Only in Washington.
Last night I was at the Radio and Television Correspondents'
Association Dinner. It's a formal-and-fun affair where
thousands of media folks assemble at the Hilton for a fancy
dinner and fab pre- and post-parties. I'm not going to
denigrate such soirees. I enjoy them. While bookers and
producers jiggled and jostled on the dance floor and media
and political celebs dissected the news du jour (this time it
was Richard Clarke's dramatic appearance before the 9/11
commission), I was able to chat with former weapons hunter
David Kay and learn about some troubling developments in
the intelligence community (more on that down the road).
And there was free sushi.
But an awful you're-all-alone moment came during George
W. Bush's comments that followed the sit-down dinner. The
current president is often the honored guest at this annual
affair, and the audience toasts him in what is supposed to be
a sign of communal and nonpartisan spirit. And, the tradition
is, that the president has to be funny; he has to provide us
with an amusing speech that pokes fun at himself and his
political foes. After all, political journalists love to see
politicians engage in self-deprecating humor. Bill Clinton
was quite good at these performances. Bush seems to enjoy
them less. Rather than do straight standup, he sometimes
relies on a humorous slide show, and that was how he
chose to entertain the media throng this time.
It's standard fare humor. Bush says he is preparing for a
tough election fight; then on the large video screens a picture
flashes showing him wearing a boxing robe while sitting at
his desk. Bush notes he spends "a lot of time on the phone
listening to our European allies." Then we see a photo of him
on the phone with a finger in his ear. There were funny bits
about Skull and Bones, his mother, and Dick Cheney. But at
one point, Bush showed a photo of himself looking for
something out a window in the Oval Office, and he said,
"Those weapons of mass destruction have got to be
somewhere."
The audience laughed. I grimaced. But that wasn't the end of
it. After a few more slides, there was a shot of Bush looking
under furniture in the Oval Office. "Nope," he said. "No
weapons over there." More laughter. Then another picture of
Bush searching in his office: "Maybe under here." Laughter
again.
Disapproval must have registered upon my face, for one of
my tablemates said, "Come on, David, this is funny." I wanted
to reply, Over 500 Americans and literally countless Iraqis
are dead because of a war that was supposedly fought to
find weapons of mass destruction, and Bush is joking about
it. Instead, I took a long drink of the lovely white wine that
had come with our dinner. It's not as if I was in the middle of
a talk-show debate and had to respond. This was
certainly one of those occasions in which you either get it or
don't. And I wasn't getting it. Or maybe my neighbor wasn't.
At the end of the slide show, Bush displayed two pictures of
himself with troops and noted these were his favorites. The
final photograph was a shot of special forces soldiers--with
their faces blurred to protect their identities--who were
posing in Afghanistan where they had buried a piece of 9/11
debris in a spot that had once been an al Qaeda camp. Bush
spoke about the prayer the commander had said during the
burial ceremony and noted he had this photograph hanging
in his private study.
So what's wrong with this picture? Bush was somber about
the sacrifice being made by U.S. troops overseas. But he
obviously considered it fine to make fun of the reason he
cited for sending Americans to war and to death. What an act
of audacious spin. One poll recently showed that most
Americans believe he either lied about Iraq's WMDs or
deliberately exaggerated the case to justify the war. And it is
undeniable that in seeking public support for the war he
made many false assertions that went beyond quoting
intelligence that turned out to be wrong. (I've written about
this in many other places. If you still don't believe Bush
mugged the truth, check out this short
guide.) As the crowd was digesting the delicious
surf-and-turf meal, Bush was transforming serious scandal
into rim-shot comedy.
Few seemed to mind. His WMD gags did not prompt a
how-can-you silence from the gathering. At the after-parties, I
heard no complaints. Was I being too sensitive? I wondered
what the spouse, child or parent of a soldier killed in Iraq
would have felt if they had been watching C-SPAN and saw
the commander-in-chief mocking the supposed justification
for the war that claimed their loved ones. Bush told the nation
that lives had to be sacrificed because Saddam Hussein
possessed weapons of mass destruction that could be used
(by terrorists) against the United States. That was not true.
(And as Kay pointed out, the evidence so far shows these
weapons were not there in the first place, not that they were
hidden, destroyed or spirited away.) But rather than
acknowledge he misinformed the public, Bush jokes about
the absence of such weapons.
Even if Bush does not believe he lied to or misled the public,
how can he make fun of the rationale for a war that has killed
and maimed thousands? Imagine if Lyndon Johnson had
joked about the trumped-up Gulf of Tonkin incident that he
deceitfully used as a rationale for U.S. military action in
Vietnam: "Who knew that fish had torpedoes?" Or if Ronald
Reagan appeared at a correspondents event following the
truck-bombing at the Marines barracks in Beirut--which killed
over 200 American servicemen--and said, "Guess we forgot
to put in a stop light." Or if Clinton had come out after the
bombing of Serbia--during which U.S. bombs errantly
destroyed the Chinese embassy and killed several people
there--and said, "The problem is, those embassies--they all
look alike."
Yet there was Bush--apparently having a laugh at his own
expense, but actually doing so on the graves of thousands.
This was a callous and arrogant display. For Bush, the
misinformation--or disinformation--he peddled before the
war was no more than material for yucks. As the audience
laughed along, he smiled. The false statements (or lies) that
had launched a war had become merely another punchline
in the nation's capital.
DON'T FORGET ABOUT DAVID CORN'S BOOK, The Lies of George W. Bush:
Mastering the Politics of Deception (Crown
Publishers). A NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER!
The Library Journal says, "Corn chronicles to devastating
effect the lies, falsehoods, and misrepresentations....Corn
has painstakingly unearthed a bill of particulars against the
president that is as damaging as it is thorough." For more
information and a sample, check out the book's official
website: www.bushlies.com.
Copyright © 2004 The Nation
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