it will be fresh in people's minds and be able to affect the election. |
pan6467, your point about,<b>"Bush and company had even Colin Powell believing we needed to go to war"</b>, IMO. makes up for the fact that you "took the bait"; i.e., the attempt by poweclown to hijack the theme of this thread.
powerclown certainly does not want to see an exploration here of what emboldened Harry Reid to take this surprise procedural move in the senate. The catalyst is the observation that the Bush presidency and the republican congressional dominance are damaged beyond repair. House majority leader Tom Delay was indicted, demoted, defanged. Senate majority leader Bill Frist has been exposed as a liar with a serious financial conflict of interest concerning his false assurances that his investment portfolio was held in a "blind trust". He is under investigation by the SEC. Bush has been forced to abandon his most important priority, SSI "reform", because he did not demonstrate a credible presentation to Americans about the "crisis" or about the "solution". More recently, Bush was forced to retreat on his decision to suspend Davis-Bacon wage regs in NOLA, and the setback of withdrawal of his nominee for the no. 2 spot at DOJ, Timothy Flanigan, tainted by ties to Jack Abramoff, and his SCOTUS nominee, Harriet Miers. Bush's polling numbers are in the shitter, and 55 percent of Americans now say that his presidency is a failure. Last friday, the VP of the USA, and president of the US senate, Dick Cheney, was personally compromised in stature and in reputations when his COS was indicted on 5 felony counts and forced to resign, by a clearly, non-partisan, special prosecutor after a careful, two years long investigation. Republicans all over the country who are running for high state or national office are reported by the press to be refusing offers of endorsement by or personal appearances with president Bush on the campaing trail. The much touted Iraqi constitution was passed with little fanfare and is not talked about anymore by Bushco because it seems too slanted toward endorsement of Islam as a state religion and as a criteria for influencing and controlling legislation, and because it is potentially easy to amend and does not strongly bind the political factions or the geographic regions of Iraq together. Sentate Select Intelligence committee chairman, Pat Roberts, was humiliated by Harry Reid's sudden senate action; he now suffers the indignity of Frist approved oversight by a six senator monitoring group. Roberts stonewalled the Phase II portion of his investigation at the behest of Cheney. Frist lost control of the senate today, and reacted by writing off his relationship with Harry Reid. The things that are probably most distrubing to powerclown are that republican senators will be increasingly forced to publicly distance themselves from Bush/Cheney if they want to survive politically, and the ones who don't will be more noticed when they carry water for this administration. Cheney himself may be manipulated into presiding in the senate of the oft threatened, "nuclear option", a discredited, lame duck, politcally weakened VP, possible casting the tie breaking senate vote to do away with the filibuster, shortly before his party loses control of the senate majority. powerclown attempted to put those who disagree with him on the defensive. That tactic won't work, anymore! |
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Patrick Fitzgerald is unmarried, annoyed, brilliant, full of integrity and extremely good at his job.(he's described what these fucks did: <a href="http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/10/28/AR2005102802234.html">He likened Libby's actions to throwing sand in an umpire's eyes.</a>) and he is aware (he said so) of what the folks who you stand up for, really did. Offenses against all of America. This prosecutor is your worst nightmare....Count on it ! Quote:
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Also, when did the entire Democratic platform officially become "Republicans are evil"? Maybe instead of focusing so hard on trying to grab votes by making Republicans look bad, they should have the novel idea of, ohh, coming up with their own platform and direction? Bush won't be around forever, and the Dems still haven't made any sort of identity outside of "Bush is Evil". |
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What you are attempting here will be much more effective if you can successfully discredit Patrick Fitzgerald, the findings in his indictment of Libby, and his comments in his Oct. 28 press conference, than if you ignore what he has placed in the public record, or if you act as if his investigation and prosecution do not matter, as you appear to be doing here. |
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what I want out of this is the truth. I want to know what the administration knew before the invasion in Iraq. Did they know he probably didn't have WMD but said he did? Did they know the Niger documents were fake? (i'd hope so) Did they know there were no credible Al Queda links? If it turns out the administration was more informed than congress and the public and they purposefully mislead people so they could go to war then there were some crimes committed. Crimes much worse than lieing under oath. These are crimes much greater than most people in the pen have done. In my opinion if it turns out that the admin knew about all of this then they are guilty of crimes much worse than mass murder as hundreds of thousands of people have been killed as a result of this war. And if those killings were intentional without justification it is no different than genocide. I want this investegated throughly, i want the smoke screen to go away. Those of you who want to burry your head in the sand and ignore the very real possiblity that we were misslead are unamerican and have no respect for the men and women who have lost their lives fighting this war.
