| Meet the Press
Mar 14 2004 Excerpts DR. RICE: Tim,
first of all, let me say that we all grieve with
the families of those who have been lost and pray
for those who go through the trial and
tribulation of trying to recover from injuries in
Iraq, but these are people who have served in a
noble cause, in America's noblest traditions, and
that is to bring freedom and to bring security to
America.
SenderBerl:
We take offense when so many of the injured
military personnel have complained of being
abused and abandoned. See this site.
***
MR. RUSSERT: On
September 11, there is a commission now in place
which the administration originally resisted and
also resisted extending the deadline. They now
want to interview the president. He
has said he'll only sit down with the chairman
and co-chairman of the committee for one hour.
Will the president meet with the full commission
and will he do it for longer than an hour?
DR. RICE: The
president, of course, is the president, and
he does have a schedule to keep, but he
has said that he will sit with the chairman and
with the co-chairman and that he will answer
whatever questions they have. And I'm quite
certain he will take as long as they need to
answer those questions.
MR. RUSSERT:
Several hours, a day if they need?
DR. RICE: Well, I
would hope that they would recognize that he's
president and that people would be judicious in
the use of his time. But
he wants as much as anyone to understand what
happened on September 11, the causes of that, and
what we can do to prevent future September 11s.
MR. RUSSERT: Will you testify
under oath in public about September 11?
DR. RICE: Tim,
this is not a matter of preference; this is a
matter of principle. It has long been a
legal and constitutional principle that
assistants to the president, the presidential
staff, do not testify before legislative
bodies. But this is not a matter of
preference. I have spent more than four
hours with the commission going through the
details about 9/11. I'm prepared to spend more
time with the commission in discussion about
whatever they'd like to know about September 11,
but as a matter of principle, we
cannot breach this wall between the legislature
and the executive.
MR. RUSSERT: John
Kerry said, "The president has time to go to
a rodeo but not spend time with the
commission."
DR. RICE: As I've
said, Tim, I believe the president is prepared to
spend whatever time they need to answer their
questions, but I hope that people will
be judicious with his time.
SenderBerl:
Incredible. The most important event of this new
millenium and his NSA takes the position that
they are hopeful that people will be sensitive to
calling for his time on this critical matter of
history the very predicate of the NSS and taking
this nation to war.
***
Howard Dean was
brilliant. He proved himself as President Bush
did not on Meet the Press, when he appeared on
Feb 22 04. John Kerry has two excellent choices
for VP, Edwards and Dean. We still stand that the
pressure is on him to pick Gephardt.
MR. RUSSERT: And
we are back. Governor Dean, welcome.
DR. DEAN: Thanks
for having me on, Tim.
MR. RUSSERT: Let
me ask you the same question I asked Dr.
Rice. Five hundred and sixty-six Americans
dead, 3,219 injured or wounded--Was it worth that
human toll for war in Iraq?
DR. DEAN: Well,
first let me say that you never say that--to
somebody's family who's lost their child in Iraq
that it wasn't worth it, that your son or
daughter died in vain. I would have made a
very different choice. And I think that the
debate that Dr. Rice and the Bush administration
are setting up is exactly what the Bush
administration has been doing all along.
It's misstating the case and diverting attention.
The truth is this is a straw debate.
Everybody's going to fight terrorism hard.
The question is: Has the Bush
administration done a good job? And the
answer is absolutely not because Iraq was a
diversion.
There was no evidence
that Iraq was ever an imminent threat to the
United States, the CIA director has said so,
there was no evidence that Iraq ever had--was
about to acquire nuclear weapons, as Vice
President Cheney said. The administration
has admitted that wasn't true. There was no
evidence, as President Bush said a year ago, that
Iraq was buying uranium from Africa. They
subsequently admitted that wasn't true.
This administration did not tell the truth about
why we went to Iraq.
