Until now, we've resisted the temptation to post on former White House press secretary Scott McClellan's new book, which accuses the Bush White House of launching a propaganda campaign to sell the war in Iraq.
Why? It's not news. At least not to some of us who've covered the story from the start.
(Click here, here and here to get just a taste of what we mean).
Second, we find it a wee bit preposterous -- and we are being diplomatic here -- that a man who slavishly - no, robotically! -- defended President Bush's policies in Iraq and elsewhere is trying to "set the record straight" (and sell a few books) five years and more after the invasion, with U.S. troops still bravely fighting and dying to stabilize that country.
But the responses to McClellan from the Bush administration and media bigwigs, history-bending as they are, compel us to jump in. As we like to say around here, it's truth to power time, not just for the politicians but also for some folks in our own business.
Bush loyalists have responded in three ways:
1) Scott, how could you? This conveniently ignores the issue of what Bush did or didn't know and do about intelligence on Iraq, converting the story line into that of wounded leader and treasonous former aide. (That canard was the sole focus of a CBS news radio report Wednesday night).
2) Invading Iraq was the right thing to do. Okay. When do Bush, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, et al *not* say that? Dog bites man.
3) It was an intelligence failure. The CIA gave us bad dope on WMD and, well, they're the experts. More on this in a second.
The news media have been, if anything, even more craven than the administration has been in defending its failure to investigate Bush's case for war in Iraq before the war.
Here's ABC News' Charles Gibson: "I think the questions were asked. It was just a drumbeat of support from the administration. It is not our job to debate them. It is our job to ask the questions.” And “I’m not sure we would have asked anything differently."
Really?
Or this from NBC's Brian Williams: “Sadly, we saw fellow Americans — in some cases floating past facedown (after Katrina). We knew what had just happened. We weren’t allowed that kind of proximity with the weapons inspectors [in Iraq]. I was in Kuwait for the buildup to the war, and, yes, we heard from the Pentagon, on my cell phone, the minute they heard us report something that they didn’t like. The tone of that time was quite extraordinary.” And this: "“It’s tough to go back, to put ourselves in the mind-set. It was post-9/11 America."
So the Pentagon tells the media what kind of reporting is in- and out-of-bounds?
Hogwash. Hogwash! HOGWASH.
We confess that here at McClatchy, which purchased Knight Ridder two years ago, we do have a dog in this fight. Our team - Joe Galloway, Clark Hoyt, Jon Landay, Renee Schoof, Warren Strobel, John Walcott, Tish Wells and many others - was, with a few exceptions, the only major news media organization that before the war consistently and aggressively challenged the White House's case for war, and its lack of planning for post-war Iraq.
Here are Bill Moyers and Michael Massing on the media's pre-war performance.
Enough self-aggrandizing trumpet-blowing. OK, Scott, What Happened?
Here's what happened, based entirely on our own reporting and publicly available documents:
* The Bush administration was gunning for Iraq within days of the 9/11 attacks, dispatching a former CIA director, on a flight authorized by Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz, to find evidence for a bizarre theory that Saddam Hussein was responsible for the first World Trade Center attack in 1993. (Note: See also Richard Clarke and former Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill on this point).
* Bush decided by February 2002, at the latest, that he was going to remove Saddam by hook or by crook. (Yes, we reported that at the time).
* White House officials, led by Dick Cheney, began making the case for war in August 2002, in speeches and reports that not only were wrong, but also went well beyond what the available intelligence said at that time, and contained outright fantasies and falsehoods. Indeed, some of that material was never vetted with the intelligence agencies before it was peddled to the public.
* Dissenters, or even those who voiced worry about where the policy was going, were ignored, excluded or punished. (Note: See Gen. Eric Shinseki, Paul O'Neill, Joseph Wilson and all of the State Department 's Arab specialists and much of its intelligence bureau).
* The Bush administration didn't even want to produce the National Intelligence Estimate on Iraq's weapons of mass destruction programs that's justly received so much criticism since. The White House thought it was unneeded. It actually was demanded by Congress and slapped together in a matter of weeks before the congressional votes to authorize war on Iraq.
* The October 2002 NIE was flawed, no doubt. But it contained dissents questioning the extent of Saddam's WMD programs, dissents that were buried in the report. Doubts and dissents were then stripped from the publicly released, unclassified version of the NIE.
* The core of the administration's case for war was not just that Saddam was developing WMDs, but also that, unchecked, he might give them to terrorists to attack the United States. Remember smoking guns and mushroom clouds? Inconveniently, the CIA had determined just the opposite: Saddam would attack the United States only if he concluded a U.S. attack on him was unavoidable. He'd give WMD to Islamist terrorists only "as a last chance to exact revenge."
