Democratic Senator Jay Rockefeller’s Vanishing Credibility on Iraq

The invaluable Tom Maguire has an interesting post deconstructing Jay Rockefeller’s October 9, 2002, speech explaining why he voted to authorize the Iraq War. Rockefeller is now – and was then – the Vice Chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee. Here’s another take on Rockefeller’s speech. Rockefeller has lately taken to claiming that Iraq “had nothing to do with Osama bin Laden, it had nothing to do with al-Qaida.” We won’t dwell here on the fact that evidence points rather conclusively in the opposite direction. Two points: Rockefeller in his 2002 speech warned that:

Saddam’s government has contact with many international terrorist organizations that likely have cells here in the United States.

And:

He could make those weapons [WMD] available to many terrorist groups which have contact with his government, and those groups could bring those weapons into the U.S. and unleash a devastating attack against our citizens. I fear that greatly.

I called Rockefeller’s office this summer and asked which terrorist groups the West Virginia Democrat was talking about. Wendy Morigi, Rockefeller’s communications director, responded.

He was talking about the Palestinian groups that had established relationships with Saddam,” she said. “Abu Nidal was living in Baghdad before the war.

Perhaps. But one week before his floor speech, Rockefeller suggested something quite different in an interview with the Charleston Gazette. He said: “If you go pre-emptive, do you cause Hussein to strike where he might not have? He is not a martyr, not a Wahabbi, not a Muslim radical. He does not seek martyrdom. But he is getting older,” Rockefeller told the paper. “Maybe he is seeking a legacy by attacking Israel or using al-Qaeda cells around the world.” [Emphasis added.] One month before the war began, Senator Rockefeller spoke of a “substantial connection between Saddam and al Qaeda.” In some interviews Rockefeller did say that he hadn’t seen evidence of close ties between Iraq and al Qaeda. But asked about an Iraq-al Qaeda relationship by CNN’s Wolf Blitzer on February 5, 2003, Rockefeller agreed with Republican Senator Pat Roberts that Abu Musab al Zarqawi’s presence in Iraq before the war and his links to a poison camp in northern Iraq were troubling. Rockefeller continued:

The fact that Zarqawi certainly is related to the death of the U.S. aid officer and that he is very close to bin Laden puts at rest, in fairly dramatic terms, that there is at least a substantial connection between Saddam and al Qaeda.”

One final note. The resolution that Rockefeller supported specifically mentioned the presence of al Qaeda fighters in Iraq:

Members of al Qaeda, an organization bearing responsibility for attacks that occurred on September 11, are known to be in Iraq.

Remind me, who isn’t being straight with the American public about the Iraq War?

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