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"Creative Omission"

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The Weekly Standard is using its new blog to post some selective excerpts from Kenneth Pollack's post-war reassessment of pre-war WMD intelligence to try and defend the administration against charges of distortion. It would be good if people could read the whole article, but it's only available to subscribers. But check out my lengthy excerpts and you'll see Daniel McKivergan is painting a misleading picture. Much as with the Bush administration's conduct, I'm not quite sure whether you'd want to say he's "lying" as such. It's more like he's deliberately trying to mislead his readers. Anyways, check it out:

Throughout the spring and fall of 2002 and well into 2003 I received numerous complaints from friends and colleagues in the intelligence community, and from people in the policy community, about precisely that. According to them, many Administration officials reacted strongly, negatively, and aggressively when presented with information or analysis that contradicted what they already believed about Iraq. Many of these officials believed that Saddam Hussein was the source of virtually all the problems in the Middle East and was an imminent danger to the United States because of his perceived possession of weapons of mass destruction and support of terrorism. Many also believed that CIA analysts tended to be left-leaning cultural relativists who consistently downplayed threats to the United States. They believed that the Agency, not the Administration, was biased, and that they were acting simply to correct that bias.

Intelligence officers who presented analyses that were at odds with the pre-existing views of senior Administration officials were subjected to barrages of questions and requests for additional information. They were asked to justify their work sentence by sentence: "Why did you rely on this source and not this other piece of information?" "How does this conclusion square with this other point?" "Please explain the history of Iraq's association with the organization you mention in this sentence." Reportedly, the worst fights were those over sources. The Administration gave greatest credence to accounts that presented the most lurid picture of Iraqi activities. In many cases intelligence analysts were distrustful of those sources, or knew unequivocally that they were wrong. But when they said so, they were not heeded; instead they were beset with further questions about their own sources.

On many occasions Administration officials' requests for additional information struck the analysts as being made merely to distract them from their primary mission. Some officials asked for extensive historical analyses

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"These officials were guilty not of lying but of creative omission." Good point. How silly of me to use such a crass term as lying when it was a work of creative writing. I should have been asking instead when the film adaptation was coming out.

Many also believed that CIA analysts tended to be left-leaning cultural relativists who consistently downplayed threats to the United States.


That's funny...I always had the opposite opinion of our intelligence community.  I guess it depends on perspective, if a person, or people, are on the far right then anyone one to the left of them represent George McGovern.


So let me see if I have the premise of the spin right...


Manipulate the intelligence (aka making shit up as you go along) to fix to the policy you desire.  Then claim the shit you made up conflicted with the real intel so therefore, because of conflicting intel, you can't be held responsible for using the shit you made up since there was uncertainty.


Interesting argument...even if it wouldn't hold up in a court of law.

"I'm not quite sure whether you'd want to say he's "lying" as such. It's more like he's deliberately trying to mislead his readers."

Put the philosophy away harvard boy, you're getting us all killed.  Until you punch these a**holes in the nose and call them lying f*wads, they will walk all over you, and us.

Cut it out!

The CIA, the State Department, and the uniformed military services would present one version .  .  . and the Office of the Secretary of Defense and the Office of the Vice President would present another .  .  .  . As a result, the Administration found it difficult, if not impossible, to make certain important decisions.

The Administration?  What does he mean "the Administration"?  Who the hell was left except Bush (and Rice and Hadley wringing their hands).

i said this on another thread, but it's worth repeating. when it comes to despising the CIA, '60s-era New Lefties have absolutely nothing on Cheney and his crew.

They didn't lie, per se, any more than politicians lie all the time. What they did is politicize intelligence, that is, they chose what intelligence reinforced their point of view and discarded what didn't fit. They do the same thing with science.

If the republicans believe that virtually everything is political, subject to spin, then they must be staunch defenders of relativism. Since reality can be described differently depending on which parts of it you want to emphasize.

Oops! I forgot. They HATE relativism. They believe in absolutes. Like the Bible and so forth. It's almost like there is some sort of cognitive dissonance or possibly even hipocracy?

How many days are left until this is over? 

Lying and spin, lying and spin

It's all we do, it's the way we win!

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