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As for the war, I think there is enough evidence to raise these questions. But in all fairness we should also call on Clinton who bought into the WMD during his term. There isn't any dispute over Afghanistan and their links and why we are there, is there? You show no true argument why we should be there, other than to repeat what the Administration says at the time, and when anyone questions you resort to your reply, which is the standard GOP talking head reply of attack on issues that have no bearing, so that you can point to a reason for hatred and dismiss facts that surround a war that in all likelihood we were duped into starting, that has no end in sight and that this very administration has changed the reasons for starting many, many, many times on record. On a side note, off topic: There are always going to be people who claim Bush was not elected, and in forums like these where people don't listen and just tend to keep spouting the same tired rhetoric (which I do also in some topics), it is easy to let emotions come into play. It doesn't change the facts, it doesn't change the argument, but when someone slips and says Bush wasn't elected or this or that... it allows the other side to change focus on the true topic and facts being debated. It is a tactic EVERY SINGLE REGULAR (MYSELF INCLUDED) IN THIS FORUM HAS USED AT LEAST ONCE. Some use it more often than others. It's human nature to use these tactics when a belief is being challenged and you cannot come up with a justification of your belief. Not saying your belief is wrong, or that is any less valuable or important than anyone else's, but sometimes we have our beliefs and we just cannot think of how to explain why we believe a certain way, so we diffuse, redirect and try to shift focus. |
Scotty McClellan just set off my BS detector:
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The first statment was made by the Clinton administration's CIA director, just three weeks after Clinton's term ended. I infer from this that it represents the final intelligence assessment of the Clinton presidency, with regard to the threat posed by Saddam: Quote:
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You can say clinton came to the same conclusions all you want that doesn't change the fact that Bush went to war not Clinton. Plus it was revealed prior to going to war that much of the intelligence was false but the administration concealed it. That is not how you run a democratic country, that is how you run an imperalist country. I want to know what his true motives for going to war was.
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How can bill and hillary and all the other democratic leaders think he was dangerous as well?
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Sounds like a straight forward honest guy to me. |
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The policy was <a href="http://www.cnn.com/2003/ALLPOLITICS/03/24/timep.saddam.tm/">"F___ Saddam, we're taking him out."</a> Scotty tried to pass the charge onto Clinton, today, too, stevo. it doesn't work, anymore. |
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I think our polititians both Democrats and Republicans went to war because they honestly believed it was the right thing to do. I agree that our intelligence looks like it was screwed up but their intentions were good. I find it hard to believe that our polititians, as corrupt as they may be, would go to war for the hell of it.
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Good question and perhaps an investigation all the way through would show why. My guess is that Papa Bush still had friends in the CIA and that it wouldn't be hard to fool a president that is fighting for his life against every personal attack and professional attack possible. I remeber when he bombed the "aspirin" factory claiming he had Bin Laden in his sights and the GOP (Limbaugh especially) laughed and said he was trying to deflect his problems. So why go after the man if people are going to attack you and your own agencies are feeding you reports that you can't believe. If you truly believe he was told that it was an Asprin factory and not where Bin Laden truly was by his intelligence people then you are truly 100% partisan blind and will buy into anything your party sells you. And again the only people saying it was an Asprin factory were those nice Taliban people ruling Afghanistan. Those great allies that W had to remove because they weren't so friendly after all and they were hiding Bin Laden.... hmmmmmm. My feeling is he was either set up by CIA people (who had no love for him anyway) or Bin Laden was truly there and he just missed him. So personally, I don't think Clinton worried about world affairs enough to question intelligence reports he got. He was too busy fighting off GOP minutia attacks. |
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If Host is right about this one, it just goes to show you how little the Democrats care about winning the war in Iraq and how incredibly gullible they were back when the war was still under discussion. Read on... Quote:
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A non-partisan special federal prosecutor, brimming with integrity, indicted the "national security" VP's COS/NS advisor, just a few days ago, on five charges related to lying under oath about the outing of the identity of a CIA "operative" who was engaged in the discovery of WMD threats. This is a prosecutor who also said that the president's most important assistant is still under investigation in the same "cover up". The record won't go away. Putting it on the democrats won't work. We get two tacts, in terms of responses to what I post...over and over....on TFP Politics...... 1.)Posts similar to yours...and stevos....and Scotty McClellans...attempting to put it on the democrats... 2.)No response..... One more time.... Bush-Cheney and their defenders own this issue: Quote:
It took a few more months of posting McClellan's quotes from this Jan. 12, 2005, "gaggle": Quote:
"Posters for Bush-Cheney" will reluctantly and finally (It's taking longer than it did with the WMD controversy) cease posting content and opinion similar to what is contained in your post, politicophile, when you all develop a sense of how you appear to others who draw conclusions from the actual record of dccumented reports, and not from unsubstantiated opinion that predominates in a partisan, parallel universe, that most of us have never visited. |
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He's the President. He's speaking on a matter of national security. You don't expect him to be making bald-faced lies. If the POTUS lied about the evidence he had prior to the war, is it the fault of the minority party in the Senate and Congress to catch his lies? It is possible for the executive branch in cahoots with the majority party in both houses to hoodwink the minority party in both houses. It isn't ideal. I suppose it is your position that it is better to follow the liars, than the people the liars fool? |
a big problem with the if it was faulty intelligence the dems should have caught it argument is the strong arm tactics used by the adminstration and republicans. The if you don't support us you are unamerican, unpatriotic, and you hate america campaign they made was a sad part of american politics.
