Why McClellan the Stonewaller Has No Right To Blast the Press

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Here's a piece I posted at Mother Jones....

Excuse me if I'm resentful of the attention Scott McClellan, George W. Bush's onetime presidential press secretary, is receiving for finally telling the obvious truth that the Bush White House deceived the public about the Iraq war. Though McClellan's account has punch coming from an insider, he's late to the party. Some of us made the case when it counted--back in 2002 and 2003, before the war was launched, and in the following years--and we also maintained that the deceptive measures of the Bush administration extended beyond its PR campaign for war in Iraq. Yet back then McClellan was doing what he could to thwart such efforts. Now he says the media failed to confront the Bush administration forcefully enough. Which is true. But when reporters did try, McClellan put up a stonewall. So his complaint is like that of a thief who, after pulling off a caper, gripes that the incompetent police did not nab him. This is absurd. After all, before each press briefing, did McClellan go to the men's room and use a bar of soap to write on the mirror, "Stop me before I spin again"?

Let's turn to one example of McClellan's complicity--one that I know well, for it was an instance when McClellan spoke falsely to me.

McClellan's daily press briefing on September 29, 2003, was a rough one for him. The news had broken that the CIA had requested that the Justice Department investigate the leak of Valerie Plame Wilson's CIA identity. This meant that presidential aides could end up facing criminal charges. The reporters in the White House press room were in a justified frenzy. The CIA leak episode was now a full-force scandal. (Two months earlier, I had been the first reporter to note that the Plame leak was possibly a White House crime, but in the intervening period most of the media had ignored or neglected the story.)

Much of the press briefing that day was devoted to the CIA leak investigation. Answering questions about the Plame leak, McClellan declared, "that is not the way this White House operates." (Actually, it was.) He insisted that Bush knew that Rove was not involved in the leak. (Actually, Rove told at least two reporters about Valerie Wilson's CIA connection, which was classified information.) And McClellan said that Rove told him that he had played no role in the leak mess. (Actually, as just noted, Rove had.)

I was at the briefing, but by the time McClellan called on me, all of the leak-related queries had been asked. Even though I was keen on covering that story, I turned to another matter: the missing WMDs in Iraq and the prewar intelligence. A few days earlier, the House intelligence committee had sent then-CIA director George Tenet a letter saying that there had been "too many uncertainties" in the prewar intelligence on WMDs in Iraq. I asked,

Is the White House aware of the House Intelligence letter to the CIA on prewar intelligence, and what's the reaction to it? And does the President think that he was given bad or incomplete information that ultimately led to his decision to war?

McClellan replied that the CIA stood behind its prewar assessments. He went on to say:

We knew that Saddam Hussein had large, unaccounted for stockpiles of biological and chemical weapons....Then came September 11th, the attacks of September 11th. September 11th taught us that we must confront the new, dangerous threats of the 21st century, that we can no longer wait for threats to gather and come to our shores before it's too late. The nexus between outlaw regimes with weapons of mass destruction and terrorist organizations is the most dangerous threat of our times. And we must confront those threats before it's too late.

I followed up. A few days earlier, news reports had disclosed that Secretary of State Colin Powell, during a February 2001 press conference in Egypt, had essentially said that Saddam posed no WMD threat: "[Saddam] has not developed any significant capability with respect to weapons of mass destruction. He is unable to project conventional power against his neighbors." And I decided to ask a question referencing this report. The following exchange ensued:

Q: You just said a moment ago that: we knew there were large unaccountable -- unaccounted stockpiles of chemical and biological weapons. In 2001, in March or February, Colin Powell said there weren't, as we learned of two days ago --
McClellan: Secretary Powell went before the United Nations and said, there were.
Q: No, no, listen to this. No, no, he said, at that point, there weren't. The [Defense Intelligence Agency] produced a classified --
McClellan: That's not what he said.
Q: -- assessment in October 2002 which said: we don't have any hard or reliable information about stockpiles. And the U.N. inspectors, themselves, said they had no hard information about stockpiles. So where are you getting your information from?
McClellan: Again, I think you're mischaracterizing Secretary Powell's comments. Secretary Powell went before -- and he said, that I never said that he was not a threat. He went before....Secretary Powell went before the United Nations and presented that very case to the world and made it very clear what was unaccounted for. Secretary Powell went through an exhaustive process to back up everything that he said, talking directly with members of the intelligence community....
Q: You said, before 9/11 we knew there were accounted stockpiles. [Powell] said, there weren't.
McClellan: Before 9/11 -- I'm glad you pointed that out, because September -- and, no, that is not what he said. September 11th taught us --
Q: He said that in --
McClellan: It was well documented by the United Nations Security Council that there were undocumented stockpiles of chemical and biological weapons.
Q: That's not true....You are mischaracterizing U.N. reports.
McClellan: We're going to move on. I think I've answered this question.

McClellan, of course, had not answered the question. He had kept on insisting that Powell had not said what he indeed had said at that Egyptian press conference in 2001. Here was a journalist attempting to press McClellan on a major contradiction in the Bush administration's stance on Iraq's WMDs--in 2001, Iraq had nothing significant; in 2003, it possessed a major arsenal--and McClellan countered with a false statement and denied undeniable facts.

I was a bit flummoxed by his response. How do you deal with someone who tells you that two plus two is not four and sticks to that position? McClellan was engaged in basic stonewalling: repeating an inaccurate assertion to fend off an inconvenient question. He did this throughout his stint as press secretary, saying whatever he could to protect the president and keep the truth under wraps. He's right these days to remind us that the media screwed up bigtime by not sufficiently scrutinizing White House claims about the purported treat from Iraq and the Iraq war. But as a fellow who made the job of reporters tougher by mangling and obscuring the truth he's in no position to accuse anyone of failing the nation.

