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Saddam Hussein verdict postponed until two days before U.S. election: Will the media turn a skeptical eye?

October 26, 2006 3:45 pm ET

SUMMARY: While it cannot definitively be said that the reason the senior Iraqi court in charge of Saddam Hussein's trial postponed its verdict in the case until two days before the November elections so that it would influence the midterms, the postponement suggests several obvious questions, including, most importantly: Given the Bush administration's history of timing national security-related actions to the political calendar, has the date for the verdict's release been set to provide maximum political benefit for the administration and congressional Republicans?

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On October 3, the Associated Press reported that the Supreme Iraqi Criminal Tribunal (SICT), the judicial body carrying out the trial of Saddam Hussein, had "postponed the verdict in the former leader's first trial" beyond October 16 -- the date it was originally expected. At that time, according to the AP, the verdict was postponed because judges were "considering the possibility of recalling some witnesses," and a court spokesman "said he could not say when the verdict would be issued."

On October 16, the AP reported: "A verdict against Saddam Hussein and seven co-defendants charged with crimes against humanity in connection with an anti-Shiite crackdown in the 1980s will be announced Nov. 5, a senior court official said Monday. Sentences for those found guilty will be issued the same day," he said. An October 16 New York Times article noted: "Other court officials have said in recent days that a major reason for the delay is that after nine months of hearings, the five judges in the case have failed to reach agreement on a sentence for Mr. Hussein and appeared to be undecided between a death sentence for him or a penalty of life imprisonment."

In an October 17 entry on The Nation's weblog, The Notion, Nation Institute fellow Tom Engelhardt noted that the media, in reporting on the postponement, failed to mention that it had been postponed until two days before the midterm elections, writing, "It's the sort of thing that -- you would think -- that any reporter with knowledge of the US election cycle (no less of how [White House senior adviser] Karl Rove has worked these last years) would at least note in an article." While it cannot definitively be said that the verdict was, in fact, postponed so that it would influence the November elections, the postponement suggests several obvious questions, which the media have yet to raise: Are there still witnesses that the judges need to recall? If so, and if there is no verdict yet, how can there be a date certain for the verdict? How did the Iraqi court arrive at the November 5 date? Did Iraqi officials consult with U.S. officials in arriving at that date? More importantly, given the heavy influence of the United States on the court and given the administration's history -- evidenced below -- of timing national security-related actions to the political calendar, was the verdict's date set to provide maximum political benefit for the Bush administration and congressional Republicans?

American officials have heavy influence on the court

According to the Library of Congress, the SICT was established on October 9, 2005, by the Iraqi interim government for the sole purpose of trying Saddam and members of his regime for war crimes and crimes against humanity. The SICT was preceded by the Iraqi Special Tribunal, which was established in December 2003 by the Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA). Though the SICT is a creation of the Iraqi government, it is heavily influenced -- legally and financially -- by the U.S. government. An October 16, 2005, Human Rights Watch report found that the U.S. Embassy's Regime Crimes Liaison Office "played the lead role in many aspects of the operations of the SICT, including: the building of the courtroom, the conduct of exhumations, interviews with 'High Value Detainees', review of seized documents and preparation of an evidence database, and training of SICT staff."

The Washington Post reported on January 25:

The United States has made the prosecution of Hussein -- accused of presiding over the killings of hundreds of thousands of Shiites and Kurds -- one of its priorities since U.S. troops invaded Iraq in 2003. The Bush administration spent hundreds of millions of dollars of a $18.4 billion reconstruction package for Iraq to exhume mass graves and gather forensic evidence. It refurbished courthouses, trained Iraqi judges and provided most of the security for the courts. Americans drafted many of the statutes under which Hussein and his associates are being tried.

Though the United States is a strong opponent of the International Criminal Court, the administration's critics say it should have ensured adequate credibility and help for the Iraqi tribunal by making it international or, at a minimum, moving the trial out of Baghdad.

International qualms about the legality of the proceeding, and about the death sentence that Hussein could face if convicted, have left the United States virtually alone in shepherding his prosecution by the Iraqi government. A U.S. official in Baghdad confirmed last weekend that only the United States and Britain had contributed experts to advise the court on how to prosecute governments for war crimes and other such matters.