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Rekna - right on. Couldn't have been said more clearly. Before the war, I would talk with my dad (a repulblican) and I would tell him that the administration was deceiving the country and fearmongering to get us to go to war with Iraq. The UK was also using bad evidence and selling their country too. There were numerous examples from both sides that were, at the time to a skeptic like me, clearly bullshit.
A short list: 1. The speech in which the president told people we had to act before one of our cities went up in a mushroom cloud. 2. The Iraq-Nigerian uranium link 3. That Iraq had bought some aluminum tubes = they are making a nuclear missile 4. The "evidence" of Al-queda bases in Iraq that Colin Powell showed the UN - they were just fuzzy pictures of buildings from a satelite - and nothing ever came of this after the war. 5. When no weapons of mass destruction were found, we claimed some trailers that were not-sterile and had canvas walls were mobile biological weapon labs. Again, made some headlines, weeks later it is completely dropped. Spin, spin spin. 6. When the UK presented evidence, they majority of their report was plagerized from a college thesis some guy wrote in the 90's, and they modified various sentences to make it sound as if things were more dangerous. 7. When there was a much stronger Saudi Arabia link to Al queda and 911, we still went after Iraq, why? 8. Saddam was hardly a threat to the US and had little power to terrorize or attack the United States mainland. These are just some of the things that if you just used common sense you would see were holes in the logic for going to war. I want to see the president fall for deceiving the United States people and fearmongering. |
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Which excuse wasn't a lie? And the other excuses what were they, facts that just can't be proven, he never said them (welllll, technically that's true his white house spokespeople would come out with the month's latest excuse, he very rarely said anything just gave his deer in the headlights smirk, a thumbs up and walk away)? |
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I'm confused as to the CIA's role here as you characterize it: are you saying the CIA was working with Bush, and subsequently ran a campaign to deceive Congress? Or are you saying the CIA was working against Bush vis a vis the Senate Intelligence Committee Report on Iraq PreWar Intel, the resignation of CIA Director Tenet, and later, Joe Wilson's CIA-sponsored 'boondoggle' that was meant to discredit the war and led to PlameGate? How could the CIA be both for and against Bush? I think the distinction needs to be made (and examined further) between exactly what intelligence the Congress received that motivated them to declare war, and what intelligence was made public to sell the war to the American people. Regarding the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence report on the pre-war intelligence efforts on Iraq, there are maddeningly vague passages: Quote:
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Doesn't anyone find it at all bizarre that members of Congress would go forth and authorize a war supported by "inadequacies" or "uncertainties" in pre-war intelligence? Why would Democrats (including Harry Reid) under a Republican President vote YEA, if there was even the slightest shred of doubt about Iraq? |
again i reiterate the big problem leading up to the war was the republican fueled mantra saying "if you don't support the war you are a traitor to america". The dems had their hands tied and could not fight the war.
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And the Dems that didn't vote to go to the war got reemed in the last election for not being "patriotic", not "supporting the troops" and a host of other charges. Plus as stated by another on here, you don't want to believe the president is going to start a war using bad intelligence and then as it did flow out about the lies and tampering of info it took the Dems. time to still get vocal because the polls were still favoring the war (and again I reiterate polls however worthless and manipulated still control what most congressmen that aren't bought by lobbyists do and think). As the Dems. did gain their voice collectively and the evidence started really pouring out then they had something to use and the polls have shifted, Bush has lost his bite and strength, they aren't as scared to speak against him now. Then even GOP senators and Reps started coming out against the war as well. As for them refuting their votes, how can they? They were duped, the whole country was. None wanted to believe the president and his administration would lie. Hell, even Colin Powell was duped, because I truly do not believe he would have testified before the UN saying Iraq had WMDs if he didn't believe it was so. First it was WMD's, the Al Quida link, then freeing the country of an evil tyrant, then spreading democracy to the Middle East, and so on and so forth. And when people questioned they were ridiculed, called names and attacked by a truly vicious, self serving, corrupt WH. I do find it interesting the GOP is allowing this investigation. They either believe this will blow up in the Dems faces or they know the truth will come out and they want to be able to save face and say they knew something was wrong. I believe the latter. I don't think the Dems would chase this if they didn't think they would win. And I truly believe there are enough truly honest GOP, who in their hearts know Bush f'd up and lied and is tearing the country apart, and are willing to see what the truth truly is. |
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