“Yes, children, hypocritical congressional investigations and foreign kangaroo courts are really our friends,” Michael Gerson writes today in the Washington Post, describing the Democrats’ “Mr. Rogers approach” to assuaging the intelligence community during their all-out assault on CIA morale:
Gerson also notes the speed with which prominent Democrats have changed their tune on the importance and admirability of the intelligence community depending on the political winds. This was Pelosi just days before she was saying the CIA systematically lied to her over a period of eight years:
Pelosi said that on a trip to Iraq. Against the backdrop of the notorious “wrong war,” on the sliding scale of Democratic political calculation, intelligence gathering was positively fuzzy-sounding when compared to the alternative of military action. Back at home, however, where liberal Democrats are finding it uncomfortable to be in charge of an escalation in Afghanistan, acting responsibly in Iraq, and keeping terrorists locked up while their base agitates for just the opposite, the intelligence community gets the brunt of their attacks. In Democrat talking points parlance, the CIA is the Wall Street to the military’s Main Street. It’s easy to attack, accepted by most as necessary but maybe unsavory, and its successes are easily dismissed as it has not the ability (due to info being classified) or inclination to go on a p.r. blitz in its own defense, especially when attacks are coming from the president’s party. Interrogators are corporate CEOs while the troops are unassailable small businessmen, so the CEOs must face the wrath of CYA-ing Dems. As Gerson notes, military commanders are thankfully getting better treatment:
The CIA is not without faults or mistakes, just as the military is not without faults or mistakes, but the enthusiasm with which Democrats dismiss (and endanger) the intelligence community’s contributions to American security for political advantage is a shame. And, as if on cue…
Nevermind that in this instance, Leon Panetta asserts that “Our contemporaneous records from September 2002 indicate that CIA officers briefed truthfully on the interrogation of Abu Zubaida, describing ‘the enhanced techniques that had been employed.'”