The official did not say how many British advisers were taking part; Britain, like other countries, has expressed reluctance to help in the case because it is a capital one.

The U.S. Embassy and the U.S. Regime Crimes Liaison Office run much of the day-to-day arrangements for the trial. Plainclothes security workers, many of them Americans, and Iraqi soldiers guard the turreted, fortress-like former Baath Party headquarters in the American-held Green Zone where the trial is playing out.

The New York Times reported on May 21 that "American influence" on the SICT "has been undeniably pervasive, with about 90 percent of the $145 million in annual costs for the court and associated investigations paid for by the United States Justice Department, and lawyers sent by Washington acting as advisers."

The Bush administration has a history of manipulating the timing of Iraq/terrorism announcements for political reasons

There have been several documented and reported instances of the Bush administration manipulating the timing of announcements or actions in the Iraq war and the fight against terrorism for their own political benefit.

  • As Media Matters for America noted, on the October 24 broadcast of the CBS Evening News with Katie Couric, CBS News White House correspondent Jim Axelrod reported that a White House official told him, "[D]o not expect to see anything significant prior to Election Day" "as far as a significant change" in the Bush administration's Iraq policy and then quoted the official as saying: "You're not going to see anything before November 8th. It would be political suicide, and Karl Rove would never allow it."
  • On September 6, Bush announced that 14 terror detainees had been transferred from secret CIA-run prisons to the Pentagon's detention facility at Guantánamo Bay. As Media Matters noted, in an article for the September 18 edition of Newsweek, investigative correspondents Mark Hosenball and Michael Isikoff quoted an anonymous senior Bush aide acknowledging that Bush's announcement was timed in such a way that the administration might frame the debate over the fight against terrorism in the days before the September 11, 2001, anniversary:

The timing of last week's announcement, just before the fifth anniversary of 9/11, was no accident. It allowed the White House to showcase its successes in capturing terrorists, and to put pressure on Congress to quickly approve the tribunals. "There were obviously messaging opportunities," says a senior Bush aide. "We could sit back and let the war be defined by the media and our critics, or we can define it ourselves."

Also, in his article for the September 10 edition of Time, White House correspondent Mike Allen reported that after Bush's announcement, the White House and Republican Party leaders almost immediately contacted conservatives in the media, urging them to promote Bush's speech "in the context of the election."

  • As Media Matters noted, the media were almost totally silent regarding an October 11, 2004, Los Angeles Times report that the Bush administration planned to delay major assaults on insurgent strongholds in Iraq until after the 2004 U.S. presidential election, fearing large numbers of U.S. military casualties. At the time, TV news broadcasts did not mention the Times article prior to the election; however, on November 8, 2004, the top story on each of the major TV networks' morning shows was the U.S.-led forces' assault on Iraqi insurgents in Fallujah.
  • In 2005, former Homeland Security Secretary Tom Ridge said that there were times during his tenure when the administration pressured the Department of Homeland Security into raising the terror threat level, even though there was little evidence warranting such a move, as Media Matters has noted. A May 10, 2005, USA Today article quoted Ridge from a forum he participated in that day in Washington, D.C.:

The Bush administration periodically put the USA on high alert for terrorist attacks even though then-Homeland Security chief Tom Ridge argued there was only flimsy evidence to justify raising the threat level, Ridge now says.

Ridge, who resigned Feb. 1, said Tuesday that he often disagreed with administration officials who wanted to elevate the threat level to orange, or "high" risk of terrorist attack, but was overruled.

[...]

Ridge said he wanted to "debunk the myth" that his agency was responsible for repeatedly raising the alert under a color-coded system he unveiled in 2002.

"More often than not we were the least inclined to raise it," Ridge told reporters. "Sometimes we disagreed with the intelligence assessment. Sometimes we thought even if the intelligence was good, you don't necessarily put the country on (alert). ... There were times when some people were really aggressive about raising it, and we said, 'For that?' "

According to a May 12, 2005, article in the Chicago Tribune, the White House immediately "dismissed" Ridge's allegations:

White House spokesman Scott McClellan said Wednesday that threat-level decisions are based on recommendations from a high-level council that gathers information about potential terrorism. When Ridge was in office, he was on the council with other key administration officials.

