Los Angeles Times's
Tim Rutten is at
it again. In
an op-ed in today's paper (Wed. 8/6/08), Rutten buttresses a new
book by author Ron Suskind and asserts that "Vice President Dick Cheney
and his inner circle long have insisted" that Iraq was directly
connected to the September 11 attacks.
Rutten's claim is an easy one to debunk. Here's Vice President Cheney
in
a Meet the Press interview with Tim Russert a mere five days
after the September 11 attacks:
RUSSERT: Do we have any evidence linking Saddam Hussein or Iraqis
to this operation? [Sept. 11 attacks]
VICE PRES. CHENEY: No.
Does it get any simpler than "No"?
Cheney's words also strike a major blow to a wild accusation in
Suskind's new book.
According to Politico's Mike Allen (and quoted by Rutten), Suskind
claims, "The White House had concocted a fake letter [that] said that
9/11 ringleader [Mohamed] Atta had actually trained for his mission
in Iraq -- thus showing, finally, that there was an operational link
between Saddam and Al Qaeda, something the vice president's office
had been pressing CIA to prove since 9/11 as a justification to invade
Iraq."
There's a lot more that can be written about the media's false
claims about Vice President Cheney's public remarks before the Iraq War.
I addressed this in a
September 2006 post. NB's Brad Wilmouth also addressed this same
issue in a November 2005 post.