Former ambassador urges regime change in the U.S.
- Share via
Barbara Diamond
Former Ambassador and Bush Administration critic Joe Wilson was
seemingly preaching to the choir Saturday in City Hall. Not one
dissenting voice was heard.
Outside, two veterans hoisted banners urging support for the
nation’s troops and God’s blessing for the president.
Wilson welcomed their presence.
“That is what democracy is all about: open debate,” Wilson said.
And open debate is what he claims was missing before the United
States went to war in Iraq. That is why he supports a regime change
by ballot box in November, although he opposed a regime change in
Iraq by armed force.
“There is no more solemn decision that any government makes than
to send its sons and daughters to kill and to die,” Wilson said. “I
agree that we should support our troops. But we should have a solemn
debate before we put 135,000 people in what is now the killing fields
of Iraq.”
The decision to make war on Saddam Hussein was a mistake that has
forever tarnished the image of the United States, according to
Wilson, and will breed generations of terrorists and perhaps a
billion supporters where before the Iraq War there were perhaps 10
million.
To justify the war, the government had to foster the belief that
Saddam had the bomb and would use it against Americans and secondly
to lump Saddam with Osama bin Laden -- although the two had no ties,
Wilson said.
“Everyone knew the last thing Saddam would do is turn over weapons
of mass destruction to a group over whom he had no control, who might
use the weapons for their purposes, even if they were not consistent
with his purposes,” Wilson said.
Wilson contended Saturday that the war was waged without
international support, with no public understanding of what the
country was getting into and no political accountability for what got
us there, what we would do once we were there or for actions during
the occupation that have become an international scandal.
He faults the Bush Administration, not the Republican Party.
“If you believe in fiscal responsibility, this is not your
Republican Party,” Wilson said. “If you believe the government
doesn’t have a role to play in your bedroom, this isn’t your
Republican Party.”
The whole world was with us on 911, Wilson said. We were the
victims and the world understood America’s goal to eradicate
terrorists who were given safe haven in Afghanistan. All that
goodwill has been squandered, Wilson said.
Wilson was the last American official to meet with the Iraqi
leader before the launching of Desert Storm and, as acting
Ambassador, he negotiated the release of American hostages.
He served as political advisor to the Commander-in-Chief of the U.
S. armed forces in Europe from 1995 to 1997 and as Special Assistant
to the President and senior director for African Affairs to the
National Security Council from June 1997 to July 1998.
The Bush administration sent Wilson to Niger to investigate the
accusation that Saddam Hussein was trying to buy nuclear materials to
construct weapons of mass destruction. Wilson said he determined it
was untrue and reported that in February 2002 to Vice President Dick
Cheney.
“A year later, [the discredited information] showed up in the
State of the Union message,” Wilson said.
Information attributed to British intelligence that Saddam was in
the market to rebuild his nuclear weapons program became known as
“The 16 Words,” although the CIA, as well as Wilson had advised it
was not true.
“This was not a simple mistake,” Wilson said. “It was cleverly
calculated to deceive the Congress of the United States, the American
people and the people around the world. It formed the basis of the
case that Saddam was a threat to the United States.
“It took me about 20 seconds to decide to call on my government to
correct the statement.”
He got no place fast until July 6 when an article he wrote titled
“What I Did Not Find in Africa” was printed in the New York Times.
“The next day the White House admitted, it,” Wilson said. “Four
days later the name of my wife was leaked.”
His wife, mother of one of the sets of twins he has fathered, is
Valerie Plame. She was a CIA agent.
“It was done to intimidate others -- do what Wilson did to us and
we will do to you what we did to the Wilson family,” Wilson said.
Conservative TV newsman and print columnist Robert Novak broke the
story. Novak has declined to name his source. Wilson believes it came
from the executive branch of the government and was treason.
“It was a crime against national security,” Wilson said. “They
decided their agenda was more important and they took an asset
[undercover agent] off the table who had worked to keep nuclear
weapons out of America.”
In response to a question from the audience, Wilson said he does
not want to see Novak tried for treason -- he supports a free press.
His ambition is to see his wife driving Novak’s black corvette next
year.
Wilson said people have told him that speaking out against the
war, starting with the New York Times article, was courageous. He
said it was his civic duty.
“We are responsible to hold [our government] accountable for what
it says and does,” Wilson said. “They cannot bully me. They cannot
bully my wife and they will not drive us from the public square. It’s
our country. We are the stewards of this democracy.
If Wilson’s words sometimes sounded like the speech of a candidate
for high office, he said they weren’t.
“I am a child of the 60s,” he said. “I have way too many wives
[three]. I have way to many drugs in my background and yes, I did
inhale.”
He said he was here to “flog” his book, which was 11th on the New
York Times Best Seller on Saturday -- maybe higher on Sunday. He
signed well over 100 copies of the book before and after his talk --
a witty but worrisome smorgasbord of history, predictions and Beltway
insider information.
He spoke without notes, and responded to questions from the
audience without editing them.
Wilson’s appearance was sponsored by the Laguna Institute, a
nonpartisan organization that explores contemporary issues and
fosters community dialogue.
The institute grew out of the goals and implementation of Vision
Laguna 2030 and is filing for tax exempt status.
Wilson was raised in California. He has close ties to Laguna. His
family and the Blackburn family, into which former Mayor Kathleen
Blackburn married, have been friends for years.
“The most important point Joe made was that citizens must have
open debates on issues of importance,” said Ann Johnson, a member of
the institute. “It is a citizen’s responsibility to inquire and be
informed about decisions at all levels of government.”
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.