McClellan dismissed the notion that the White House pressured the council into higher levels of security.

"No one suggested that," he said.

However, others raised the issue. On the October 12, 2005, edition of MSNBC's Countdown, host Keith Olbermann documented 13 "coincidences" -- instances characterized by "a political downturn for the administration, followed by a 'terror event' -- a change in alert status, an arrest, a warning." One such "coincidence" occurred on August 1, 2004, shortly after the Democratic National Convention had concluded. That day, the DHS raised the alert level for financial institutions in New York and Washington, citing "unusually specific" intelligence. But less than a week later, it came to light that the information that led to the warning was actually "three or four years old," according to an August 3, 2004, New York Times article.

  • An article in the July 19, 2004, issue of The New Republic -- posted July 8 on the magazine's website -- quoted two sources from Pakistan's intelligence service and another from its Interior Ministry saying that the Bush administration was pressuring Pakistani officials to make arrests of so-called "high-value targets" during the 2004 Democratic National Convention. On July 29, 2004, mere hours before Sen. John Kerry (D-MA) accepted the Democratic presidential nomination, Pakistani officials announced that they had captured Ahmed Khalfan Ghailani, an Al Qaeda suspect in the 1998 bombings of the U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania. Soon after, it came to light that the Pakistani government had actually arrested Ghailani four days earlier -- before the convention began -- but had delayed announcing the news until July 29.
  • The Bush administration acknowledged that it timed the launch of its campaign to build public support for invading Iraq to coincide with the first anniversary of the September 11 attacks and the 2002 midterm elections. The New York Times reported (subscription required) on September 7, 2002:

White House officials said today that the administration was following a meticulously planned strategy to persuade the public, the Congress and the allies of the need to confront the threat from Saddam Hussein.

The rollout of the strategy this week, they said, was planned long before President Bush's vacation in Texas last month. It was not hastily concocted, they insisted, after some prominent Republicans began to raise doubts about moving against Mr. Hussein and administration officials made contradictory statements about the need for weapons inspectors in Iraq.

The White House decided, they said, that even with the appearance of disarray it was still more advantageous to wait until after Labor Day to kick off their plan.

"From a marketing point of view," said Andrew H. Card Jr., the White House chief of staff who is coordinating the effort, "you don't introduce new products in August."

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    • Author by njguy93 (October 26, 2006 4:02 pm ET)
         

      Then the troglodytes can rally around the glorious George Bush for making sure that the evil Saddam Hussein gets punished. FOX NEWS CHANNEL will have wall-to-wall coverage, of course, with a segment on how George Bush got Saddam and the Iraqi people are now better off.

      THANK YOU. njguy93@yahoo.com

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      • Author by wolf kotenberg (October 26, 2006 7:10 pm ET)
           

        cured from his addiction to alcohol and pedophilia. wal to wall coverage. oh yeah, we almost forgot the midterm election.

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    • Author by Con Man (October 26, 2006 4:08 pm ET)
         

      Even I, as a card carrying member of the vast right wing conspiracy thought it was a little shady the timing of this. Hmmm... For everyone's sake, it would have been better the day after the election... but it is their justice system. Hmmm...

      Report Abuse
    • Author by wesley (October 26, 2006 4:15 pm ET)
         

      mmfa...rambles through an 83 word sentence to pose a question that requires only a two word answer...the answer is "so what".

      They offer no proof...only wild speculation on their charge. mmfa does, once again, prove that good news for America...as in a conviction of Saddam...is bad news for out of power liberals...and it makes their collective ass hurt.

      This goes beyond dubious reporting...it is childish and pitiful pandering.

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      • Author by nerzog (October 26, 2006 5:07 pm ET)
           

        You really think this represents a "victory" for America? Saddam posed no threat to us...he had nothing to do with 9/11...we've lost 3,000 lives and hundreds of billions of dollars...for what? So Puddinhead George can parade a tin-pot dictator in front of the press and crow "Oh what a good boy am I"?

        THE WORLD IS NOT BETTER OFF NOW, AND NEITHER ARE WE...sorry to break that sad news to you.

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      • Author by therick (October 26, 2006 5:09 pm ET)
           

        explain to me how reading the verdict 2 days before our election is good news for America, then explain how a guilty verdict is good for America, or how a not-guilty verdict would be bad for America.

