On the July 23 broadcast of NBC's
Today, co-host Matt Lauer
interviewed Weekly Standard
writer Stephen F. Hayes, author of the forthcoming biography Cheney: The Untold Story of America's Most Powerful
and Controversial Vice President. Lauer noted
that Vice President Dick
Cheney "does not like to do a lot of interviews, does not like to
talk about himself, does not like to share personal feelings, and yet he sat
down for 30 hours of interviews with you." Lauer continued: "You've admitted you
were somewhat sympathetic to the vice president going in. So, do you think he
felt this was his best chance to get this written the way he'd want it written?"
Hayes replied: "I think that's probably true." To claim that Hayes, however, is
"somewhat sympathetic to the vice president" drastically understates the
steadfast support Hayes has shown Cheney and the Bush administration on foreign policy, and particularly on the
Iraq war -- support based on
falsehoods and distortions and that has been touted by Cheney
himself.
Most recently, Hayes appeared on the
July 22 broadcast of NBC's Meet the Press, where he claimed that the
July 17 release of the National Intelligence Estimate (NIE)
on the terrorist threat to the United States "strengthens the basic
case that the administration has been making that Al
Qaeda remains a serious threat." According to Hayes:
HAYES: Yeah, it's very interesting.
I think one of the things we saw this week, and this, this speaks directly to
what the vice president told me, is with this -- the release of this NIE we saw
a shift in thinking. I think for a long time administration critics had begun to
make the argument that really this Al
Qaeda threat is overblown, that they misled us into the war in
Iraq, they're misleading us about the
seriousness of the threat from Al
Qaeda. And I think what the NIE does, even though in some ways
it's, it's very critical of the administration, is it strengthens the basic case
that the administration has been making that Al
Qaeda remains a serious threat.
As blogger Steve Benen noted at Talking Points Memo, however, Hayes was making a straw-man
argument:
Where are these mysterious White
House "critics" who've been arguing that the al Qaeda threat is "overblown"?
Seriously, name some prominent Bush detractors who have argued this, in Hayes'
words, "for a long time." I'm relatively clued into Democratic talking points
and I can't recall any Democrat or left-leaning political figure ever making
this argument in any forum, in any context. Hayes appears to have simply made it up in the hopes
of making the NIE appear more favorable for his White House
allies.
Which segues to the other problem:
the NIE doesn't strengthen the
Bush's gang's "basic case" at all. The White House has said, repeatedly, that
thanks to the president's leadership, we've destroyed al Qaeda's leadership and
have the terrorist network on the run. The
NIE, in stark contrast, shows the opposite and vindicates what White House
critics have been arguing for years. While the president's policies have been
failing in Iraq, al Qaeda is
rebuilding, recruiting, and refilling its coffers -- in large part because of the president's failed policies
in Iraq.
Indeed, as The New York Times reported on July 17: "The
intelligence report, the most formal assessment since the 9-11 attacks about the terrorist threat facing
the United States, concludes that the United States is losing ground on a number
of fronts in the fight against Al Qaeda, and describes the terrorist
organization as having significantly strengthened over the past two years."
While Meet the
Press
host Tim Russert noted that this most recent NIE "seems to
contradict last year's intelligence estimate ... that al-Qaeda's ability had been
diminished," he offered no challenge to Hayes' claim that the NIE supports the administration's case against that of
"administration critics."
Hayes' comments on Meet the Press are just the most recent
example of his false and misleading claims in defense of the Bush
administration's Iraq
policy:
- In an article for the May 8, 2006, issue
of The Weekly Standard, Hayes
attacked a 2003 New York Times
article that he claimed falsely suggested that the "Bush
administration selectively used intelligence to make its case" connecting Iraq
to Al Qaeda as a justification for the invasion of Iraq and that "nonpolitical
intelligence professionals were simply setting the record straight." According
to Hayes, "the whole thrust" of the Times
article was "contradicted" by a line allegedly from the very intelligence report that the Times cited in making its
argument
that read: "[Captured terrorist] Abu Zubaydah explained that
[Al Qaeda leader Osama
bin Laden's] personal goal of destroying the U.S. is so strong that to achieve
this end he would work with whomever could help him, so long as al Qaeda's
independence was not threatened." However, as Media Matters for America documented, this line in no way
contradicts the suggestion that the Bush administration selectively cited
intelligence in linking Iraq to Al Qaeda as a justification for war, nor does it
lend support to the idea of an operational relationship between bin Laden and
former Iraqi dictator
Saddam Hussein.
