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October 25, 2005
Ron Fournier of the Associated Press doesn't like Dick Cheney. That's pretty much the content of Fournier's latest hit piece. And Fournier is, perhaps because of his animus toward the Vice-President, no stickler for accuracy. He writes: The latest disclosure also raises fresh questions about the vice president's credibility, long-ago frayed by inaccurate or questionable statements on Iraq. Really? It would be interesting to see how many such inaccurate statements Cheney made, that were not also made by John Kerry and Hillary Clinton. Cheney told NBC on Sept. 14, 2003, that he didn't know who sent Wilson on a mission to Niger to explore claims that Iraq was seeking nuclear material. "He never submitted a report that I ever saw when he came back," Cheney said at the time. "I don't know Mr. Wilson. I probably shouldn't judge him. I have no idea who hired him." Fournier clearly implies that there is a contradiction between Cheney knowing that Wilson was married to Valerie Plame, and his statement that he "had no idea who hired him." But why? Here is Cheney's full exchange with Tim Russert on Meet the Press: MR. RUSSERT: Now, Ambassador Joe Wilson, a year before that, was sent over by the CIA because you raised the question about uranium from Africa. He says he came back from Niger and said that, in fact, he could not find any documentation that, in fact, Niger had sent uranium to Iraq or engaged in that activity and reported it back to the proper channels. Were you briefed on his findings in February, March of 2002? As far as I know, every word that Cheney said was true, and there is no contradiction between those statements and his purported knowledge that Wilson's wife worked for the agency. Later in his hit piece, Fournier again goes after Cheney on Iraq: It was Cheney who all but made a direct link between Saddam Hussein and the Sept. 11 attacks, then denied that he had ever done so. Really? Those words "all but made" are suggestive. Fournier never quotes Cheney where he "all but made a direct link" between Saddam and the September 11 attacks; the reason is that Cheney never did it. Fournier is just passing on an urban legend, under the auspices of the Associated Press. As far as I know, Cheney has consistently discussed the relationship between Iraq and September 11 as he did in the same Meet the Press interview quoted from above: MR. RUSSERT: The Washington Post asked the American people about Saddam Hussein, and this is what they said: 69 percent said he was involved in the September 11 attacks. [Ed.: Russert misrepresents the Washington post poll. In fact, respondents were asked how "likely" they thought it was that Saddam was involved. 32% said "very likely," 37% said "somewhat likely."] Are you surprised by that? As a certified liberal, Fournier subscribes to the dogma that Iraq couldn't possibly have anything to do with al Qaeda: [Cheney] also insisted there was a link between al-Qaida and Iraq. But of course! No one could possibly deny, in light of all of the revelations both before and after Saddam's downfall, that there were links, connections, relationships--call them what you will--between Iraq and al Qaeda. We have discussed them many times. It is possible to debate the extent and significance of the links between Iraq and al Qaeda, but for Fournier to imply that they didn't exist is absurd. I once heard Ari Fleischer describe Fournier as one of the best of the White House press corps. God help us if that's true. |
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