        Oh, I momentarily forgot how much us Libruls hate America. (Please understand that was sarcasm)

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      • Author by kgonz (October 26, 2006 5:39 pm ET)
           

        Wesley,

        Hypothetically, if a Democratic president and congress were in power instead and had done exactly what he Republicans have done, and this news was announced, would you and/or other conservatives ask he same question about timing and political manipulation?

        Be honest.

        Report Abuse
        • Author by open_mind (October 26, 2006 5:43 pm ET)
             

          Anyone remember the charges of "Wag the Dog"? Republicans appear to have short memories.

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        • Author by wesley (October 26, 2006 9:47 pm ET)
             

          I can't speak for other Republicans but only for myself. If the tables were turned I would not be amused...from a purely political standpoint.

          This situation is what it is...a political windfall for the party in power...in this case the Republican party. A conviction of Saddam will provide an obvious lift to conservatives at the ballot box.

          With the chances of the democrat party regaining power in the looming midterms shrinking daily this is not good news for the liberals. Whine about a conspiracy or accept it for a tough political break...que sera sera.

          Report Abuse
          • Author by redking75687 (October 27, 2006 1:24 am ET)
               

            Almost two million dead, probably a third of them children, in the last fifteen years just to get one man who never threatened the USA.

            This is completely insane.

            Report Abuse
            • Author by steve k (October 27, 2006 4:23 am ET)
                 

              Saddam did try to assassinate Bush Sr. in '93. (Clinton retaliated by bombing the headquarters of Iraqi intelligence, and between then and the current war, there were no confirmed attempts of Iraqi terrorism against the US). And one could make the argument that the Gulf War was the only feasible response to his attempt to control all the oil in the Middle East. Afterwards, we should have taken it as a warning sign to start pouring money into research on alternative energy sources, to free us from our perilous dependence on foreign oil. We did not, and we are now experiencing the consequences.

              But when Bush the younger invaded, there was no threat. None at all. They searched and searched, and all they found were some thirty-year old munitions. Hardly the mighty arsenal of chemical/biological/ nuclear weapons, ready to rain death upon the heartland of America, that Bush would have us believe Saddam had.

              The cost in lives has been staggering. The Lancet recently published a study which estimated as many as 655,000 Iraqi deaths as a result of the US invasion. And this administration still thinks it deserves to govern. Enough is enough!

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          • Author by Krotos Hairetikos (October 27, 2006 8:39 am ET)
               

            With the chances of the democrat party regaining power The use of "Democrat" as an adjective: one of the quickest and most reliable ways to identify someone as a brainless right-wing drone.

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          • Author by losingfaith (October 27, 2006 11:25 am ET)
               

            "With the chances of the democrat party regaining power in the looming midterms shrinking daily"

            Shrinking according to who??

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      • Author by steve k (October 26, 2006 7:03 pm ET)
           

        Just yesterday, a White House source openly admitted that Rove was intentionally postponing policy changes in Iraq until after the election in order to save face with the voters. Is it really so unbelievable that they're planning to spring a "Saddam surprise"? Given the bogus bomb threats about bombs in stadiums? The liquid explosives scare? The "al-Qaeda" group that was supposedly going to blow up the Sears Tower?

        That they're timing policy to maximize political gain doesn't really shock me any more. That they're now openly confessing to it does. Just how stupid do they think we are?

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    • Author by Dem02020 (October 26, 2006 4:19 pm ET)
         

      The question the administration (and all those who hitch their wagon's profits to it) love to ask...

      "Are we better off having removed sadaam?"

      ...which simply begs the question...

      "Was he a threat to the National Security of the United States?"

      ...which the administration (and all those who hitch their wagon's profits to it) love to respond...

      "You saw the same intelligence we did!"

      ...which makes me respond (actually wish):

      "I'd much rather have a Congressional investigation into the FALSIFIED 'pre-invasion intelligence' first, before having a verdict on sadaam second."

      It looks like the other way around though...

      We'll get a verdict on sadaam, before we get an investigation into the FALSIFIED 'pre-invasion intelligence'.

      But who cares about the timing of it all...