If they had simply said
Saddam Hussein is a bad man and we should go take
him out, the American people would have said no,
we don't think that's worth the war. Now,
there have been a lot of justifications for
attacking Iraq. Most of them have turned
out not to be true. The argument is:
Did the capture of Saddam Hussein and the attack
on Iraq make us safer? I said no during the
campaign. I think it's very clear that the
answer is no. We've spent 566 American
lives and $160 billion when we should have been
going after Osama bin Laden. And that is
why I think this president is weak on terrorism,
not strong.
MR.
RUSSERT: Dr. Rice said that Saddam Hussein
was the most dangerous regime in the world.
DR. DEAN:
That was ridiculous. This is a pathetic old
man who we'd been containing for 12 years by
overflights. We had sanctions on
him that were paralyzing him. It turned out
that there were no weapons of mass destruction,
as the administration--although the
administration said otherwise. It turned
out that there was no relationship between Saddam
Hussein and al-Qaeda or the killing of the 3,000
Americans at the World Trade Center, even though
the administration tried to lead us in an
opposite direction. The administration
simply did not tell the truth about Iraq.
The debate is not about whether we should fight
terrorism. I supported the war in
Afghanistan because I think we did the right
thing in Afghanistan, although I think the
conduct of the war is not being very
well-managed, after the fact. But
fighting Iraq had nothing to do with terrorism.
Paul O'Neill
had said, according to the book "The Price
of Loyalty," that was out a couple of months
ago, that President Bush always intended to go
into Iraq long before 9/11. He did.
He didn't tell the truth to the American people
about why. Whether he was
misled by his own people or whether he
deliberately didn't tell the truth, we don't
know. We need to find that out. He needs to
spend a lot more than an hour before the
commission that's trying to figure out who knew
what and when did they know it.
MR. RUSSERT: But
you yourself believed that Saddam had weapons of
mass destruction.
DR. DEAN: I did,
because the president told us. And I'm
inclined to believe presidents in most
circumstances. I think most Americans,
Democrats or Republicans, ought to believe the
president of the United States when he does
something as serious as send us to war.
MR. RUSSERT:
Republicans watching this morning, some will say,
"OK, Dean, if you had your way, Saddam
Hussein would still be in power."
DR. DEAN: That's
not necessarily so. I did believe that the
United--and I said at the time that the United
Nations could and should remove Saddam from
power. My objection was to a unilateral war
when America wasn't being told the truth about
why we're going to war. The president told
us that Iraq was an imminent threat to the United
States. That wasn't true. The
president allowed us to think that he had
something to do with the attack on 9/11. Turned
out that wasn't true, and there was no evidence
for that, as the president himself admitted a few
months ago. So my concern was: How
can we remove this evil person in the way that we
try to remove other evil people?
I think there's an
attempt to, for example, remove Robert Mugabe
from Zimbabwe, which we should be doing, but you
do that with sanctions, with overflights, and
with multilateral actions. You don't do
that-- unless the country is a direct threat to
the United States, which Iraq clearly was not,
you do not do that. And if the president
was so interested in going in and unilaterally
removing Saddam Hussein, how come we didn't
unilaterally remove Kim Jong Il of North Korea,
which is a far greater danger to the United
States than Iraq ever was?
MR. RUSSERT:
Because he has nuclear weapons and can use them
against us.
DR. DEAN: Exactly
so. And the question is if unilateral
attacks on other countries are the rule for
countries that we deem dangerous, then we have a
standard that makes no sense to the rest of the
world. And the reason that we have
lost the moral leadership in the world since this
president has taken office-- we used to be the
moral leader as well as the most powerful nation
militarily. We're not the moral leader
anymore. You would be hard-pressed to find
the majority in very many countries around the
world where people admire the United States the
way they did from the end of World War I right to
the day we went into Iraq. And
that is a product of an inconsistent foreign
policy which is not in the best interest of the
defense of America against terrorism. It
simply reflects the peak of the president of the
United States and that was illustrated when Paul
O'Neill, who I believe is telling the truth, said
that, in one of his early Cabinet meetings long
before 9/11, this president intended
to go to war against Iraq for reasons that the
American people today do not know.
