Smasharoo wrote:
Lay off the crack. The correct answer to the question was and is "There is no evidence at this time to indicate Iraq was involved in 911. At all, period. If we uncover such evidence we'll let the public know at that time"
Um... They tried that Smash. The media wouldn't let the idea go.
Heck. From your own quote:
VICE PRES. CHENEY wrote:
We don't know. You and I talked about this two years ago. I can remember you asking me this question just a few days after the original attack. At the time I said no, we didn't have any evidence of that. Subsequent to that, we've learned a couple of things. We learned more and more that there was a relationship between Iraq and al-Qaeda that stretched back through most of the decade of the '90s, that it involved training, for example, on BW and CW, that al-Qaeda sent personnel to Baghdad to get trained on the systems that are involved. The Iraqis providing bomb-making expertise and advice to the al-Qaeda organization.
Now. Let's review the timeline:
1. 9/11 attacks occur
2. Media asks if Iraq is connected to the attacks.
3. Administration says that "there's no evidence of a connection"
4. 2 years later, polls show many people believe there is a connection, even though the administration said *exactly* what you say they should have said.
5. At that time, the media again asks about this connection. Presumably, they know about the meetings between Iraqi officials and senior Al-queda members. Cheney can't exactly deny those happened can he? He has to acknowledge those meetings and mention them.
Riddle me this batman: If the administration started out saying there was no evidence of a connection, yet two years later "the people" believe that there is, where did they get that idea?
It can't be from this interview because the polls were done *before* this. As far as we can tell, the last "official" comment on this was exactlywhat you say they should have said: "There is no evidence of a connection between Iraq and the 9/11 attacks".
Find me something the administration did between their first statement and the polls that would make people believe what the polls showed, and you might have a case. If you can't, then your accusation is pure speculation at best.
It's not about being an applogist Smash. I'm not trying to coverup or lessen some wrongdoing by the administration. I happen to thing that (in your own worlds) there is no evidence that the administration made any statements about a possible Iraq-9/11 link that could be responsible for the public believe that one did, in fact, exist.
Lots of people believe in UFOs smash. Should I conclude from the fact that the VP of the US doesn't go on TV and debunk the idea as a confirmation that space aliens are abducting people? You're making the same argument here. You're saying that because people believed something *despite* the government saying there was no evidence of it that the government is somehow complicit in that belief.
I'm sorry. It's not the government's job to tell me what to think and believe. I'm actually quite glad of this. They *shouldn't* be telling me such things. They should just give me the facts (which they did) and let me come to my own conclusions (which they did). The fact that many people came to the wrong connclusion is not the governments fault. In fact, it *should not* be their fault. If we make it their fault, then we set a dangerous precident about what power the government should have over the information people recieve. Should they have debunked every op-ed piece that argued a connection? Isn't that censorship of a sorts? The people are "free" to be decieved by the press. That's one of the strengths of our system. It is most certainly *not* the responsibility of the government to prevent me from making an incorrect decision about something.