Ok Keith I looked at the Fox News (Bush News Network) link and I appreciated the PBS link although you need to read the entire piece but here's an except you didn't post.
Mistake of the GOP to attack Clarke's credibility?
RAY SUAREZ: You opened in by calling it a mistake to go after Clarke on the part of the administration. If it's a mistake, the rest of the GOP isn't necessarily hearing it. Senate Majority Leader, Mr. Frist, is now asking for permission to declassify testimony given by Richard Clarke when he was the counterterrorism adviser in order to compare what he told the commission this week and what he told Congress two years ago. Earlier in the day before Frist made his call, Minority Leader Tom Daschle said, well, if he lied, try him for perjury, sort of calling Frist out almost. So it looks like it's not over.
DAVID BROOKS: I think politically it was a mistake for the administration. I don't think it is a mistake to talk about Richard Clarke's credibility. That's very much at issue. Many people who have seen worn testimony by him, John Lehman, Christopher Shays, Bill Frist, have all said there is incredible contradictions between the sworn testimony in private and what he has given in his book.
We've seen it in the press. Just one example. He gave a background briefing in August 2002 where he swore -- he talked about the great glories of the Bush anti-terror policy before 9/11. He told specific facts about what Bush had done. They had made a decision to quintuple the CIA budget for al-Qaida, a whole series of points that he gave on the background to reporters, we have the transcript of that report. If what he said in that background briefing is true, then everything in the book is false. If the book is true, he was lying to those reporters. At some point, he was lying.
RAY SUAREZ: He dealt with that, Mark, didn't he, during his testimony?
MARK SHIELDS: I think his explanation is perhaps more understandable in Washington than it is outside of Washington. I mean that, well, staff people at the White House always do, for every president, put the best spin on it they can. Whoever the president's latest economic adviser goes out and says well, the economy is really growing, boy, corporate profits are up, the fact that we haven't produced any jobs, we just don't mention. That's what he says he was doing. I think there are discrepancies, I would say maybe inconsistencies and contradictions. That's fine. That's fine.
What the administration decided to do was to go good cop-bad cop on him. We had Colin Powell being very responsible, George Tenet, even Donald Rumsfeld in their public testimony. Behind that, were the bad cops: **** Cheney, saying he is out of the loop. And they got so bad -- and Condi Rice -- that they started contradicting each other and stepping on their story. As they criticized him, they got a blowback on themselves. Condi Rice, for example, said that we had a plan, military operation plan for the Taliban in Afghanistan in place before 9/11. **** Armitage, the deputy secretary of State, says that's not true. **** Cheney, the vice president says he was out of the loop. She says no, he wasn't out of the loop.
end quote
Now here's Clake's Testimony from 911 Commission:
TRANSCRIPT:
JAMES THOMPSON, COMMISSION MEMBER: In August of 2002, you intended to mislead the press, did you not?
RICHARD CLARKE: No. I think there is a very fine line that anyone who's been in the White House, in any administration, can tell you about. And that is when you are special assistant to the president and you're asked to explain something that is potentially embarrassing to the administration, because the administration didn't do enough or didn't do it in a timely manner and is taking political heat for it, as was the case there, you have a choice. Actually, I think you have three choices. You can resign rather than do it. I chose not to do that. Second choice is...
THOMPSON: Why was that, Mr. Clarke? You finally resigned because you were frustrated.
CLARKE: I was, at that time, at the request of the president, preparing a national strategy to defend America's cyberspace, something which I thought then and think now is vitally important. I thought that completing that strategy was a lot more important than whether or not I had to provide emphasis in one place or other while discussing the facts on this particular news story.
The second choice one has, Governor, is whether or not to say things that are untruthful. And no one in the Bush White House asked me to say things that were untruthful, and I would not have said them.
In any event, the third choice that one has is to put the best face you can for the administration on the facts as they were, and that is what I did.
I think that is what most people in the White House in any administration do when they're asked to explain something that is embarrassing to the administration.
THOMPSON: But you will admit that what you said in August of 2002 is inconsistent with what you say in your book?
CLARKE: No, I don't think it's inconsistent at all. I think, as I said in your last round of questioning, Governor, that it's really a matter here of emphasis and tone. I mean, what you're suggesting, perhaps, is that as special assistant to the president of the United States when asked to give a press backgrounder I should spend my time in that press backgrounder criticizing him. I think that's somewhat of an unrealistic thing to expect.
THOMPSON: Well, what it suggests to me is that there is one standard of candor and morality for White House special assistants and another standard of candor and morality for the rest of America. I don't get that.
CLARKE: I don't think it's a question of morality at all. I think it's a question of politics.
end quote
Now here's a link to a real comment about the Bush Regime and Clark's briefing.
http://www.miami.com/mld/miamiherald/news/columnists/edward_wasserman/8356592.htm?1c
Now here's also what Clark says, think the Bush (Secrecy is Everything) Regime will be forthcoming?
http://www.cnn.com/2004/ALLPOLITICS/03/28/clarke/
Clarke wants all testimony, records declassified
Ex-counterterrorism aide: 'Not just a little line here and there'