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Stories

 
BODY COUNTS

Remembering Tim Russert

By Ward Harkavy, Friday, Jun. 13 2008 @ 6:19PM
Comments (10)
Categories: Cheney, DOWNING STREET MEMO, EXCUSES (FOR WAR), REPORTERS (NON-EMBEDDED), SOLDIERS (KILLED), Vietraq

. . . as one who at a crucial time in '02 lobbed softballs to Dick Cheney.

It's tragic that Tim Russert unexpectedly died, leaving behind family and friends who loved him.

That said, let's try to keep this in perspective — and not the perspective offered up this afternoon by the Washington Post, which called him "the Democratic operative turned NBC commentator who revolutionized Sunday morning television and infused journalism with his passion for politics."

He did not revolutionize anything. He was a news reader, a media celebrity, not a soldier dying in a futile war.

As our body count in Iraq keeps right on climbing, I'll recall Russert's classic '02 interview of Dick Cheney on Meet the Press as a true exemplar of recent American journalism.

I don't mean that in a nice way.

The exact date was September 8, 2002, as Cheney and his frontman, George W. Bush, were lobbying Americans and members of Congress on the urgent necessity of invading Iraq. This was before the key Senate vote.

We now know they were lying, but many of us were thinking that back in '02. Drowning out the dissenters were most of the U.S. media outlets — not all, but most.

And media celebs such as Russert were playing their roles as wing men for schnooks such as Cheney.

In June 2005, I parsed Russert's '02 interview with Cheney in an item called "Shuck and Awe." So I'm just going to plagiarize myself and re-run that item here. See for yourself:

Shuck and Awe

Originally posted June 6, 2005

Before the "shock and awe" of March '03, there was shuck and jive. But the Downing Street Memo and other British government documents revealing Blair-Bush skullduggery in 2002 are not old news.

In fact, the recently released documents offer fresh clues not only about (1) the contempt the Bush and Blair regimes had for the intelligence of the American public and press but also about (2) why the occupation of Iraq has turned into such a horror show.

On March 14, 2002, Tony Blair's foreign policy adviser, David Manning, reported to his boss after meetings with Condi Rice and a National Security Council "team" in D.C., according to a memo leaked three years later:

We spent a long time at dinner on IRAQ. It is clear that Bush is grateful for your support and has registered that you are getting flak. I said that you would not budge in your support for regime change but you had to manage a press, a Parliament and a public opinion that was very different than anything in the States.

What do you suppose he meant by "different"? Well, the U.S. press, for one thing, is much more easily gulled—in general, that is.

Only three days before Manning sent that memo to Blair, Dick Cheney (on his way to the Middle East) was in Great Britain meeting with the prime minister. The two regimes' CEOs stood still for a press conference in London, where the reporters aren't afraid to ask tough questions, and the Bush regime can't put on its own dog-and-pony show. Here's an example from the March 11, 2002, press conference, courtesy of a White House transcript:

QUESTION: Mr. Vice President, if the inspectors are allowed into Iraq, will that negate the need to take military action against Baghdad? If you do have to take military action against Baghdad, what will be the legal basis of that action? And if you can't build a coalition that many support, will [you] go ahead anyway?

Cheney's reply? This is how he started it:

They do the same thing here they do in the States, that's ask these long complex questions.

russert-meet-the-press-135.jpgYeah, that was really complex. But I guess compared with the "grilling" he gets from people like Tim Russert (left), it's complex. On September 8, 2002, Russert hosted Cheney on Meet the Press and played slow-pitch with him—open-ended questions, perfect for spinning. Here's one:

RUSSERT: Let me turn to the issue of Iraq. You have said that it poses a mortal threat to the United States. How? Define mortal threat.

Yes, ask the vice president to define a buzz phrase that he and his handlers have spent a lot of time honing. Here's another softball:

RUSSERT: There seems to be a real debate in the country as to [Saddam's] capability. This is how the New York Times reported comments by Senator Chuck Hagel, a Republican, who said, “The Central Intelligence Agency had 'absolutely no evidence' that Iraq possesses or will soon possess nuclear weapons.” Is that accurate?

Gee, what do you think Cheney will say when you let him off the hook with a stupid-ass "Is that accurate?" appended to an otherwise-promising line of questioning? Here's how Cheney belted that blooper pitch:

CHENEY: I disagree. I think the accurate thing to say is we don't know when he might actually complete that process. All of the experience we have points in the direction that, in the past, we've underestimated the extent of his program.

Keep in mind, now, that Cheney was making up this shit. The Bush and Blair regimes were "fixing" the intelligence, as the Downing Street Memo, revealed three years too late, put it.

A little later in the Russert interview, Cheney said:

We know we have a part of the picture. And that part of the picture tells us that [Saddam] is, in fact, actively and aggressively seeking to acquire nuclear weapons.

Which provoked this question:

RUSSERT: Why haven't our allies, who presumably would know the same information, come to the same conclusion?

Big problem with this question, Tim. You're asking a question that Cheney cannot answer. He can't speak for others' actions. Instead of pinning him down, you're leaving him room to roam.

Russert could have asked this instead: "Our allies haven't come to that conclusion, and they would have no reason to cover for Saddam. You say 'we know.' Give me a specific example of what 'we know,' and how that is at odds with what our allies' intelligence tells them."