      ...as long as we get an investigation into the FALSIFIED 'pre-invasion intelligence'...

      ...from the First Session of the 110th Congress.

      Report Abuse
    • Author by evillib1727 (October 26, 2006 4:31 pm ET)
         

      AND I AM GETTING TIRED IF IT!

      FIRE CONGRESS!

      Report Abuse
    • Author by loislap (October 26, 2006 4:31 pm ET)
         

      The fix is in and the sentence is DEATH. I have zero doubt it.The vomit inducing excuse for a government would never allow a verdict TWO DAYS BEFORE A MAJOR ELECTION without knowing in advance exactly what will happen.I despise these people in the very pit of my guts. Of course the jackass Tony Snow(assuming he's even asked about it)will give forth with the usual sputum about "the absurdity of the idea" that the fix is in with the usual pomposity and utter insincerity. There will be zero follow up questions and then the whole sorry assed pack of nincompoops will file out of the room like the good little weenies that they are. BTW-the election will close. The Dems will BE ALLOWED to come close to regaining power in the senate.They will fail. Exit polls will demonstrate that yet again the voters have been robbed of their votes and democracy in general. Sorry-I calls 'em like I see's 'em.

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    • Author by bones2earth (October 26, 2006 4:53 pm ET)
         

      Boy, Wesley, you mut've really been p.o.'d about the phantom WMD's.

      Report Abuse
    • Author by hogprint (October 26, 2006 4:55 pm ET)
         

      Right wing conspiracy? Definitely not right wing misinformation. Stay on course lads. You're drifting.

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      • Author by nerzog (October 26, 2006 5:12 pm ET)
           

        Maybe you can think of an alternative reason to announce the verdict two days before the election? Do you really think anybody in the Iraqi government does anything without approval from Washington?

        Report Abuse
        • Author by jeter2 (October 26, 2006 5:28 pm ET)
             

          I knew I'd find YOU on this thread...being you love a good conspiracy theory ;-)

          While MMFA is only speculating here, it wouldn't surprise or shock me at all IF the Saddam verdict date was orchestrated by Rove & Co.

          HOWEVER, I truly DOUBT this will shift votes to the GOP, since a majority of Americans don't believe we should have invaded Iraq in the first place. Saddam being found guilty & sentenced probably won't produce much more than a yawn.

          Report Abuse
          • Author by open_mind (October 26, 2006 5:41 pm ET)
               

            I agree that a guilty verdict may not have much impact, but a not-guilty may energize some voters to go out and vote or have some unpredictable effect.

            It is just too speculative though. Who knows what will happen. I personally hate speculation, although I enjoy reading it after events have happened as a way to audit how accurate some people were. That is about the only time I find news analysis shows entertaining at all -- weeks, months or years after they originally aired. A good rule of thumb is to bet the opposite of whatever Dick Morris is saying at any given time.

            Report Abuse
            • Author by jeter2 (October 26, 2006 6:57 pm ET)
                 

              I hadn't even considered a Not-Guilty verdict. I would think THAT would be a devastating blow to Bush & Co. BUT you're right, it's tough to figure how that would play out among certain voters. Personally I believe it would be a NEGATIVE for the GOP.

              Yeah Dick Morris is a hoot. That chip on his shoulder seems to RULE his brain. Wonder IF he still thinks Condi will be President in '08?

              Report Abuse
          • Author by nerzog (October 26, 2006 5:41 pm ET)
               

            But don't forget that a certain percentage of Joe Sixpacks out there still believe that Saddam attacked us on 9/11. These are the people who don't watch the news or read newspapers. They get their news from Rush Limbaugh on their car radio or from what they hear in the lunch room. If just a few hundred thousand of these misinformed chowderheads can be impressed by Bush bagging Saddam, it could make a difference in a close election.

            I think Karl Rove isn't missing a trick here. He knows the election will be close, so he's pulling out all the stops. If you like conspiracy theories, how's this...I think Rush Limbaugh picked this fight with Michael J. Fox just to excite the Anti-Abortioniks.

            By the way, I think even Karl Rove wasn't expecting the New Jersey Gay Marriage ruling...that was a gift. He'll exploit it, though. It should be worth at least half a million extra Knuckledragger votes.