    Comments

  1. When your job is to be the spokesliar and you are still basking in your title and the pay grade, you are very likely to try and avoid being fired for telling the truth.

    How much of the truth Scottie knew, we'll never know.

    Whoever trained him, made sure that unresponsive answers were the major weapons in his arsenal.

    I wish that he had been more forthcoming in the book. I'm sure he is still with holding major facts that are far more damning than what is found in his book.

    Posted by: kalpal Author Profile Page | May 30, 2008 5:46 AM

  2. David,

    Regardless of Scottie's complicity, I can see no argument against the fact that his book release is reviving the discussion of this "MAL-administration's" media-sponsored march to the madness of "pre-emptive" war.

    The important thing for us to do is to keep highlighting the "He said, she said, they said" CYA -spewing of the Executive branch's continued denial of their crimes (which they made into OUR NATIONAL crimes) split/screened alongside of the TRUTH.

    It is hard to believe that only a few years ago, we were bashing our oldest trade and defense partners for refusing to be dragged down into the Middle-Eastern Mire we created. We were serving up "Freedom Fries", pouring French Wine down toilets, pushing Peugeots over cliffs and canceling Parisian pilgrimages.

    All because of the "catapaulting of propaganda" that began as a whisper in the West Wing, was published by media acolytes in the largest papers and then amplified and repeated ad nauseum by TV and right-wing radio.

    When pressed, Scottie McClueless could only say..."Don't you read the papers"?!

    So please, David, don't bash Mr. Scott too much too soon lest ye somewhat dim the spotlight that shines on his admissions for at least a few news cycles. (don't forget the Sunday Shows!)

    Do however keep stoking this boiler long after the USS Shrub has run aground (and they've pretty much plowed up the beach already) and blown up like a fourth-of-July firecracker...shun the calls of the disgraced disciples of denial to "just move on" when this group of criminals is replaced.

    Don't let this go down in history unchallenged and un-repudiated. Don't let any future governmental leaders forget how very vile they can be shown in retrospect. Threaten them with verifiable truth and historical revulsion. Prosecute the criminals NOW to deter future crimes.

    Oh, and thanks for all your work.
    -T

    Posted by: Hajji Author Profile Page | May 30, 2008 7:08 AM

  3. Snotty McClueless may have "No Right To Blast the Press" but that also doesn't mean the press doesn't deserve every blast.

    The press, the media, the press corps all failed miserably.

    The failure of the press would be as apparent with or without Snotty or his book.

    Maybe Snotty has put the lie to the pending Iran WMD attack?

    In that case he is a better man than most all in the pathetic press.

    Thanks

    Posted by: capt Author Profile Page | May 30, 2008 8:07 AM

  4. Once a Bullshitter, always.....

    Nothing new on Iraq....

    However, we now have evidence that Bush was directly in on the Plame incident. "We will get to the bottom of this and fire the person or persons involved", which was later defined as "pardon".

    Posted by: geof01 Author Profile Page | May 30, 2008 9:03 AM

  5. They do the bidding of their masters....

    The CIA created Osama Bin Laden.

    The Bush White House created Scott McClellan.

    In 2004 Scott asked about Richard Clarke, why did he wait so long, and now the press is asking him the same. The Bush team isn't worried about repercussion. They think they've pulled it off. There have never been pure coincidences, only Rovian coincidences like this one.

    This draws negative attention to Bush at a time we need the bright lights on McCain. Target political priorities - McCain then on 01/21/09 a grand jury can go after Bush.


    Posted by: geof01 Author Profile Page | May 30, 2008 9:55 AM

  6. How the HRC5 virus has penetrated our immune system and may take control of the body:

    She gets the DNC rules committee to rule that she won Florida and Michigan, which requires them to agree that breaking the rules is okay, as long as the losing candidate screams long and hard. (Retailers know what I mean) This also has to be okayed by the Obama Campaign. Not going to happen.

    An option would be to seat the delegates and count half the votes, but this does her no good, she needs all the votes, even the ones from Michigan where only chairman Hillary was on the ballot. She won't agree to the half rule. Not going to happen.

    Another option proposed by Levin and Stabenow for Michigan gives her the 69 delegates and him 59. Giving him any delegates means she can't win. She won't agree to arbitration. Not going to happen.

    Michigan and Florida will go to the convention with nothing resolved. Well, aside from the fact that they broke the rules and shouldn't count.

    So the anti-bodies can't kill off the virus this weekend and we wait and see what Puerto Rico and South Dakota and Montana do.

    She needs to get 83% of the remaining delegates and super delegates in order to win. She is not going to get that in the states. Not going to happen.

    She then needs to block the uncommitted T-Cells from choosing anyone. If the decide next week to swarm to Obama the virus is finished.

    The Virus needs to take it to the convention floor and hope Obama doesn't get it on the first ballot, the convention votes to seat Florida and Michigan, and she has attracted enough red blood cells to switch the her. The party can't let it get that far.

    Remember this is the HRC5 virus and it has support within the system from previous exposure to HRC3 and HRC4 and the immune system has difficulty do to the long term presence of the WJC virus. Party leaders like Al Gore, Nancy Pelosi and Harry Reid must act before the convention to keep our nomination from being a distraction from the message and winning the general election.

    This is one nasty virus and it ain't going away.

    Posted by: geof01 Author Profile Page | May 30, 2008 12:41 PM

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