* The Bush administration relied heavily on an Iraqi exile, Ahmed Chalabi, who had been found to be untrustworthy by the State Department and the CIA. Chalabi and his Iraqi National Congress were given millions, and produced "defectors" whose tales of WMD sites and terrorist training were false, fanciful and bogus. But the information was fed directly to senior officials and included in official White House documents.
* The same INC-supplied "intelligence" used in the White House propaganda effort (you got that bit right, Scott) also was fed to dozens of U.S. and foreign news organizations.
* It all culminated in a speech by Secretary of State Colin Powell to the U.N. Security Council in February 2003 making the case against Saddam. Virtually every major allegation Powell made turned out later to be wrong. It would have been even worse had not Powell and his team thrown out even more shaky "intelligence" that Cheney's office repeatedly tried to stuff into the speech.
* The Bush administration tried to link Saddam to al Qaida and, by implication, to the 9/11 attacks. Officials repeatedly pushed the CIA for information on such links, and a separate intel shopwas set up under Defense Under Secretary Douglas Feith to find "proof" of such ties. Neither the CIA nor anyone else ever found anything resembling an operational relationship between Saddam and al Qaida.
* An exhaustive review of Saddam Hussein's regime's own documents, released in March 2008, found no operational relationship between Saddam and al Qaida.
* The Bush administration failed to plan for the rebuilding of postwar Iraq, as we were perhaps the first to report. The White House ignored stacks of intelligence reports, some now available in partially unclassified form, warning before the war about the possibilities for insurgency, ethnic warfare, social chaos and the like.
We could go on, but the rest, as they say, is history.
That's what happened.
-- Warren P. Strobel and Jonathan S. Landay.

Excellent piece. Keep on keeping on!
Posted by: JT | May 30, 2008 at 05:43 AM
Kudos! Again!!
Thank you for keeping us informed for
without you where could we go to
learn the truth?
Please send copies of this post to all of our nation's MSM.
Posted by: Midwest Maggie | May 30, 2008 at 05:56 AM
Scott was in a bad place when he left. Could you imagine being the squishy part between the public and the whitehouse?
They lied to him and threw him to the dogs, so to speak. It's obvious he never was one of them, and they aren't above having him commit suicide or going on an all expense paid trip to GTMO. It's still good that he's coming out now, because these sociopaths are still in power and trying to start just one more war, and we still need the keystone.
Posted by: Kristie Mansfield | May 30, 2008 at 05:56 AM
Thanks to you, and a few others who believe that journalism is supposed to be something more than entertainment and something less than propaganda, we can say that we have known this for quite some time. The puzzle remains why so few of us seem to have taken the trouble to find out.
Posted by: Elmo | May 30, 2008 at 06:40 AM
Good job, excellent column. The only folks who still understand the role of the news in our democracy.
I wish you would buy the NYT.
Posted by: john | May 30, 2008 at 06:49 AM
OK, so while many knew all this long ago, the corporate media ignored it all and acted like the Iraq war, outing Plame, torture, etc. were all normal.
So now that an insider has confirmed it was all based on a pack of lies, why isn't the word impeachment on everyone's lips?
Posted by: John Moffett | May 30, 2008 at 06:57 AM
"Memo to Scott McClellan. . ." should be required reading to all congressional and presidetial candidates.
Generally, I do not favor media takeovers, but McClatchy taking over the "Miami Herald" sure made the "Herald" a better newspaper.
Posted by: J W Alsip | May 30, 2008 at 07:01 AM
All of those involved in the creating the "build up" to invade Iraq, should be tried for war crimes, like the Nazis, and look what happened to a bunch of them....
Corey Mondello
Boston, Massachusetts
www.CoreyMondello.com
5-30-08
Posted by: Corey Mondello | May 30, 2008 at 07:47 AM
The Hague. Immediately.
Posted by: bob | May 30, 2008 at 07:48 AM
What I don't understand is why the people who were RIGHT about this all along - the "experts" - are frozen out of all "expert" discussion on our news outlets.
Posted by: Cynicor | May 30, 2008 at 07:53 AM
You guys (and gal) are just remarkable. When the marmongers were salvating, you took a stand. Unfortunately no one listened. My own paper, The Ledger Enquirer (which is a part of the McClatchy chain of newspapers) in Columbus,GA didn't run the stories you guys put forward, instead opting for the NYTimes' Judy Miller and Michael Gordon misguided articles.
May God continue to bless you guys, as well as the fortunes of McClatchy company itself.
Posted by: Morel | May 30, 2008 at 08:03 AM
Glad you all are blogging. Yes, McClellan's book has a lot of rehashing in it (but some important new bits as well, see emptywheel, on Plame case, for example). But it has had a good impact on the media generally, in that they are perhaps finally beginning to get a glimmer of a clue about how they were played, and how complicit they have been--before and after the invasion.
Glad you're doing this, and please keep it coming.
Posted by: Casual Observer | May 30, 2008 at 08:04 AM
Georges Sada.