MR. RUSSERT: Dr.
Rice seemed to suggest this morning that after
September 11, the president and others must
connect the dots. In all the intelligence
from the United States CIA and other
intelligences around the world said that Saddam
had weapons of mass destruction and the president
acted on that information in good faith, and that
if he didn't remove Saddam Hussein, Saddam would
still be there now at least trying to develop a
nuclear weapon and why would we want that?
DR. DEAN: Well,
the truth is our own intelligence did not signal
to the vice president and the president that
there was clear evidence that they had weapons of
mass destruction. I mean, the language--I
thought George Tenet's testimony was pretty
striking a couple of weeks ago when he made it
clear that again and again, he went to the White
House and went to the vice president's office and
tried to pull them back from the rhetorical brink
that they had overstepped by making claims that
simply weren't so. The truth is the
evidence that we had for the existence of weapons
of mass destruction wasn't nearly as strong as
what the president and the vice president were
telling us.
So again, the bottom
line is not whether we should defend ourselves
against terrorism. Of course, we
should. And John Kerry, when he becomes
president on January 20, I have no doubt will
defend us against terrorism having served abroad
in a war. I think people who've
served abroad in a war are always more cautious
about committing troops because of their own
experience than those who have not. And
very few people in this administration who made
that decision have survived abroad in a way.
The argument is not
whether John Kerry or George Bush is going to be
better about protecting against terrorism.
They're both going to try to do the best they
can. I happen to think that Kerry will be
better than the president, but the argument
is: Should we have gone into Iraq or
not? That's the argument we're having today
and the answer for me, it seems to me, is very
clearly no because we went in on bad information,
we've spent $160 billion, and had we spent that
money in Afghanistan and in the northwest
provinces of Pakistan, we might well have Osama
bin Laden.
For the
president of the United States to assert that we
are safer because Saddam Hussein is in jail is
ludicrous given what happened three days ago in
Spain.
MR. RUSSERT:
Al-Qaeda is alive and well?
DR. DEAN: It's
very clear that al-Qaeda is alive and well.
We don't know for sure if al-Qaeda was
responsible for the bombings, but when you have
three Moroccans and three people with Indian
passports--or two people with Indian passports
that were clearly involved, it certainly does not
indicate that it's likely that ETA was, in fact,
the culprit.
MR. RUSSERT: Let
me show you something you said in the campaign
way back in July. "If I as governor of
Vermont can figure out the case is not there to
invade Iraq, how can three senators and a
congressman who claim to have authority in public
affairs manage to give the president unilateral
authority to attack Iraq?" The three
senators being Kerry, Edwards, Lieberman and
Congressman Gephardt.
DR. DEAN: Sure.
MR. RUSSERT:
Having said that, how can John Kerry make a case
against the president on Iraq when he voted to
give him the authority?
DR. DEAN: Well,
first of all, in campaigns, we focus on the
differences, and this was a big difference in the
campaign. But I think you also need to look
at the similarities now that the campaign is
over. For whatever our differences were on
the war--and they were significant--there are
some significant important similarities.
First of all, John Kerry has made it very clear
that he wanted a real multilateral coalition.
The president's coalition of the willing,
composed of people like Kazakhstan and Eritrea,
is not exactly a real multilateral coalition.
MR. RUSSERT: He
had Great Britain and Spain and some big
countries.
DR. DEAN: He had
Great Britain and Spain and that was it, and
Poland. The rest of the list was not a
major impressive array of armaments from around
the world. So this was a unilateral,
essentially, action. I think John Kerry has
spoken out very clearly about that. But the
biggest difference I think between Senator Kerry
and President Bush on this issue is that Senator
Kerry really does believe in internationalism and
George Bush does not. George
Bush said during the campaign there would be no
nation building, that he believed
that the United States' power ought to be exerted
more clearly and more forcefully.
