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Kulin, I don't remember what kind of intelligence Germany gave us—but if my memory serves me correctly, they were very strongly against that war. In fact, we had to listen to quite a few raspberries from them on the issue.....
The loudest raspberries of all came from France (remember "freedom fries"?), but that's quite a different matter.
Right there is a problem in this discussion: it's assumed that if someone thinks Bush had intelligence that was matched by other countries, that one approves of the invasion.
From all the research I did at the time, and since while on JUB, I have no doubt that the intelligence services of a number of nations pointed to exactly what the stuff Bush had did. I don't even think Bush lied (I once cited a solid Democrat commentator to that effect, somewhere here): he gave us the stuff he had -- but we've seen since that Cheney leaned on the intelligence community to spin the stuff given to Bush.
Yet even if what Bush (and Pelosi, Clinton, and others) saw was 100% correct, my position back then was and remains that there was no need to go off playing Texas Ranger in a place where the varmints have automatic weapons. Saddam had made enough concessions that an astute student of the region could have played the situation like a fiddle and gotten him removed without a single U.S. or NATO or other soldier setting foot on Iraqi soil.
So the problem here is not with the intelligence, or the actions, but that some people lump everyone together if they speak even the slightest bit favorably of anything remotely connected to Bush.
Correct...They would have taken "evidence" from a monkey's ass if that's what it took to justify that scam.![]()
Cheney might have -- but only if he could whip up a set of credentials to make the monkey's ass look like a real intelligence source.
AFTER the invasion, during investigations into the intelligence and where it failed, they discovered that information. Essentially, Germany didn't tell the US their doubts about the intelligence until after the invasion had occurred.
I don't even feel like doing research right now to find it, but I remember an article stating that after we'd gotten the intelligence and moved, the Germans discovered they'd been fed a line, and told us -- quietly; they still don't officially admit they were had.
Though if that admission had come, say, a week before Bush started his little military adventure playing Texas Ranger in the Middle East, I have little doubt that Cheney would have made sure it took ten days to get the information "processed" and delivered through channels... knowing full well that once things got started, Bush wouldn't have the balls to pack up and go home (if nothing else, Rumsfeld probably would have locked him in the Oval Office until he'd gotten his jollies off the "shock and awe").



















god i love john stewart






