February 11, 2009 5:02 PM

Cheney Steers Clear Of Libby Mess

By
David L Miller
(CBS)  Despite the conviction of his former chief of staff in a high-profile trial, Vice President Dick Cheney said today that he has not had an opportunity to speak to his friend, I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby, the highest-ranking official of the Bush administration to be convicted of federal crimes.

During an appearance on CBS' Face the Nation, the vice president also said he expects the Democratic-led Congress will eventually relent in its demand that future funding for the Iraq war be tied with a timetable for withdrawal.

"I think the Congress will pass clean legislation," Cheney said. "I don't think that the majority of the Democrats in Congress want to leave America's fighting forces in harm's way without the resources they need to defend themselves."

Congressional leaders have been invited to meet with President Bush at the White House on Wednesday. Both the House and Senate have passed supplemental funding bills for the war that include timetables for withdrawing U.S. troops from Iraq by March 2008. Mr. Bush has vowed to veto such legislation, and Democrats do not have enough votes to override him.

While some Democrats, such as Michigan Sen. Carl Levin, have signaled a desire to send the president a bill he will sign after an initial veto, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid has said his party will not back down. Cheney said such actions would be "irresponsible," especially after the Senate overwhelmingly confirmed the nomination of Gen. David Petreaus to lead combat operations in Iraq.

When suggested by CBS Evening News chief Washington correspondent Bob Schieffer that a majority of Americans want a timetable for American troop withdrawals from Iraq, as has been voted on in Congress, Cheney said, "Well, there is also a majority that I think would prefer to have us win. And there is a fundamental debate going on here in terms of whether or not our objective in Iraq is to quote 'withdrawal' or whether our objective in Iraq is to complete the mission. And I think a majority of Americans would prefer the latter."

Recent events in Iraq, including a Thursday suicide bomber attack on the Iraqi Parliament building, have not dimmed Cheney's hopes for victory, he said.

"I don't want to underestimate the difficulty of the task, Bob, but just because it's hard doesn't mean we shouldn't do it."

"There is no question it's a very difficult assignment, but we've got a new commander in the field, we've got a good strategy in place, and I think we will soon see positive results," he said.

He said leaving Iraq now would signal U.S. withdrawal from a global war on terror, sending the wrong message to allies such as Pakistan. "Are they going to have any confidence at all that the United States is going to stay and complete its mission?" Cheney said.

In response to Schieffer's suggestion that Cheney's 2005 remark that the Iraq insurgency was in its "last throes" might make some dispute his optimistic take on the war going forward, the vice president suggested his comments lacked hindsight ("We have to respond to questions from the press and we do the best we can with what we know at the time"), but still spoke that progress in Iraq was evident.

"My statement at the time that you referenced was geared specifically to the fact that we just had an election in Iraq where some 12 million people defied the car bombers and the assassins and for the first time participated in a free election," Cheney said. "We had three elections in 2005 in Iraq: We set up a provisional government, then we got a ratification of a brand new constitution, then elections under that constitution of a new government, the government that is in place now. I still think in the broad sweep of history those will have been major turning points in the war in Iraq."

In other current issues, the administration continues to back Attorney General Alberto Gonzales, Cheney said, even as the controversy surrounding the firings of eight U.S. attorneys continues to grow. E-mails released Friday showed that successors for the attorneys were under consideration nearly a year before their firings — an apparent contradiction of Gonzales' testimony before Congress.

"He is a good man," Cheney said of Gonzales. "I have every confidence in him. The president has every confidence in him."

The vice president would not discuss the conviction of Libby on charges of perjury and obstruction of justice as part of the investigation into the leak of former CIA operative Valerie Plame's identity. The case is under appeal.

Cheney called the verdict a "great tragedy" but said he had not talked to Libby since he was found guilty on March 6. "I haven't had occasion to do that," he said.

He also refuted claims by Reid that, amid a hostile Congress and the president's declining approval ratings, he and other members of the administration had become more isolated that Richard Nixon's White House during the Watergate scandal.

"It's a ridiculous notion," Cheney said.

