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View Full Version : Neocon Richard Perle denies Architect of War accusations


SeedyROM
01-09-2009, 04:54 AM
So this neocon sounds a little like the whacko who denied the holocaust ever happened aka Iranian President Mahmoud IamANutjob. His claims are damn right insulting. The media have many years of interviews and speeches documenting his warhawk stance. :mad:

http://thinkprogress.org/2009/01/08/perle-iraq-architect/
Perle Washes His Hands Of Iraq: I Was Not An ‘Architect Of That War,’ Neocons Had No Influenceğ
Over the past few weeks, many Bush administration officials have begun rewriting history in an effort to burnish President Bush’s legacy. Following suit, neoconservative war hawk Richard Perle has taken the opportunity to polish his own record during the Bush years — mainly on Iraq.

In the latest issue of The National Interest, Perle devotes 4,600 words — not to congratulate President Bush for invading Iraq — but to wipe his, and the whole neoconservative movement’s, hands clean of the whole affair. In the essay, he categorically denies that both he — and neoconservative ideology in general — had any influence on the Bush administration in its decision to go to war:

I have been widely but wrongly depicted as deeply involved in the making of administration policy, especially with respect to Iraq. Facts notwithstanding, there are some fifty thousand entries on Google in which I am described as an “architect,” and often as “the architect,” of the Iraq War. I certainly supported and argued publicly for the decision to remove Saddam, as I do in what follows. But had I been the architect of that war, our policy would have been very different. […]

But about the many mistakes made in Iraq, one thing is certain: they had nothing to do with ideology. They did not draw inspiration from or reflect neoconservative ideas and they were not the product of philosophical or ideological influences outside the government.

Perle is right. He strongly advocated publicly for the invasion of Iraq, especially after 9/11, even making claims that Saddam Hussein had links to Osama bin Laden (an assertion he later claimed he never said). But in fact, Perle had direct access to top administration officials during the run up to the war. Former CIA director George Tenet recalled that shortly after 9/11, Perle told him that “Iraq has to pay a price for what happened yesterday, they bear responsibility.”

Moreover, the neoconservative influence on the Bush administration, particularly regarding Iraq, has been well documented. For Perle to claim otherwise is beyond absurd.

Seeing that Perle cannot deny he supported the invasion, he then offers two separate justifications for both outcomes of the WMD argument. First, he says the belief that Saddam had WMD was “widely accepted” at the time of the invasion. But, noting that no WMD were found, Perle then says the “salient issue” was not that Saddam had WMD but that he “could produce them” someday. Nevertheless, Perle concludes, “no one should take seriously the facile conclusion that invading Iraq was mistaken because we now know Saddam did not possess stockpiles of WMD.”

Except this statement is a direct contradiction of what Perle wrote earlier this year in an article for The American Interest. Then, he claimed if we knew Saddam had no WMD in March 2003, the U.S. shouldn’t have invaded:

If Saddam had provided solid, confirmable evidence of the destruction of the stockpiles of weapons of mass destruction he was believed to possess, we would not have invaded.

Indeed, no matter how many incoherent, contradictory and misleading essays Perle concocts trying to absolve himself from the Iraq debacle, like his fellow Iraq war architects, it’s clear he has no leg to stand on.

Ambushed on the Potomac by Richard Perle, this one is long so click and read.

http://www.nationalinterest.org/Article.aspx?id=20486

Independent Harry
01-09-2009, 11:47 AM
wow, its amazing, even the convicted and guilty murderer generally considers himself a decent person...

disrupter
01-10-2009, 02:26 AM
Murderers always self-rationalize what they have done.

It is our human reflex at work.

I didn't wreck the car, the alcohol did.
I didn't shoot that person, the gun did.
I am not evil, it is the work of Satan that made me do that.
I believe in God so when i murder rape & rob it must be a good thing.

We rationalize whatever we do as a means of psychological self-reinforcement. We paint pretty internal pictures that keep us 'psyched up'.

Most organized religion is mass marketed identical 'paint-it-by-numbers' psychology to make it easy enough for even the SUPER loser idiots.

Oddly though some people become psychologically depressed or neurotic & blame themselves for things vastly beyond their doing.

Does that imply that all psychology is inherently non-empirical?
or just that some [sizable?] portion of it is?

There's no accounting for psychology,
it's all just psychological.

Moby
01-10-2009, 03:14 AM
Murderers always self-rationalize what they have done.

It is our human reflex at work.

I didn't wreck the car, the alcohol did.
I didn't shoot that person, the gun did.
I am not evil, it is the work of Satan that made me do that.
I believe in God so when i murder rape & rob it must be a good thing.
And from the RNC Sheep


We didn't lose the election, the media decided they wanted Obama to win.
Palin wasn't a joke, the media was mean to her.

I could go on but those two should go down in history as the most insane claims ever made by a population of supposedly educated people.

SeedyROM
01-11-2009, 04:04 AM
You guys do realize neocons are rewriting history in an effort to sanitze thier image for democrats. Obama will receive advice from neocons so isn't this ploy designed to wash away the dirt so they look like a normal educational group similar to the Neolibs I exposed recently? These fucks can re-write al they want, the proof is against them. MSNBC's Racheal Maddow had some fun with the neocon faux holocaust crazyness.