And John Kerry believes,
I think--and I don't want to speak for Senator
Kerry, because I'm not on this show to do that,
but he made it clear during the campaign that you
get more--I think you can get more results with
cooperation with other countries than not.
And I think the illustration of that is very
simple, because the comparison is really most
interesting between George Bush and his father,
who I thought was quite deft
diplomatically. George Bush's father had
over 100,000 foreign troops in Iraq when we went
in the first time, an invasion that I also
supported, because I think that when a dictator
takes over another country that's your ally, you
have an obligation to come to their defense.
This president couldn't
get those troops. They have some troops
from Britain, some from Spain and some from
Poland and a smattering of others. I
believe that John Kerry, who is a
multilateralist, would have been able to put
together the kind of coalition that George Bush's
father had, which served us well in the first
encounter with Saddam Hussein. This
president is not going to ever be able to get us
out of Iraq without, I think at this point, Iraq
dissolving into chaos or a fundamentalist Shiite
theocracy, both of which are very bad for the
United States. I think John
Kerry will be able to get us out of Iraq because
I think he will engender much better cooperative
relationships with the kinds of countries that he
needs to get those 100,000 foreign troops in so
that we can bring home our Guard and Reserve and
one of our two divisions.
MR. RUSSERT: You
think that Iraq may be on the verge of civil war?
DR. DEAN: I think
that is the unfortunate indication. I
actually fear--and this is an interesting thing
for one of the most anti-war candidates to
say--my greatest fear right now is that President
Bush for political reasons will withdraw our
troops prematurely from Iraq, and that Iraq will
descend in--either to civil war or to
chaos. There are significant
divisions. If you, for election reasons,
bring home the troops too early, then you risk
the--either al-Qaeda establishing a beachhead,
and we know al-Qaeda is in Iraq now, even though
they were not in Iraq before we went in, or you
risk the attempt by the Shiite religious majority
to enforce a Shiite theocracy, which is what they
have in Iran. I think that would be a very
serious problem.
MR. RUSSERT: So
Howard Dean would not cut and run if he was
president?
DR. DEAN:
No. I don't think you could do that, and
I'd be surprised if either of the candidates--I'd
be more worried about President Bush in this
arena because I think that he is more sensitive
to poll numbers and he understands that there are
a lot of people asking questions about why we're
there. You know, the significant
issue in Iraq is not whether we're in there or
not. If that were the significant issue,
I'd be the nominee and Senator Kerry would
not. People care about Iraq, but they
really wanted--they voted for John Kerry because
they thought--for a number of other
reasons. The significant issue--and
this is where the president is going to rise or
fall in this election--is did the president tell
the truth? And I think an increasing number
of Americans believe that he may not have told
the truth. And when the president of the
United States has problems with his credibility,
that brings his re-electability into question.
SenderBerl: The
dynamic which compels Bush to find WMD. There was
a news story the other day that we insert
accordingly on the issue raised by us long ago.
http://www.propagandamatrix.com/130304usunloading.html
U.S.
Unloading WMD in Iraq
Tehran Times | March
13 2004
TEHRAN (Mehr News Agency) Over the past
few days, in the wake of the bombings in Karbala
and the ideological disputes that delayed the
signing of Iraqs interim constitution,
there have been reports that U.S. forces have
unloaded a large cargo of parts for constructing
long-range missiles and weapons of mass
destruction (WMD) in the southern ports of Iraq.
A reliable source from the Iraqi Governing
Council, speaking on condition of anonymity, told
the Mehr News Agency that U.S. forces, with the
help of British forces stationed in southern
Iraq, had made extensive efforts to conceal their
actions.
MR. RUSSERT: Last
July, you suggested on this program that it would
take--may take more American troops in Iraq in
order to stabilize it. Is that still your
view?
