By David Holman on 11.22.05 @ 12:06AM
Coverage of the Vice President's speech yesterday was stunningly shoddy and dishonest.
Vice President Dick Cheney addressed prewar intelligence and the
debate surrounding it yesterday at the American Enterprise
Institute. Such a succinct and effective speech ought to warrant very little parsing. Yet
leave it to Washington reporters to mold a rather simple event to a
predetermined story line. In this case, they reported Cheney as
"lashing out" at critics and backing away from administration
attacks. Well, which is it? As it turns out, neither.
Unfortunately, some of the parsers need parsing. The
who-said-what debate surrounding Rep. Jack Murtha's comments and
the ensuing controversy has suffered from confusion and mangled
facts. The coverage of Cheney's AEI speech is no different. So let
us sort it out:
David Stout of the New York Times took his shots early and often. In his report,
he takes issue with Cheney objecting to criticisms that the
administration deceived the country. His third paragraph reports
that the Vice President welcomes debate on the issues. The fourth
paragraph tries to depict Cheney's arguments as contradicting this
sentiment:
But moments later, he described as "dishonest and
reprehensible" any suggestion that President Bush or anyone in his
administration had manipulated intelligence to exaggerate the
threat posed by Saddam Hussein.
"Moments later"? How dramatic! It's as if two Dick Cheneys spoke
at AEI yesterday: one who welcomes debate, and one who then
actually engages in it!
Stout not only adds drama to this mix, but he skews what Cheney
actually said. Stout's version of events sounds more like Downing
Street Memo language of "intelligence and facts being fixed around
the policy." However, Cheney said it's "dishonest and
reprehensible" to suggest the President and his administration
"purposely misled" the American public on prewar intelligence.
Stout drastically lowers Cheney's threshold for "dishonest and
reprehensible," and in so doing, falsely portrays Cheney's
standards for unacceptable discourse.
The AP's generic headline is amusing for its color if not its
veracity: "Cheney Lashes Out at Bush's Iraq Critics." UPI chimed
in, "Cheney takes swipe at Iraq critics." Such a
speech sounds violent -- and much more eventful than the one I
attended yesterday.
The most misleading aspect of reports of Cheney's speech is
their repetition of the conventional wisdom that the White House
smeared Jack Murtha after he advocated pulling out of Iraq. Mark
Kilmer detailed this faulty reporting at RedState, but
it bears repeating. In initial reports, and as still posted at the
San Francisco Chronicle, the Associated
Press summarized Cheney's AEI remarks thusly, "Cheney backed away
from earlier administration characterizations of Rep. John Murtha,
D-Pa., as a coward..."
Which administration official called Murtha a coward? Kilmer
points out that the only notable Republican -- not administration
-- official on record as using Murtha's name and "coward" in the
same sentence is Rep. Jean Schmidt (R-Ohio). And she was relating what a
Marine colonel said.
The administration's statement, by Press Secretary Scott McClellan,
was personally complimentary, but took issue with Murtha's
position:
Congressman Murtha is a respected veteran and
politician who has a record of supporting a strong America. So it
is baffling that he is endorsing the policy positions of Michael
Moore and the extreme liberal wing of the Democratic party. The eve
of an historic democratic election in Iraq is not the time to
surrender to the terrorists. After seeing his statement, we remain
baffled -- nowhere does he explain how retreating from Iraq makes
America safer.
The Associated Press later revised the Murtha-coward sentence of
its dispatch to
read, "But Cheney stopped short of joining those Republicans
who have questioned the patriotism of Rep. John Murtha, D-Pa.,
calling him 'a good man, a Marine, a patriot.'" Even this revision
is misleading. If anything Cheney affirmed the need for a healthy
debate on the beginning and ongoing conduct of the war. He was warm
and respectful, calling Murtha "a friend and former colleague."
Those are just a few articles covering 20 minutes out of the
Vice President's day. One can only imagine how much the press gets
wrong on this subject alone, on a daily basis, much less over the
entire Bush presidency. Don't believe everything you read in the
papers.
topics:
Iraq