            Report Abuse
        • Author by redking75687 (October 27, 2006 1:31 am ET)
             

          Khalizad, the US Ambassador to Iraq, is a PNAC member.

          Report Abuse
      • Author by open_mind (October 26, 2006 5:26 pm ET)
           

        MMFA actually supports their speculation with a well reasoned argument.

        Do you deny that the Bush Administration has timed news events in the past or tried to use its power to manipulate what is being covered? There is direct evidence of this.

        Once that is established, is it so far-fetched that Rove &al. would want to time the verdict for maximum political gain?

        It isn't necessarily a fact, but it is something to think about.

        Report Abuse
    • Author by tman418 (October 26, 2006 5:37 pm ET)
         

      Bush and Co. are masters at getting elected. Democrats are going to have to go into full throttle before this verdict. We see this happen on every even numbered year, before an election. EVERY single election.

      Report Abuse
    • Author by jeter2 (October 26, 2006 7:05 pm ET)
         

      Did you get BANNED on your 100th name here? Weren't you shrubshredder yesterday? Before that Mr. Kite, before that...

      So now you're on moniker #101

      Wanna wager how long you'll last on THIS one before MMFA bans you again?

      Don't worry Coop I won't flag you. Every forum needs some comedy relief. And you're it.

      Report Abuse
    • Author by loislap (October 26, 2006 6:19 pm ET)
         

      "Stay on course lads" No. It's "stay the course". Wait..Bush has never said that. Right.

      Report Abuse
    • Author by loislap (October 26, 2006 7:56 pm ET)
         

      "TIN FOIL HAT ALERT!"

      -thanx for alerting us to your presence hogfat.

      Report Abuse
    • Author by pete bogs (October 27, 2006 8:57 am ET)
         

      I don't actually think this will impact the elections for anyone... Americans care more about Iraq in the sense of the growing numbers of US dead and the chaos it's lapsing into... Hussein is incidental... we all want to see him punished, but he is no substitute for bringing, say, bin Laden to justice... the other issue is the economy... Hussein is low on the radar for voters... still, the timing is probably intentional - for all the good it will do...

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      • Author by gord_metcalfe6501 (October 27, 2006 9:21 am ET)
           

        ...its about displaying 'positive progress' in Iraq. "Look, we are bringing the terr-ists to justice, lookit what we done, we convicted the big dick-tater". Mission Accomplished...

        Report Abuse
    • Author by indigo1968 (October 27, 2006 1:37 pm ET)
         

      The only drama surrounding Saddam post-invasion was whether he'd be caught dead or alive. The trial is strictly a formality and a theatre for Saddam to act like an imbecile; he will be found guilty and executed no matter what.

      Anyone with a brain should be able to see it coming a mile away.

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    • Author by bolo.boffin2180 (October 28, 2006 5:02 am ET)
         

      Mark my words - Iraq will descend into chaos following the announcement of the verdict and sentence of Saddam Hussein. I expect that it may be quelled, but the violence will be displayed across our country on our news channels. The riots and fighting will last two days at the very least, ensuring that in the final days of the election season, the top news story will be the downfall of Saddam, the insane violence of his remaining supporters in Iraq, and one of the precious few foreign policy victories of George W. Bush.

      To say that the Bush Administration arranged for the verdict to fall when it did is to say that they are playing the expected reaction for political gain, that they are using the horrific images of a nation at war with itself to frighten voters into supporting them, that they are not precisely terrorists but they find terrorists quite useful to their own purposes. Is everybody clear on that? We are saying that the Bush administration manipulated the court system of a sovereign nation in order to use the expected riots and insurgent attacks as a political commerical in the States.

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    • Author by princeofwheels (October 28, 2006 9:50 am ET)
         

      that the timing of this is not orchestrated is probably walking around their house wearing a "Liberals Hate Chrismas" t-shirt. Personally, I hate Halloween because instead of wearing a mask, everyone should be required to remove their masks for that one day. The Rovember Suprise will be that Bin Laden is actually charged with a crime. On second thought, they have changed the date so that the judges can get out-of-town before the verdict...far, far out-of-town. Don't worry Judges, Rumsfeld will send our troops to protect you just after they are finished protecting Halliburton's assets...til then, you are "Dead Judges Walking"

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