DR. DEAN:
No. What I have since said is that we need
more troops, but not more American troops.
And I do believe we need additional foreign
troops to make sure that Iraq is
stabilized. They should not be American
troops. I think the American people have no
appetite for sending more American troops to
Iraq.
MR. RUSSERT: You
talk about John Kerry and Iraq, and I want to go
back to this, because six weeks ago on this
program, we talked about it. And I'm very
curious about whether or not you believe that
John Kerry has the credibility to engage the
president on Iraq. Let's watch our
discussion from Wisconsin:
(Videotape, MEET THE
PRESS, February 1, 2004):
MR. RUSSERT: This
is what you said to The New York Times last
week. "[Dean] defined the nomination
battle as a choice between [himself]" and
"a Washington insider who shifts back and
forth with every poll."
Who is that?
DR. DEAN: That's
John Kerry.
MR. RUSSERT: On
what issues?
DR. DEAN: Iraq,
for one. He couldn't make up his mind
whether he was for Iraq or not for the longest
time.
They all voted for that
stuff, and then they come around and find out
it's unpopular, so now they're saying,
"Well, we've got to do this and we've got to
do that." How about a little foresight
and how about standing up for what you think is
right and not worrying about what the focus
groups and the polls say?
(End videotape)
DR. DEAN: It was a
tough campaign, one that I did not win.
Evidently more Democrats did not agree with me
than agreed with me, and I accept that. The
great thing about a democracy is that you have a
vote. And, you know, people say, "Oh,
aren't you angry?" I'm not the least
bit angry about the way the campaign turned
out. John Kerry won fair and square.
And now the question is: Are we all going
to pull together as a team or not?
MR. RUSSERT: But
is he consistent enough on Iraq to debate George
Bush?
DR. DEAN: You
know, one of the things--I've gotten to know John
a little bit since the campaign was over, and I
think that what he does sometimes is muse in
public. He does what, actually, I've done,
which has gotten me in trouble and sometimes it
gets him in a little trouble--is you think out
loud. I think that he is really struggling
with the right way to fight terrorism, and I
think he and I agree that the right way to fight
terrorism is not to send several thousand troops
to Iraq without first being candid with the
American people and explaining to them why you're
doing that. Did we have our differences in
the campaign? Yes. Was it a very
hard-fought campaign? Yes. I made my
case. I think we had a significant impact
on the race in--about allowing Democrats to say
things they wouldn't have said before.
But John Kerry is the
nominee of this party, and the choice is between
John Kerry and George Bush, and there's no
question in my mind that John Kerry will make a
far better president than George Bush, both
on the economic and jobs side, which is going to
be the biggest issue in this campaign, and most
certainly, in my view, in the conduct of foreign
policy. John Kerry is an
internationalist. We forfeited the moral
leadership of this world, a position that we had
been in since the end of World War I, when George
Bush went into Iraq unilaterally. We
deserve that moral leadership title back again,
and I think Kerry will bring it to us.
MR. RUSSERT: Let
me show you a bumper sticker that can be seen on
automobiles around the country, and actually
available on the Kerry Web site. And I'll
put it on the screen: "Dated Dean,
Married Kerry." What's that mean to
you?
DR. DEAN: Well,
that means we had a great run. We didn't
quite get there, and John did. And, you
know, God bless him for it. You know, this
is a tough business, politics, as I've
discovered, and you get out there and you give it
your best shot. We did. We think we
got a lot of people excited. We got a lot
of grassroots people excited, and we're going to
talk about that on "Larry King" on
Wednesday. But we didn't get to the
nomination. We fell short. And I
accept that. That's the voters that decided
that, and now we've got to move on.
SenderBerl: We believe
Kerry has made overtures to Dean to be his
running mate. However, we doubt it will be Dean
or Edwards, even those either of these men who
help Kerry take Bush absent Bush's ploys to shift
the election to some state of mayhem for the USA.