But Russert didn't ask that. Instead, he asked Cheney why our allies hadn't "come to the same conclusion." How in the world could Cheney know "why"? (Except for the fact that he and Blair were making up shit and the allies weren't—but he couldn't very well admit that.) This one was easy for Cheney to hit out of the park:

CHENEY: I don't think they know the same information. I think the fact is that, in terms of the quality of our intelligence operation, I think we're better than anybody else, generally, in this area.

Oh, so our intelligence was good, eh?

Cheney was just giving himself a pat on the back, because the Bush regime was making it up as it went along, so it could justify an unjustified invasion of Iraq.

So, do you see a difference in the kinds of questions British and American politicians have to face? Democracy is more raucous in Great Britain, and the press—with exceptions—is more docile in America.

Now for the other part of the equation: the disastrous occupation that has followed the unjustified invasion. Go directly to the Downing Street memo itself for that. The memo from Matthew Rycroft to Manning of Manning's meeting with Blair on July 23, 2002, summarized MI6 chief Richard Dearlove's recent visit to D.C. (Dearlove is referred to as "C.") Here's a passage from the memo:

C reported on his recent talks in Washington. There was a perceptible shift in attitude. Military action was now seen as inevitable. Bush wanted to remove Saddam, through military action, justified by the conjunction of terrorism and WMD. But the intelligence and facts were being fixed around the policy. The NSC had no patience with the UN route, and no enthusiasm for publishing material on the Iraqi regime's record. There was little discussion in Washington of the aftermath after military action.

"Little discussion" of the "aftermath," huh? We'd better make sure there's plenty of discussion about that.

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Related Content

  • Morning Report 6/6/05
    Shuck and Awe June 6, 2005
  • Morning Report 6/13/05
    Pre-War Plot: 'Time Will Be Required to Prepare Public Opinion' June 13, 2005
  • Morning Report 5/28/05
    Downing Street Memo: Coverup Then, Coverup Now May 28, 2005
  • Hard to Swallow June 5, 2005
  • Morning Report 6/15/05
    The Elephant in the Downing Street Living Room June 15, 2005

More About:

  • Tim Russert
  • Dick Cheney
  • George W. Bush
  • World Politics
  • Politics

Comments (10)

Eileen says:

Thanks for not romanticizing Russert.

Posted On: Friday, Jun. 13 2008 @ 7:11PM
Tim Mocarski says:

You were wrong in your assessment of the Cheney interview. You were wrong then and even more wrong now. "Don't speak ill of the dead." Didn't your parents teach you that time-honored phrase? You should be ashamed of yourself this time.

Posted On: Friday, Jun. 13 2008 @ 8:32PM
Beth says:

If Tim Russert had done his job there would, no doubt, be many fewer dead American service people, Iraqi civilians, residents of New Orleans and others whose deaths were caused, or increased in number, by Bush Cheney and the media enablers who gave them a pass time and again. Any journalist who enabled them deserves criticism regardless of whether they are dead or alive.
Didn't your parents teach you critical thinking? You should be ashamed of yourself.

Posted On: Friday, Jun. 13 2008 @ 10:30PM
Anonymous says:

who the hell are you again?

Posted On: Friday, Jun. 13 2008 @ 10:40PM
sakara says:

no one, besides his friends and family, is gonna miss him.

Posted On: Friday, Jun. 13 2008 @ 10:50PM
Michael D. Fein says:

Ward, you make some very salient points. I get a little nuts when I hear people espouse the edict "you must never speak ill of the dead." What a crock of shit! If a person sucked while they lived, they suck when their dead as well. Death does not endow a being with an entirely new light. They are in death what they were in life.

Now all that being said, I had many disagreements with Mr. Russert, however, in general, I found him to be relatively fair to all sides on the issues. As far as the lead-up to the Iraq war is concerned, sadly, Tim fell in line with the vast majority of the country including the media. Yes, he, as well as all the others, had the obligation to search for the truth rather than buy the company line. But to disparage his entire career over this, granted very important and critical event, is not really fair.

Tim was a well respected journalist. He was also a major media force. When he was at his best, no one could beat him, but consequently, when he failed, he did so with a bang.

All in all, I shall miss Tim Russert.

Posted On: Saturday, Jun. 14 2008 @ 6:51PM
TomSongs says:

IMPEACH for Tim. Wherever he is now, he knows the truth.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xT6Zhx0q8xs

Posted On: Saturday, Jun. 14 2008 @ 9:07PM
KimLnyc says:

No one person could have prevented the A-holes in the WH from starting this illegal war in Iraq. So don't blame Russert for not doing his best in this instance.

He was a great political journalist and those who loved him will miss his insightful questions and comments.

He will not be easily replaced.

Posted On: Sunday, Jun. 15 2008 @ 1:39PM
Raster says:

When cheney*/bush* wanted to sell lies to America, they ALWAYS came to Russert first!

Posted On: Sunday, Jun. 15 2008 @ 6:31PM
Matt says:

You are not lying if you believe what you are saying to be true at the time. There was no lying, there was bad intelligence, but then again, it works to your arguement to claim Cheney and Bush were lying.

Typcal Liberal Douche!

Posted On: Tuesday, Jun. 24 2008 @ 10:37PM

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