NEW YORK, Sept. 4, 2007

Envoy: Bush OK'd Plan To Disband Iraq Army

The Skinny: L. Paul Bremer Disputes President's Claim That Dissolving Army Wasn't U.S. Policy

  • L. Paul Bremer, left, and President Bush (2003 photo)

    L. Paul Bremer, left, and President Bush (2003 photo)  (AP)

  • Special Report The Road Ahead

    Katie Couric reports from Iraq on the future of U.S. involvement there.

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Just whose brilliant idea was it to disband the Iraqi army? The former U.S. boss of Iraq, L. Paul Bremer, says President Bush knew about and supported his plans to dissolve Saddam's military, according to letters he released to the New York Times yesterday.

Annoyed that Bush was quoted in a recent book as suggesting that he had gone a bit Rambo out in the desert, Bremer disclosed his spring 2003 correspondence with the president.

The impetus for Bremer's action was Bush's interview with Robert Draper, author of the new book "Dead Certain," in which the president sounded as if he had been taken aback by the decision.

"The policy had been to keep the army intact; didn't happen," Bush told Draper. When Draper asked how he had reacted when the policy changed, Bush replied, "Yeah, I can't remember. I'm sure I said, 'This is the policy, what happened?'"

But according to the Bremer letters, Bush responded to the envoy's briefing that he was planning to dismantle the Iraq military with a big thumbs-up the following day: "Your leadership is apparent. You have quickly made a positive and significant impact. You have my full support and confidence."

The Times notes that the decision to disband the military is "now widely regarded as a mistake that stoked rebellion among hundreds of thousands of former Iraqi soldiers and made it more difficult to reduce sectarian bloodshed and attacks by insurgents."

Pentagon Dragged Its Feet In Buying Troops Protective Gear

The Bremer letters were sent to the president through the office of former Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, with whom Bremer claims to have discussed his plans to dismantle the military "several times," according to the Times.

Rummy also serves as a major, if absent, character in today's sweeping USA Today investigation tracking the Defense Department's slowness to equip the troops in Iraq with protective gear like body armor and devices to jam signals from detonators.

Even as the president and Pentagon officials claimed they were doing all they could to get these items for the soldiers, the paper digs up documents suggesting that "the military cut or underfunded several programs and moved so slowly and grudgingly that members of Congress" had to step in with "extraordinary measures."

Interviewed officials complained of a refusal among top military brass at the beginning of the war to believe that the fighting would be anything but brief. Once things started to get bogged down, there was a "peacetime mentality" guiding acquisition of "up-armored vehicles," the paper reports.

In one particularly striking example, Pentagon officials "balked at pleas from battlefield commanders and their own analysts to provide the lifesaving MRAP, or Mine Resistant Ambush Protected vehicle, for patrols and combat missions." Only after Rummy left and Robert Gates took over did the Pentagon embrace the MRAP.

But the Rumsfeld-isms continue to come, abeit filtered, from beyond the political grave. A spokesman for Rumsfeld told USA Today that "the former Defense secretary isn't interested in discussing the choices he and other made."

Memorial Day For American Labor Movement?

This Labor Day, workers flexed their muscle with a transportation strike that stranded thousands ... in London. Where it wasn't Labor Day.

The New York Times reports that 2,300 subway workers walked off the job for a three-day strike over pensions and security, closing down the bulk of the city's transit system.

Meanwhile, back in New York, the city that gave birth to the tradition of Labor Day parades, union leaders announced that they wouldn't be parading this year, according to the Times.

Instead, they'd be replacing their usual march on the Saturday after Labor Day with a rally at the World Trade Center site focusing on health issues of 9/11 workers. One labor historian proclaimed the decision was, in a head-scratcher of contradiction in terms, "a powerful message of weakness."

Separating Fact From Fiction

The Washington Post reports that researchers have discovered that "People are not good at keeping track of which information came from credible sources and which came from less trustworthy ones." So anyone seeking to discredit a misinformation campaign with more accurate information is facing a nearly impossible task.

University of Michigan social psychologist Norman Schwartz used a flier recently issued by the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention that attempts to combat myths about the flu vaccine. He found that within 30 minutes, older people misremembered 28 percent of the false statements as true. Three days later, they remember 40 percent of the myths as factual. Younger people did better at first, but after three days, they made just as many errors as the older people did at first.

The psychological insights "show that denials and clarifications, for all their intuitive appeal, can paradoxically contribute to the resiliency of popular myths," according to the Post.

"This phenomenon may help explain why large numbers of Americans incorrectly think that Saddam Hussein was direction involved in planning Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks, and that most of the Sept. 11 hijackers were Iraqi," the Post charitably suggests.

While the beliefs "likely arose because Bush administration officials have repeatedly tried to connect Iraq with Sept. 11, the experiments suggest that intelligence reports and other efforts to debunk this account" - like this Washington Post article - "may in fact help keep it alive."

