CHICAGO__

SUN-TIMES

__AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 2007
CHICAGO SUN-TIMES

 COMMENTARY | 35


True or false:Can Bush tell difference?







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ANDREW GREELEY

"Is President Bush able to dis
        tinguish truth from falsehood?
        Is he too caught up in the dou-
ble-talk generated by his spin
masters to grasp the difference?
After reading his talk to the VFW
last week, I think that at this stage
of his presidency he is utterly in-
capable of honest communication
with the rest of the country.
    Objectively, his claim that the
United States can win in Iraq, his
comment that the Iraqi prime
minister is a good guy and his his-
tory of the Vietnam War go far be-
yond the boundaries of truth.
Granted, the speech was ground
out by one of the spin masters
(perhaps trained in dishonesty by
Karl Rove), the president ulti-
mately is responsible for it. It fol-
lows logically from all the false-
hoods going back to weapons of
mass destruction. It is contra-
dicted by the intelligence estimate
released the same day by the dir-
ector of National Intelligence.
The killing continues, the Iraq
government is not improving, the
war continues.
    And, one would add, Americans
continue to die.
    Why does the president con-
tinue to deny the obvious, even
when his own intelligence agency
affirms it? Because some conser-
vatives insist the United States
could have won the Vietnam War
if it hadn't ''lost its nerve''? There
is no serious support for this folk-
lore. The only similarity is both
wars were foolish wars for which
there was no good reason, the
United States was doomed to
defeat from the beginning, and
if someone had not pulled the
plug, we'd still be fighting in
Vietnam, just as we are still fight-
ing -- perhaps forever -- in Iraq.
    The Iraq Study Group gave the
president a way out. He didn't
take it because he wanted victory.
He can't have victory. But he is
not quitting during his adminis-
tration, no matter how many
more senseless deaths occur. His
VFW speech is part of a campaign
to elect a president who will con-
tinue the war. Whether Bush is
deliberately deceiving his poten-
tial supporters or whether he no
longer knows truth from false-
hood because of his personality
traits must remain a question
only God can answer.
    However, it is not wrong to
question his credibility -- and the
suffering it causes to the families
of those who die because of his
stubborn insistence on ''staying
the course'' until a democratic
Iraq becomes a reality. Must we
not say, Mr. President, you have
spoken so often against the truth,
that we no longer believe anything
you say.
    Some writers tell me I am
driven by hatred of the president,
and as a priest I ought not to hate
anyone. (These are people who
generally did not think it was
wrong to hate President Clinton
or President Kennedy). I don't
hate the president, but I hate this
stupid, unjust and evil war. To be
a priest and not condemn evil
would be sinful.
    The war will end only when it
ends, when someone in power
says, "already, all right, enough,"
and announces that the war is
over. Lyndon Johnson tried to do
that when he withdrew from the
1968 election. The Iraq Study
Group tried to do the same thing.
Johnson's plan was frustrated
when Richard M. Nixon won the
election and continued the war for
six more years (during which time
more people died than had in the
previous six years). The Iraq
Study Group, basically conserva-
tive men, ran afoul of the presi-
dent's stubbornness and the
reluctant loyalty of his congress-
ional allies.
    The long-awaited reports of
Gen. David Petraeus and Ambas-
sador Ryan Crocker will provide
another escape hatch. They will
have to report in some way the
Iraq government is not able to end
the raging civil war. Does anyone
want to bet the president will say,
''Then, let's get out of there''?