And so now the question
is: Are we going to fundamentally change
the country? And I think we can. I'm going
to work for fundamental change for the country. I
don't get to be the captain of the team.
That's not what the voters said. John Kerry
gets to be the captain of the team. And the
question is: Do you want to be on the team
and work for change, or do you not? And I
do want to be on the team and I'm going to work
for change.
MR. RUSSERT: Why
did voters date you, though? Date you
heavily? You know? Is it the wild and crazy
boyfriend and then settle down for a more somber
husband?
DR. DEAN: Well, I
hadn't thought about that. You know, I
think we were saying things that other people
didn't dare say for a while. I mean, if you
look at what happened--and I've said this before
on MEET THE PRESS. If you look at what
happened is that George Bush got into office with
500,000 fewer votes than Al Gore got. And a
lot of--for the first two years, we all laid down
in front of him, we let him get away with all
this stuff, and we passed his right-wing
program. Furthermore, he governed far
further to the right than I ever thought he
would, knowing him as governor of Texas. I
was just shocked by the stuff that he has
passed. The Medicare prescription bill,
imagine having your administration order somebody
not to testify that it's going to cost $140
billion more than you thought. I mean, if
this was going on in the Clinton administration,
there would be all kinds of inquiries and
hearings and people being fired. What is
going on in this Capitol and what is going on in
this country? That's the case we made to
the American people, and I think it was a pretty
attractive case.
MR.
RUSSERT: What do you think the defining
issue or issues will be in this race?
DR. DEAN:
Jobs. Jobs. Right now, the
unemployment rate is high, but the worst thing is
all the people who have quit looking for work, health
insurance, which goes right around with jobs--I
should really have said economic security, not
just jobs. Economic security in
this country is a disaster for people unless
you're one of the few favored people that got
George Bush's $3 trillion worth of tax
giveaways. Or unless you're in the
pharmaceutical business or the insurance business
and you got all that money from the Medicare
prescription bill which did very little to help
seniors. People want economic security. This
president is concerned about a very small group
of people at the very top. He's forgotten
about ordinary Americans. That's why I'm going to
support Kerry.
MR. RUSSERT: You
think Ralph Nader's candidacy will hurt John
Kerry?
DR. DEAN: I think
it's too early to tell. You know, my belief
is that the question is: Do you want John
Kerry or do you want George Bush? If you
want George Bush, then you should vote for George
Bush. But, unfortunately, voting for Ralph
Nader is going to have the effect of helping to
elect George Bush, and we hope that that doesn't
happen.
MR. RUSSERT: Would
you serve in a Kerry Cabinet?
DR. DEAN: I have
not been asked. And I certainly have no
comment on that. You know, if I get asked, I'll
make the decision at the time. But I think
it would be very premature for anybody. And
I'm sure Senator Kerry is not asking people to
serve if they'll serve in his Cabinet right now.
MR. RUSSERT: Would
you be interested in running as vice president?
DR. DEAN: I think
that--I've publicly said that I'm not sure he's
going to want two people from adjacent states
running.
MR. RUSSERT:
Clinton-Gore.
DR. DEAN: Oh,
well, yeah, that. You know, I haven't been
asked about that either. And I'm not going
to make any comments about that either.
MR. RUSSERT: You
will have an announcement about your future later
this week, about organizations and your plans for
the Democratic Party.
DR. DEAN: I
will. We built an enormous grassroots
organization. We want to keep that very
active, not just in Washington-type politics, in
trying to get a Democratic Congress and a
Democratic president, but we want to encourage
people to run for office at the grassroots and we
want to support them. Our supporters all
over the country have done great things and we're
going to talk exactly about how to do that on
Wednesday night.
MR. RUSSERT: And
we'll be covering it. We thank you for your
views, Governor Dean.
DR. DEAN: Thanks,
Tim.
|