|
The
Smoking Gun That Could Lead To Bush's Impeachment
BUZZFLASH
READER COMMENTARY
by Chris Marshall
If
high-ranking intelligence officials are to be believed, there is a
smoking gun which strongly suggests that George Bush should be impeached
for lying to the American people in order to generate support and justification
for war. Everyone should be clear about what it is. There is much to
criticize about how the Bush Administration lied and manipulated public
opinion. But right now the single most damaging piece of evidence in
the case against Bush is the forged letter proffered as evidence that
Iraq was trying to obtain uranium for use in nuclear weapons, which
Bush
touted in his State of the Union speech. It now appears that not only
was the document a forgery, it is almost inconceivable that Bush and
his cronies didn't know it was a forgery before they presented it to
the American people and the world as evidence –- a clearly impeachable
offense.
Consider
the following: New
York Times columnist Nicholas Kristof, in a column on 5-6-03,
reported that he was told by "an insider" who was present at
the meetings the
following story:
"I'm
told by a person involved in the Niger caper that more than a year
ago the vice president's office asked for an investigation of the uranium
deal, so a former U.S. ambassador to Africa was dispatched to Niger.
In February 2002, according to someone present at the meetings, that
envoy reported to the C.I.A. and State Department that the information
was unequivocally wrong and that the documents had been forged...The
envoy's debunking of the forgery was passed around the administration
and seemed to be accepted -- except that President Bush and the State
Department kept citing it anyway. ‘It's disingenuous for the State Department
people to say they were bamboozled because they knew about this for a
year’ one insider said."
This story has been corroborated by at least 2 credible sources:
1) Greg Thielmann, Director of the strategic, proliferation and military
issues office in the State Department's Bureau of Intelligence and Research
until September 2002, who says his agency told Powell the letter was
definitely bogus long before the State of the Union speech in which it
was presented as evidence.
2)
Condoleeza Rice, who admitted on June 8's This
Week with George Stephanopoulos,
that the Vice President's office requested the report from the Ambassador
and that people in the Vice President's Office may have known (she maintains
that the information was held at low levels and didn't make it to the
top).
Remember
that our intelligence agencies were overhauled after 9/11 so that crucial
information would not get lost in the intelligence bureaucracies.
One of the highest ranking intelligence officers in the State Department
says the State Department knew the document was a forgery.
And
it is simply not believable that the Vice President’s office could
send an
ambassador on a fact-finding mission, that that ambassador could
come back from the mission he was sent on by the Vice President, tell
the
CIA and the State Department that the document was a forgery, and,
with the Vice President's office, the CIA, and the State Department
all in
possession of this information, that the Administration could somehow
not have been informed. Hell, the Vice President's Office, the CIA,
and the State Department ARE the Administration. We need to hear a lot more about this from our leaders and from the
media.
Chris Marshall
BUZZFLASH
READER COMMENTARY |