Copyright 2009 CBS. All rights reserved.
Add a Comment See all 225 Comments
by iceman_1960 April 16, 2007 8:23 AM EDT
There's no question D*ick Cheney is an incompetent Vice President, and corrupt if you will.
Reply to this comment
by iceman_1960 April 16, 2007 8:19 AM EDT
"There is no question it's a very difficult assignment, but we've got a new commander in the field, we%u2019ve got a good strategy in place, and I think we will soon see positive results" - D*ick Cheney

Go ahead... Make my day...

U.S. forces kill 3 Iraqi police in friendly fire

BAGHDAD (Reuters) - U.S. forces killed three Iraqi policemen in a case of friendly fire during a raid against suspected al Qaeda militants in the insurgent stronghold of Ramadi on Monday, the U.S. military said.

The U.S. military said in a statement that American ground forces had received small arms fire during a raid operation in Ramadi, west of Baghdad, and returned fire. Three men killed in the confrontation were later identified as Iraqi police.

The military said its troops had "coordinated their operation and no Iraqi police were known to be in the area."
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by kcstan11 April 16, 2007 5:35 AM EDT

It is time for Cheney to take a long vacation in the Green Zone or a ride through Dallas in an open convertible.

The best thing that the nerws media can do is to keep this lying moron off of the airwaves.

Reply to this comment
by gutcheck108 April 16, 2007 4:39 AM EDT
All great empires end. The Romans, the British, and now the American Empire has had its day.

Failing to recognize that free trade/globalization is in the end injurious to American workers hastens our demise. Ideological escapades like Iraq hasten our demise. The subverting of the two party system with aberrations like the K-Street Project and the demonization of anyone opposed to the NeoCon point of view hastens our demise. But the demise is inevitable.

As a result of our leaders Americans are now despised globally. We are to the 21st Century what Germany was to the middle of the 20th. The common folk of countries like Brazil and Sweden hate us--and these are people who don't hate ANYBODY! No wonder young American travellers slap Canadian flags on their backpacks when they travel.

*** Cheney is not the cause of our demise. He is merely an agent for its hastening. In that sense, he is the perfect agent of history.

He thinks he's a man on mission...a statesman of incalculable power and principle. He's wrong. He's merely the pawn of the inexorable forces of history. And just like he's 'willing to bet' that Democrats will bend to his will, I'm willing to bet that one day, when he's sitting on his porch and looking out on landscape of his estate, he'll come to understand what he was and also what he wasn't.


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by firststate April 16, 2007 3:59 AM EDT
WENEEDCHANGE
7 pesos and dintinhale may be two of the personalities of a Multiple Personality Disorder patient, the first two to manifest are usually nearly opposites. Their abilities to reason do seem to parallel. Failing to inhale for extended periods causes hypoxia and can result in brain damage, need proof? 7 pesos is a one-trick pony.
Reply to this comment
by firststate April 16, 2007 3:59 AM EDT
WENEEDCHANGE
7 pesos and dintinhale may be two of the personalities of a Multiple Personality Disorder patient, the first two to manifest are usually nearly opposites. Their abilities to reason do seem to parallel. Failing to inhale for extended periods causes hypoxia and can result in brain damage, need proof? 7 pesos is a one-trick pony.
Reply to this comment
by firststate April 16, 2007 3:38 AM EDT
Mr. "Trust me, we need to start a war" Cheney is now lecturing on responsibility. I suppose The moron will be teaching a speech class. Next, we'll probably find out that Condeliar is running a diplomacy workshop, those questioning her lack of tact will get their A$$ kicked before their rendition to Gitmo. Freddo may try to be admitted to the Federal Bar for the District of Columbia. It is truly a time of miracles.
Reply to this comment
by weneedchange April 16, 2007 3:17 AM EDT
Emhawk: You waste time & energy trying to get thru to seven-pesos, because it's so obvious his
elevator doesn't go to the top! He's on a one-track rant that makes no sense but to anyone with
as fried a brain as in his skull.

And given the senseless diatribe expectorated by didntinhale, I'm guessing they're roommates. It's not likely anybody still sane could survive being so close to either of these kooks !!!

I've reported flagrant abuse before, but I can't
help but wonder if seven-pesos may be Moderator!
Reply to this comment
by pilgrimsway-2009 April 16, 2007 3:08 AM EDT
Do not read
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Reply to this comment
by pilgrimsway-2009 April 16, 2007 2:55 AM EDT
Do not read
http://pilgrimswaylighted.blogsot.
com
http://
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Reply to this comment
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