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Wrong crook convicted

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Milosevic must be chuckling in his grave!

It drips from neo-con fingertips. It flows from the Oval Office and the Pentagon. The blood of countless - literally! - Iraqis who would still be alive today if not for the Bushevik coup that entrenched madmen, thieves and thugs in America's presidency. How will these moneyed monsters be made accountable for their horrific war crimes? Is justice even possible? Hold Dick Cheney to Account
by John Nichols


Published on Thursday, March 8, 2007 by The Nation

The conviction of Vice President Dick Cheney's former chief of staff on charges of obstruction of justice, perjury and lying to the FBI confirms the suspicions that millions of Americans have had for years about the lawlessness of this administration.

And the focus of the Libby trial on a particular aspect of that lawlessness -- the determination of the administration to punish critics of the manipulation of intelligence to make the "case" for invading and occupying Iraq – means that these convictions go to the heart of the current debates about how to end that war and about how to hold those responsible for it to account.

Make no mistake about what has happened: An essential member of the Bush-Cheney administration has been convicted of attempting to undermine a Federal Bureau of Investigation inquiry into scheming by the vice president and others to punish former Ambassador Joe Wilson for revealing that statements made before the start of the war by the president and others were in conflict with intelligence that had been provided to the White House.

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nevada, got it right when he said: "It's about time someone in the Bush Administration has been held accountable for the campaign to manipulate intelligence and discredit war critics."

Reid got it right, as well, when he said, "(The Libby) trial revealed deeper truths about Vice President Cheney's role in this sordid affair. Now President Bush must pledge not to pardon Libby for his criminal conduct."

But Reid and other Congressional leaders have their own responsibilities now.

The Libby trial revealed stunning details about Cheney's direct and aggressive involvement to attack Wilson. In the course of the trial, it was revealed by Catherine J. Martin, who served as the vice president's top press aide in 2003, that Cheney dictated detailed "talking points" for Libby, and others on how they could impugn Wilson's credibility

The vice president ordered press aides to closely track press coverage of Wilson and ordered Libby to begin making behind-the-scenes contacts with reporters covering the story. So engaged with the "get-Wilson" initiative was Cheney that, while he and Libby were traveling on Air Force Two, the vice president personally prepared materials to be slipped to a Time magazine reporter who was on the story.

That level of involvement by the vice president in an effort to discredit a former ambassador of the United States who was participating legally and appropriately in a national debate about how the war in Iraq began begs the question: Will Cheney be held to account?

"This case doesn't end with Mr. Libby's conviction," says Congressman Maurice Hinchey, D-New York, the House's most consistent and aggressive critic of Cheney. "Testimony in the Libby trial made it even more clear that Vice President Cheney played a major role in the outing of Mrs. Wilson's identity. It is time to remove the cloud hanging over Vice President Cheney and the White House that Special Counsel (Patrick) Fitzgerald so aptly described in his closing remarks and expose all of the lies that led to the outing of Mrs. Wilson's identity."

Hinchey says that, "The question which has always needed to be addressed is why Mrs. Wilson's CIA position was revealed to the press. The answer is that the administration was attempting to undermine and weaken the credibility of her husband, Ambassador Joe Wilson, who publicly disclosed his findings that Iraq never sought uranium from Niger for a nuclear weapon. Ambassador Wilson publicly proved that the administration's case for war -- that Iraq had an active weapons of mass destruction program -- was false. He demonstrated that multiple senior administration officials, including President Bush himself, deliberately made false and misleading statements to win congressional approval and public support for an invasion of Iraq."

Hinchey's right. Fitzgerald, who says there is a cloud hanging over the office of the vice president, should pursue the matter of Cheney's wrongdoing. But so, too, should Congress, where House Oversight and Government Reform Committee chair Henry Waxman, D-California, is reportedly talking with House leaders about dusting off his 2005 proposal that issues related to the scandal should be the subject of congressional hearings. "It's ridiculous that Congress should stay out of all of this and not hold hearings," Waxman said at the time.

It is even more ridiculous to think that, with Libby now convicted, and with so much new evidence of Cheney's inappropriate activity now in the public domain, the House and Senate would fail to open hearings.

At issue is the most fundamental of all questions in a republic: Can a member of the executive branch of the federal government, perhaps the dominant member, deliberately deceive the legislative branch, then set out to use to punish Americans who expose those lies, and get away with it?

That is not just a legal question for prosecutor Fitzgerald, it is a Constitutional question for Congress.

John Nichols' new book is THE GENIUS OF IMPEACHMENT: The Founders' Cure for Royalism. Rolling Stone's Tim Dickinson hails it as a "nervy, acerbic, passionately argued history-cum-polemic [that] combines a rich examination of the parliamentary roots and past use of the 'heroic medicine' that is impeachment with a call for Democratic leaders to 'reclaim and reuse the most vital tool handed to us by the founders for the defense of our most basic liberties.'" © 2007 The Nation

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Comments (14)add comment

Ricardovitz said:

Libby will be vindicated. The moronic jurry which was comprised mainly of ignorant Democrats, wrongly convicted Mr. Libby of "obstruction of justice". Admittedly, the jurry had no idea what Mr. Libby was allegedly guilty of and never intended him to face jail time. Even knowledable die-hard democrat ACLU type lawyers agree that this farce of a case will be thrown out on appeal.

