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Judging the case for war (Chicago Tribune) Read it & Weep

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kpete Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Dec-28-05 10:29 AM
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Judging the case for war (Chicago Tribune) Read it & Weep
Judging the case for war

Published December 28, 2005


Did President Bush intentionally mislead this nation and its allies into war? Or is it his critics who have misled Americans, recasting history to discredit him and his policies? If your responses are reflexive and self-assured, read on.

On Nov. 20, the Tribune began an inquest: We set out to assess the Bush administration's arguments for war in Iraq. We have weighed each of those nine arguments against the findings of subsequent official investigations by the 9/11 Commission, the Senate Intelligence Committee and others. We predicted that this exercise would distress the smug and self-assured--those who have unquestioningly supported, or opposed, this war.

The matrix below summarizes findings from the resulting nine editorials. We have tried to bring order to a national debate that has flared for almost three years. Our intent was to help Tribune readers judge the case for war--based not on who shouts loudest, but on what actually was said and what happened.

The administration didn't advance its arguments with equal emphasis. Neither, though, did its case rely solely on Iraq's alleged illicit weapons. The other most prominent assertion in administration speeches and presentations was as accurate as the weapons argument was flawed: that Saddam Hussein had rejected 12 years of United Nations demands that he account for his stores of deadly weapons--and also stop exterminating innocents. Evaluating all nine arguments lets each of us decide which ones we now find persuasive or empty, and whether President Bush tried to mislead us.


lots more at:
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/opinion/chi-0512280311dec28,0,7879020.story?page=1&coll=chi-newsopinion-hed
via:http://www.haloscan.com/comments.php?user=atrios&comment=113578218264386382
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Supersedeas Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Dec-28-05 10:49 AM
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1. We know * was wrong, but now let's reconsider history
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XNASA Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Dec-28-05 10:54 AM
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2. Feh. The Tribune.
They'll print anything the Bushies tell them to print.
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tecelote Donating Member (645 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Dec-28-05 11:10 AM
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3. Which one is true?
A. "That in turn enabled Hussein to continue his brutal reign and cost untold thousands of Iraqis their lives."

B. "That in turn enabled Bush to continue his brutal reign and cost untold thousands of Iraqis their lives."
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mattclearing Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Dec-28-05 11:14 AM
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4. Both.
But honestly, it's not the U.S.'s problem. We backed him out of Kuwait and starved his people for a decade in hopes of choking off Saddam's support. It just hurt the Iraqi people...Saddam didn't suffer for it. We're still doing it.
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radio4progressives Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Dec-28-05 11:27 AM
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5. "The Verdict" is Specious At Best
I didn't bother reading through the Chicago Trib's "case for war" - when one supports a particular policy, just about any justification will do. All one needs to do really is jump to the editor's "conclusions" . Why was I not surprised to read such tripe as this paper's "verdict"? In the face of insurmountable evidence that a nation was literally lied into war, with the direct assistance of the press in making that case in the first place, and then continuing the lie - the press has been taking well deserved floggings on it's reporting. Collectively, we have mainly aimed our arrows and whips at the papers of record, the New York Times and the Washington Post, while giving other papers a pass. The Chicago Tribune is one such paper.

Clearly, do they not deserve equal treatment for this piece of self justified tripe?



THE VERDICT

There was no need for the administration to rely on risky intelligence to chronicle many of Iraq's other sins. In putting so much emphasis on illicit weaponry, the White House advanced its most provocative, least verifiable case for war when others would have sufficed.
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