"A
pitiful week, which found Colin Powell apologizing for a fraudulent
State Department report on terrorism that suffered from shockingly
wrong statistics and apparent, er, printing problems"
BY JOHN TULLY
THE LOS ANGELES SUN
Jan. 25 2005
There are weeks on that tiny hill full of impressive buildings and important
people when swirling winds truly collide. Halfway through 2004, the June
sun was shining, the war was spiraling out of control, and nobody except
maybe Joe Biden had the faintest trace of a viable plan to stop digging
the hole .
It had been an extraordinary few days, one which brought William Jefferson
Clinton back to the limelight that he loves so much. The former president's
book tour received a curious mixture of scoffing and slathering from
the networks while they just about ignored a visit from the Special Prosecutor
to the Oval Office, He was there to find out who gave Bob Novak the identity
of C.I.A. agent Valerie Plame, which ruined her long undercover career.
A pitiful week, which found Colin Powell apologizing for a fraudulent
State Department report on terrorism that suffered from shockingly wrong
statistics and apparent, er, printing problems. The original report stated
that terrorism acts in the world against America, for the year 2003,
had gone down.
It hadn't .
Terrorism acts actually went up for the year; what do you know? It turned
out that they had only looked at part of the year and in fact attacks
were up by a record amount.
A typical week, as the Vice-President was given a break by the Supreme
Court when it sent the now infamous lawsuit about his energy policy meetings
back down to the lower courts.
As usual the mainstream media got lost in the shuffle about Ken Lay and
Big Oil running energy policy. Forgotten once again was the release in
2003 of curious Energy Task-Force documents that contained detailed Iraqi
oil field maps, pipelines and terminals, and a list of "Foreign
Suitors of Iraqi Oil Field Contracts".
Meanwhile, back in the real world, it had been a long week for Congressman
Henry Waxman who called for a Select House committee to investigate the
abuses at a prison named Abu-Ghraib after weeks of outright stonewalling
by the administration.
A partial and select document dump of memos late on a Tuesday evening
by the White House, showed that the President had approved a document
on February 7, 2002 approving a new set of interrogation techniques that
fall outside the law of the Geneva Convention and could be used in future
conflicts.
Now, six months later, the fellow who cleared those torture memos will
be our new Attorney General, the head of the C.I.A. who claimed the intelligence
about Iraq's imminent threat was a "slam dunk" gets a medal,
and the President's adviser on national security for the past four years
and two failed wars gets to head up the State Department.
"Forgotten
once again was the release in 2003 of curious Energy Task-Force
documents that contained detailed Iraqi oil field maps, pipelines
and terminals"