Which means that, in three days, nearly half of you will remember this posting as an account of how Bush was broadsided by Bremer's plan to disband the Iraqi military.

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Add a Comment See all 12 Comments
by ivandrago September 6, 2007 5:19 PM EDT
I think that omega39 was just kidding about the fine president stuff. Sarcasm doesn''t always translate well in plain text.
Reply to this comment
by disambiguate September 4, 2007 5:46 PM EDT
The main problem was disbanding the army without first disarming it. The result was thousands armed men with no income. What good could come of such a scenario?
Reply to this comment
by thinkharder- September 4, 2007 4:30 PM EDT
L. Paul Bremer, is just another Bush hater that is trying to cover his own inadequacies by blaming them on our fine president.
Posted by omega39

I challenge you...name one fine aspect of George W. Bush. Think carefully now...there may be a few I can''t rebut.

It''''s as if they are saying that disbanding the Iraqi army was a bad thing.
Posted by infidel_us

What was good about it? What did it accomplish, other than stripping away just one more bit of the Iraqi''s abitlity to feel like a sovereign nation and leaving us trying to scrape together another fighting Iraqi force to temper the civil war we started by showing up there in the first place.


Reply to this comment
by missingamerica September 4, 2007 3:43 PM EDT
Bush replied, "Yeah, I can''t remember....".

Far and away the two defining quotes of the last seven years of the Republicans and their Administration are variations of:

"I can''t remember."

and

"It could have been handled better."
Reply to this comment
by pepperp1 September 4, 2007 3:20 PM EDT
(202) 224-3121 for the Senate, and (202) 225-3121 for the House



Another Bush Lie

Tabloid attempt at legacy writing

Sound bite for the RNC and Bush Library wall

Sorta like critic quotes on movies joe smith said ........ Bush has a brain


Bush has no creditability his behavior has been amoral and dishonest, nor does Bremer have any good will, but just like Monica and the stained Blue dress





Bremer kept his emails as keep sake of his tryst with Bush





Reply to this comment
by flreason September 4, 2007 3:05 PM EDT
"L. Paul Bremer, is just another Bush hater that is trying to cover his own inadequacies by blaming them on our fine president."
Posted by omega39 at 11:27 AM : Sep 04, 2007

You''ve got to be kidding! Fine president?! Blind loyalty is not a virtue in a democracy. We-the-people are responsible for the government''s acts taken in our name.

Bremer has documentary evidence showing that the actions he took to disband the Iraqi army were sanctioned--if not directed--by the Bush Administration. He wouldn''t have produced these if Bush''s juvenile attempts to deny responsibility hadn''t targeted Bremer as scapegoat. Bush is a typical rich kid whose money and connections have allowed him to remain adolescent in his behavior. Now all of his money and his daddy can''t save him from his own ignorance and his corrupt administration.

It is a tale of hubris and greed befitting a Greek tragedy. Too bad that the majority of Americans chose to be the Greek chorus: providing narrative background noise to the action, and viewing the outcome as decreed by the gods.
Reply to this comment
by nyckate September 4, 2007 2:31 PM EDT
infidel_us -- no stupid - they''re showing Bremar''s proof that Bush LIED yet again.

Bush said he was unaware of Bremer''s decision and that the decision was a mistake.

Bremar has FACTUAL evidence to show that Bush not only knew in advance for wrote a letter agreeing with and praising Bremer.

Bush Liar Extraordinaire!! That''s what this article shows -- and if you had a working brain you wouldn''t need it explained to you.
Reply to this comment
by nyckate September 4, 2007 2:27 PM EDT
separating fact from fiction??

LOL - that has never ever been one of Georgie''s strong points!

Good to see someone calling Bush out on at least one of his many many lies.

That''s the thing about alcoholics - their failures are always someone/anyone else''s fault.
Reply to this comment
by omega39-2009 September 4, 2007 2:27 PM EDT
L. Paul Bremer, is just another Bush hater that is trying to cover his own inadequacies by blaming them on our fine president.
Reply to this comment
by infidel_us September 4, 2007 2:25 PM EDT
Another ''nothing'' article from the NYT and CBS. It''s as if they are saying that disbanding the Iraqi army was a bad thing. Armchair quarterbacking at its best!
Reply to this comment
by juwboy September 4, 2007 1:59 PM EDT
In a development that CBS has ignored, Sunni and Shia representatives from Iraq have been meeting in Finland with delegates from South Africa (black and white) and Northern Ireland (Catholic and Protestant) to discuss mutual problems and routes to solutions. The report is at:

tinyurl.com/2a9wz7
Reply to this comment
by glossypan September 4, 2007 1:10 PM EDT
The buck stops where? There is no limit to the number of people bushbaby and Cheney/Halliburton will sacrifice to keep their colonialist dream alive.
Reply to this comment
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