Posted by: Not All Iraqis Agree | May 30, 2008 at 08:05 AM
thank you, thank you, thank you - at a time when millions of us felt alone in some wilderness, your reporting was an oasis of sanity.
mad props to Mr Walcott as well
history will be kind to you all
hope you are aware you have legions of readers and admirers on the progressive blogs
now - could we have more truth to power time
on torture?
on the disappearance of Khalid Sheik Mohammed's wife and children ?
on caging and other organized efforts by the Administration and Republican Party to deny US citizens their right to vote ? (you know, that whole US Attorney thingy)
why, in the face of these crimes against the Constitution, the democratic leadership has refused to impeach ?
and could ya have it on my desk by lunch ?
thank you !
Posted by: izzatxeaux | May 30, 2008 at 08:13 AM
=>Generally, I do not favor media takeovers, but McClatchy taking over the "Miami Herald" sure made the "Herald" a better newspaper.<=
I'd like to seee McClatchy take over the Washington Post.
Job 1: Fire Fred Hiatt.
~
Posted by: ifthethunderdontgetya™³²®© | May 30, 2008 at 08:17 AM
Thank you for your efforts over the years in connection with the run-up to, and continuing horror of the war in Iraq. You truly deserve all of the awards and accolades that have come your way. Would that a larger portion of the press had operated in such a strong (and absolutely proper) manner when things could have turned out differently.
Posted by: Robert P. Ewing | May 30, 2008 at 08:46 AM
Thank you for this!
The media pile-on that has been on display this week is really something to see. I would say that they are touchy, touchy, touchy when anyone questions their years of acting like stenographers for the Bush administration.
They say, "We asked right questions! That's all we can do!" Clearly, this news organization proves them wrong. If nothing else, they could have called YOUR reporters for some honest information!
To watch the entire Washington press corp (with a few exceptions) spew forth the Bush administration talking points about McClellan and his book is as revealing as the book itself.
Have they no shame ...
Posted by: Casey | May 30, 2008 at 08:59 AM
I've said all along that if I could sit at my computer in my own house and find out what was really going on as early as the fall of 2002, that there is NO excuse for journalists—unlike you, the "alternative" press, and a few independent voices who got it right—except that their heads were so far up their asses that they really couldn't see. Shameful.
Posted by: ckennedy | May 30, 2008 at 09:00 AM
digg this at http://digg.com/political_opinion/Blog_Nukes_Spooks
Posted by: rxbusa | May 30, 2008 at 09:07 AM
How about what's NOT happening?
Impeachment
Yes, the euphemedia has the same responsibility for reporting on the insanity of non-impeachment as it did on Iraq.
No, it is not a "partisan issue" any more than torture, illegal spying, terrorizing the nation into war -- or any of the other realities that demand it be undertaken -- to save lives.
Failure to impeach -- and the non-reporting of that failure -- is a symptom of the same disease being lamented now.
---
Posted by: thedeanpeople | May 30, 2008 at 09:08 AM
During the past few days, I've heard lots of folks denigrating McClellan's book because he supposedly is only saying things that "everybody knew."
Everyone in town might "know" my neighbor robbed the local gas station. But if he writes a book admitting he did it, it puts the knowledge on an entirely different plain.
And that's the value of McClellan's book--it's the admission of truth by an insider and confirmation of all that stuff we "knew," from the Downing Street Memo right on through the Katrina mess.
Posted by: RAM | May 30, 2008 at 09:22 AM
Why this John Dean wannabe momma's boy Rove-puppy is selling books and pimping media time instead of telling it to authorities under oath is simply beyond the pale.
McClatchy Boys ROCK. I owe your bureau -- and the few others out there of your ilk -- a sincere debt of gratitude for the years of sourced investigations that, for me, effectively serve as Kryptonite against the hypnotic sheeple-fying influence of our pathetic MSM. I seriously love you.
Speak truth to power, indeed! Landay and Strobel's piece deserves to be The Most Forwarded Post in the History of the Internet.
Posted by: SuSu | May 30, 2008 at 09:29 AM
I too agree that Stroebel and Landay are greater than Woodward and Bernstein. Unfortunately, McClatchy/Knight Ridder were marginalized and ignored by the MSM. The investigative reporting was well thought out, researched, well written and to the point, but didn't receive the recognition it should have.
And its not the fault of McClatchy/Knight Ridder...it's the MSM fault for being too accomodating/embedded with Bu$h and his administration.
The MSM needs to realize they dropped the ball when McClatchy/Knight Ridder gave them the latteral pass on the truth behind the curtains.
Posted by: Tahut | May 30, 2008 at 09:32 AM
Thank you so much for this documentation. Ladies and Gentlemen, let the War Crimes Tribunals begin!
Posted by: War On War Off | May 30, 2008 at 09:39 AM
Thank you, you are American heroes.
Posted by: ch2 | May 30, 2008 at 09:49 AM