Drakona wrote:In general, the conclusion of the argument seems to be, "Whatever happened, the Bush Administration did something wrong." That's certainly in dispute, and there are a number of ways out of that conclusion, outlined above.
I see only one "way out" outlined in your post. That is, that if the administration had faulty intel (for whatever reason), or misinterpreted intel (for whatever reason) that war was still justified. but this is hardly a way out of the problem to which i am pointing. the intel was wrong. this is separate from how it was used. the mistaken intel is important.
nothing that you posted changes the fact that the intel was wrong. and although you say that it is a disputed fact that the administration claimed wmd as a reason for going to war, you post nothing to counter my claim that it was. honestly, i find the fact that you even claim this last point is in dispute...amusing.
serioulsy, this whole thread has a taken on a rediculous tone. it's as if the idea that the administration is fallible is totally unbearable and many of you are not prepared to admit even the slightest mistake on their part. all that i have stated here is that there was a mistake. I DO NOT claim that bush lied. only that lying is one logical possibility.
the administration made a mistake. no amount of hand waving here can change that. i for one, will not ignore the fact that a mistake occurred. I'm not trying to be unpatriotic or make the administration look bad. but also, i couldn't care less if it makes them look bad.
listen people, the only thing i'm suggesting here is that we investigate the mistake, get to the bottom of it, and take steps to prevent a similar mistake in the future. and anyone who sees this as anything but a rational and modest suggestion is the one who should have to answer claims of being a partisan zealot and intellectually dishonest, not me.
no one here has said a thing to controvert the fact that the administration presented intel saying that Iraq was currently in possession of WMD and that this made them an imminent threat. furthermore, the adminisration used this "threat" to justify a war.
there are really two issues here.
Point 1: the wrong intel.
Point 2: the intel being used to justify the war.
I'd like to see a serious argument here refuting 1 or 2. Bold Deceiver has so far seemed to accept these 2 points. no one here as posted anything to show 1 or 2 is false.
1 and 2 lead to some LOGICAL questions. first, questions about point 1. why was the intel that was
presented wrong? was it wrong because the raw intel gathered was mistaken? was it wrong because the administration misinterpreted it? was it wrong because it was fabricated? wrong because it was exaggerated? lastly, wrong [only] because the evidence has been eliminated?
one diversion here. i used this statement broadly in an earlier post. i also indicated that this broad statement included a number of possibilities. it is immaterial to me HOW the evidence might have been eliminated. it might have been buried, sold, mailed through FEDEX, or shoved up their a$$es. if the evidence was eliminated it is not how it was that matters to my current argument. but it will be very important for another issue i will address next. even though i believed i indicated this clearly in earlier posts, for some reason you post rubbish like this:
Bold Deceiver wrote:Alternatively, they could have sold them to terrorists, but that's not a possibility in your world.
i implicitly included this in my argument. i made no mention of limitations on how the evidence was eliminated. and anyway, it has no bearing on my argument. it makes no difference in my context how the evidence was eliminated. since i have clearly indicated evidence elimation was possible, i would accept even the most outlandish means were possible.
finding proof of this would be crucial, but what is more...LOOKING for evidence of what happened is essential. the fact that none of us knows the answer makes my argument all the more valid. it must be investigated because a mistake happened.
and now the real significance of this to those who argue in favor of possibility 4 (evidence of the intel has been eliminated)... if this occurred - it still amounts to an intel failure!!!
yep, that's right. if he had the weapons and we allowed him to stash them, sell them, bury them, or shove them up his a$$ this mean a serious break down in intel. and yet i am not even assailing the administration for this. in fact, i have not blamed them for this at all and have clearly stated that possiblity 4 is improbable relative to the other 3. but for those of you who think possibility 4 would absolve the administration of having phucked up, think again. possibility 4 would be the worst of all
because it would mean the imminent threat is still out there!
BD, part of the reason you're so way off base here is that you assume too much about my motivation. i'm not voting for Kerry. I'm not even voting for a democrat. i see no difference between democrats and republicans. i couldn't care less who wins the election at this point because they're all completely the same. and the winner will certainly be Kerry or Bush. My take on that is that we're screwed either way. It's goin to hell in a handbasket and that's that. If you stop trying to argue against me as if I'm some bleeding heart democrat you'd be doing me a big favor. maybe i'd get more substance and less rhetoric about what a blind liberal i am.
finally, to the question you've been dying to have answered.
Bold Deceiver wrote:Since you contend that Iraq possessed WMD, and since you contend that Iraq no longer possesses WMD, when, in your view, did WMD cease to exist in Iraq?
Well, my answer is I don't know and I don't care. This question may be relevant for John Kerry (or some other bleeding heart liberal) to answer, but it isn't for me. It isn't, because i have no liberal agenda to besmirch the bush campaign or see a democrat reach office. i don't want either of them. my agenda is absolutely how i have presented it - a mistake happened in a crucial intel area and it can't be ignored.
to me your question about WHEN is utterly misguided. the only shred of relevance is pertinant only in an academic sense to determine the details of how the intel went wrong. there is zero significance to the question in terms of my argument here that it went wrong in the first place.
i never saw the intel. i never interpreted the intel. i never presented the intel to the american people. i never went to war over the intel. i have never taken a stance until now. there's no prior position for me to waffle from. i never had one.
it would appear from what i have seen and read that Hussein had wmd at one point. it would appear that he used them at one point. but WHEN he got rid of them has no bearing on my assertion that our intel about him was wrong. ok, so that leaves only the question of whether WHEN is relevant to how the intel was used. no, WHEN is not relevant. it is sufficient for my argument (and my concern) that the intel WAS wrong. WHEN it went wrong is academic and is only pertinent in the sense that knowing WHEN will give us the details of the intel error. But knowing WHEN cannot make it any less of an error.
the real questions are and always have been
1.
why was the intel wrong?
and
2.
should we be concerned about the false intel and how it was used?
i don't know the answer to question 1. i have never claimed to know it. i have posted here the logical possibilities of why it
could have been wrong. and no one has yet to post a satisfactory refutation of this.
I know the answer to question 2. the answer is YES. we should all be concerned about an intelligence failure this substantial. future failures could result in further attacks on our nation or our allies. future failures could result in unnecessary casualties to american military personnel. future failures could result in collateral damage to civilian targets in enemy states. future failures could result in mistakenly attacking states that were not "guilty as charged".
Will, has been the one person here to truly put forth a rational argument that actually addresses my points. He essentially argued that at the end of the day, we did the right thing by taking down Hussein. I agree that taking him down is a good thing. still, the details of the intel failure must be explored and safeguards put in place to protect against future failures such as this.
Will's point is very much common sense. So is mine. Again my point is a modest one because it draws no conclusions about specifically who is to blame, or specifically what went wrong.
A mistake CLEARLY happened. The mistake should be investigated and we should safeguard against such mistakes in the future. No one here has said anything to refute this. some people are here seem to be in a big hurry to gloss over the mistake because it is distateful to them that the president for whom they voted made a mistake. well, sorry! the mistake happened. the mistake matters.
for the record, i meant it completely when i said:
"I am all for more pre-emptive invasions of those who would threaten democracy or tyrannize their own people. i just want them to be better executed operations. and i want them to be justified with more finesse in the theater of world politics.