The Democrats wasted millions of dollars of tax payer money to prove what? That Libby forgot that he may have mentioned to somebody the name of a non-covert CIA opperative that was allready commonly known. That's what this guy was tried for - not outing a CIA opperative, but forgetting that he mentioned the lady's name to someone in passing.

That's the "evil" crime that Scooter Libby was convicted of.

Democrats are sooooo stupid, it's beyond belief! Just more evidence of de-evolution due to drug-guzzling hippy animals.
March 12, 2007

DOCTOR_BENWAY said:

Ricky, I think they are all asleep on this site. It is way past my bedtime, but I am just disposing of one of my clients. Your spelling is just as anarchic as ever I might add. But I digress. We all know by now Ricky, that politicians and most professionals in fact, are total scum and should be hunted down and exterminated. But then, I'm an old-fashioned, soft-hearted sort of guy...
March 12, 2007

Ricardovitz said:

this is why I call you "Mister" and not "Doctor". Like you said "...professionals in fact, are total scum and should be hunted down and exterminated. "

If'n so this is right, then surely you don't a want anyone hunting you down and making you dead pond scum. So, it's best that we professionals, like you and me Mr. Benway, stay under that radar.
March 12, 2007

Venting Wasabi said:

Mr Rick appears not simply "under the radar" but under the influence... of redneck-ism.
March 14, 2007

DOCTOR_BENWAY said:

Ricky my boy, I love you like a fond father would love an idiot son. I said, "politicians and MOST professionals" didn't I? Have you seen any signs of the Oz public hunting down the sneaky little c*nt who stole their guns? No, they are too retarded to discern who has been hurting them, so we are safe from them. I fear the globalist and federal party-poopers who interfere with pure science. I think you understand the points I made Ricky.
March 14, 2007

Ricardovitz said:

"'politicians and MOST professionals' didn't I?"

You still ain't maid it clear, Mr. Benway - are you or are you not most professional?

Anyway, I totally agree with you about your nanny-state government and it's titular pimple-head stealing all of your guns. And, I don't hear one Australian complaining about the fact that they cain't any longer own weapons. Y'all turned them in and now it don't make no nevermind what your government does, because all you can do now is complain about it on blogs like Xenox News.

Every time you give up a right, freedom or privilage to your governemnt, the one guaranty you will get in return from them is that YOU WILL NEVER GET IT BACK!!!

You all are slowly and willingly slipping into slavery.
March 14, 2007

DOCTOR_BENWAY said:

Thanks for your concern Ricky, I was NOT suggesting that I am one of the professionals who should be exterminated. Nobody is hunting down any professionals - not even the most evil ones. I'll be alright.
March 14, 2007

Aussie Austrich said:

Dear Ricky

Are you suggesting that us Aussies should march the streets in mass protest like they did in Washington in the 60s and 70s?

or perhaps some other sort of revolt?

More info please - otherwise you just come across as a whiney nyah nyah - and oy, I've already got a gun.

March 14, 2007

Ricardovitz said:

I'm suggesting:

1. that you get the NRA to take up your cause in Australia

2. That you start the equivilent of GOA (Gunowners Of America) - you can still call it GOA, since Australia and America both start with A's.

3. That you not elect ANYONE to office who is against the citizens of your country owning the firearms of their choice.

4. That anyone who owns a gun, HIDE IT, STASH IT, get as much ammo as you can stuff in large closet for it.

5. That you start a grass roots campaign to GET YOUR GUN RIGHTS BACK, and ultimately make these rights irrevocable somehow.

6. Join a gun club, just for the hell of it. Learn to shoot, and buy as many guns as you can afford, even with debt.

7. Hunt! And take your kids hunting too.

8. And, yes I would suggest that you Aussies march in mass protest - you won't get your freedoms back until you do.

When you all figure out that you really do need guns and ammo, it will already be way too late. It's really sad what is happening to your country. Demoralizing, actually.
March 14, 2007

Venting Wasabi said:

Here in Monstralia and there in the Mutated States of Dumerica polls consistently show most folks wqant to see the Malicious Dwarf and the Shrub flushed down the toilet bowl of history. Colonel Rick Sanders is whistling dixi in the dark.
March 14, 2007

LordyLordyLordy said:

I think we should all at least do #6 of Rick's solution for Oz. Any extra knowledge is good knowledge; especially for the trying days ahead.
March 14, 2007

DOCTOR_BENWAY said:

Ricky is (in his tortured way) appealing for the cleansing effect of an all-out global war. Looking at the dead-heads that now populate this planet, it has to be seriously considered. All options should be on the table! But I agree with Venting Wasabi that we should start culling from the top first.
March 14, 2007

Ricardovitz said:

that I have been tortured in some way. I also must ponder some more on whether culling from the top or from the bottom first really makes any difference at all. Culling from the top is so difficult and doesn't lend itself to any immediate gratification, does it Doctor?
March 15, 2007

DOCTOR_BENWAY said:

I meant no offense Ricky, but personal inner torment has been very fashionable since James Dean hit the screen, but I digress. I consider that culling from the top is the paradigm to follow, however if it proves too difficult we may as well start by exterminating footy-fans. I have conducted computer simulations of mass-slayings of crowds by projecting Billy Thorpe's "Poison Ivy" directly at the simulated bioforms. I got good results, but it needs to be tried out at a footy match with Billy's band the Aztecs supplying the audio. I'm kidding, of course. It would be more efficient to use military-surplus nerve-gas.
March 15, 2007

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