- On the December 9, 2005, edition of MSNBC's Hardball
with Chris Matthews, Hayes defended Cheney's claim
during a December 9, 2001, Meet the
Press interview that 9-11 hijacker Mohamed Atta met with an Iraqi
intelligence official in Prague, by saying, "If you look at the front page of
The New York Times in the days
surrounding the vice president's claim, The
New York Times was reporting the same thing." But as Media Matters noted, even after the Times and numerous other
news outlets subsequently reported in May 2002 the FBI and CIA's
finding that
"no evidence" existed to substantiate the claim, Cheney
continued to
raise the possibility of such a
meeting.
- On the November 11, 2005,
edition of Fox News' Special Report with Brit Hume,
Hayes responded to a declassified 2002 Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA)
document that questioned the reliability of claims made by captured Al Qaeda
operative Ibn Al-Shaykh al-Libi that Al Qaeda had received chemical and
biological weapons training from Iraq. Hayes claimed that Democrats
using this document to criticize administration's attempts to link Al Qaeda and
Iraq were "cherry-picking," and that "there were actually more than a dozen
reports about Iraq having trained Al Qaeda." In fact, as Media Matters noted, news reports at the time
indicated that al-Libi was the principal source for the administration's claims
of a connection.
- In an article for the October 24,
2005, issue of The Weekly
Standard, Hayes selectively cited the Senate
Intelligence Committee's "Report on the U.S. Intelligence Community's Prewar
Intelligence Assessments on Iraq" in order to falsely claim
that "virtually everything" former Ambassador Joseph C. Wilson IV said about his
trip to Niger to investigate reports that Iraq had sought uranium from that African nation "was
false." Hayes also attempted to dismiss allegations that the outing of Wilson's wife, Valerie
Plame, as a CIA
operative was part of a White House effort to discredit or strike
back at Wilson by claiming that "[s]everal reporters known to have spoken with
Karl Rove and Scooter Libby, the senior White House officials apparently at the
center of the current investigation, have testified that they did not learn of
Plame's identity or status from either person." At the time, however, Time reporter Matt Cooper had already acknowledged that it was "through my
conversation with Rove that I learned for the first time that Wilson's wife
worked at the CIA," and then-New York
Times reporter Judith Miller had written just days earlier that she
testified that her June 23, 2003,
meeting with Libby "was the first time I had been told that Mr. Wilson's wife
might work for the C.I.A."
Hayes resumed his attacks on Wilson in an October 25,
2005, Daily Standard online article in which he rehashed several
of the false claims he had made in his previous piece. Hayes also asserted that Bush's claims about
Iraq seeking uranium from Niger had not been "invalidated," despite the fact
that the administration had already acknowledged that the "16 words" from the
2003 State of the Union address -- "the British government has learned that
Saddam Hussein recently sought significant quantities of uranium from Africa"
-- should not have been
included in the speech. Moreover, the Senate Intelligence Committee concluded
that after October 2002, the available intelligence did not support the claim
that Iraq was seeking uranium
from Africa.
- In an article for the September 5, 2005,
edition of The Weekly Standard,
Hayes attacked the report of the bipartisan 9-11 Commission for
relegating to two footnotes a January 2000 meeting in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia,
between two of the 9-11 hijackers and a man named Ahmad Hikmat Shakir Azzawi,
described in the report as an Iraqi national. Hayes asserted that the commission
had failed to fully explore that meeting in its report given Azzawi's
"mysterious contribution to the 9/11 plot." Hayes further wrote that former 9-11
Commission member John F. Lehman "told me that Shakir's many connections to al
Qaeda and Saddam's regime suggested something more than random chance." However, the Senate
Intelligence Committee's September 8 report concluded that "Shakir was not
affiliated with al-Qa'ida and had no connections to the IIS [Iraqi Intelligence
Service]."
- As Media Matters has noted, in an article in The Weekly Standard's
November 24, 2003, issue, Hayes attributed to "a top secret U.S. government
memorandum" -- which Hayes identified as a memorandum produced by former Undersecretary of Defense
Douglas Feith -- the conclusion that Saddam and bin Laden "had an operational
relationship." Hayes described the memo by saying that "[m]uch of the evidence
is detailed, conclusive, and corroborated by multiple sources." In a January 9,
2004, interview with Denver's Rocky Mountain
News, Cheney cited Hayes' article, claiming that "[i]t goes
through and lays out in some detail, based on an assessment that was done by the
Department of Defense and was forwarded to the Senate Intelligence Committee
some weeks ago." Cheney added: "That's your best source of
information."
However, following the publication
of Hayes' article, the Pentagon released a statement asserting that "[n]ews
reports" about the memo "are inaccurate." It stated that the portion of the memo
to which the Hayes article referred "was not an analysis of the substantive
issue of the relationship between Iraq and al Qaeda, and it drew no
conclusions." Further, during a February 11, 2007, interview on Fox News Sunday, Feith stated: "Nobody in my office said
there was an operational relationship between Iraq and Al
Qaeda."
&mdash R.C. & S.S.M.
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