Donald Rumsfeld Won’t Accept Responsibility For Iraq

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Donald Rumsfeld

Former US Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, during an interview on The Late Show with Stephen Colbert, refused to accept US responsibility for creating the so called Islamic State.

Rumsfeld told Stephen Colbert that the instability in the Middle East is due to a Shia-Sunni conflict and not the interference of the Bush administration in Iraq. Stephen Colbert accuses the former Defense Secretary of deliberately not revealing “unknown knowns” that could have stopped the advent of war in Iraq and the subsequent rise of Daesh.

Sputnik reports:

On Monday evening’s episode of The Late Show, host Colbert asked Rumsfeld whether the rise of Daesh was predicted during the planning of the Iraq war, as either a “worst-case scenario, or a beyond-worse-case scenario.”

The Late Show with Stephen Colbert YouTube video:

​Rumsfeld paused for a moment and answered, “I think the disorder in the entire region and the conflict between the Sunnis and the Shia is something that generally people had not anticipated.”

“On the other hand, if you think what Eisenhower said, he said ‘The plan is nothing, planning is everything.’ The point being that anything changes with first contact with a problem,” he offered.

Experts on the subject, including the Kofi Annan Foundation, strongly disagree, and blame the instability in Iraq and the rise of Daesh on the 2003 Iraq invasion and US policies following the war, such as the abuses at Abu Ghraib.

Colbert reminded Rumsfeld that the latter was aware that the information on whether Iraq actually possessed weapons of mass destruction before the invasion was unreliable, but that he did not share that particular revelation with other members of the Bush administration.

The television host asked the former government appointee point blank: “Were there things that the administration, or you, knew that we didn’t learn about out of the best possible intentions — which is, there were things that would undermine the case for a war you thought was necessary to save the United States?”

Rumsfeld never batted an eye, declaring: “The president had available to him intelligence from all elements of the government, and the National Security Council members had that information. It was all shared, it was all supplied, and it’s never certain — if it were a fact, it wouldn’t be called intelligence.”

“Wow,” Colbert said, “I think you answered my question.”

 

Edmondo Burr
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