North King
blech
- Joined
- Jan 2, 2004
- Messages
- 18,165
Both are good points. 

Sanaz said:Having a weapons program does not make them an immediate threat.
At the time of the attack, Iraq's GDP would not have placed it in the top 25 on the fortune 500 list. They were poor, did not have much will or motivation, and were a general mess.
This is not the CIA's fault, even if it is a bloated bureaucratic nightmare. It is the fault of the administration, and the misrepresentation they put forth, and continue to put forth. Intelligence inaccuracies are just part of the business. The CIA did not lie, they had nothing to gain by lying.
ainwood said:Well, my view is that the blame-game is pretty-much irrelevent. If people get genuine satisfaction out of a big 'I told you so', then that's pretty churlish.
I've never been called "churlish", I had to look it up in the dictionary : "marked by a lack of civility or graciousness". Of course the investigations should continue, but it was high level officials, academics, and military personnel saying it was the wrong time for an attack. It has cost billions of dollars, too many lives, has caused the loss of goodwill of the world community, and has increased the threat of terror worldwide. There are incompetent creeps running the most powerful country on the planet, and in charge of the most powerful military in the history of the world. This is a lot more than "I told you so".ainwood said:Well, my view is that the blame-game is pretty-much irrelevent. If people get genuine satisfaction out of a big 'I told you so', then that's pretty churlish.
The "whole doctrine of preemption" is disgusting. Who cares what it's purpose is?rmsharpe said:Isn't the whole doctrine of preemption supposed to be removed potential threats, and not immediate ones?
Not relevant. Obviously he was a lunatic, and should have been removed. My family is Iranian. Do you think I like the guy??? The only point is, they were not an immediate threat. They didn't have the resources.Saddam's state-heavy economy, corruption, and overall mismanagement can account for most of Iraq's suffering. They're the only strong oil economy in the Middle East with a per capita GDP under $5,000. Even Lebanon, a state that's been in anarchy and civil conflict for many years and has no oil, has a per capita income three times greater than the average Iraqi. Other than Saddam, there's no reason that the Iraqi economy would be as rotten as it was.
I have not absolved the CIA, that would be stupid. And attacking the Clinton administration is fair game, of course. The intelligence organizations have been a mess for a long time. Reform was needed long ago. The current situation is not the fault of Reagan, Bush, Clinton, or Bush specifically, it is systemic. Lack of funding until there is a crisis, etc. I doubt there would ever have been any reform if the US wasn't attacked directly, and that's too bad. But this case in Iraq goes far beyond "bad intelligence" causing a "bad decision". Trusting the intelligence too much was careless, because there was no way they were getting accurate information in that region. Think about it, how would they? It's not like the locals love the US, or even if some do, others would obviously lie to cause problems. And Johnny American couldn't exactly hang aroung Baghdad checking out potential weapons sites. This is common sense. The richest country on the planet should be able to figure it out.Since you have absoloved the CIA and placed the blame directly on the sitting administration, does this then justify me attacking the Clinton administration for what they did or did not do based on perhaps faulty intelligence?
Maybe, it's hard to know. I can't imagine how the US will gather useful and reliable middle eastern intelligence, unless the Israelis gather it for them. The important thing is, knowing what to trust, and how much to trust it. That is the administration's job, not only the CIA's job. Both are to blame, not one or the other.rmsharpe said:Again, I ask, if the Bush administration is at fault, does this mean that if Kerry is elected, the CIA will be able to provide either actual intelligence, or will Kerry simply just ignore (and undermine) the CIA like Clinton did?
Ah, I flipped around what you were saying when I read it. I agree with this.ainwood said:What I sincerely hope doesn't happen is for people to simply say 'it was the CIA's fault' use them as the scape-goat and pretend that with a new director in the CIA, everything is going to be alright.
Sanaz said:That is the administration's job, not only the CIA's job. Both are to blame, not one or the other.
Absolutely. There was a lot of misinterpreted information, and that is to be expected. People in high political office should have the reasonng capability to figure out what to believe and what not to believe.rmsharpe said:Don't forget Congress.
I'm not sure of the details and reasons for why this would be delayed, but the report is incomplete without this information. It looks like a PR job, to separate the blame on the CIA from the blame on the administration and on Congress. It may not be, but it looks that way. There needs to be QA bult into the system - the CIA needs to provide and interpret information, and those taking action need to verify it as much as possible before taking action. Otherwise, the head of the CIA would also be president. There needs to be a separate, two-step process. Or else the president and the administration look like either liars or fools, and neither is better than the other.Conservatives on the panel successfully blocked Democratic efforts to finish the second part of the report -- how the administration used the information from the intelligence community -- until after the November elections.