We have yet another remarkable revelation of the mindset of
Washington's ruling clique of neoconservative elites -- the people who took us
to war from the safety of their Beltway bunkers. Even as Iraq grows bloodier by
the day, their passion of the week is to keep one of their own from going to
jail.
It is well known that I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby --
once Vice President Cheney's most trusted adviser -- has been sentenced to 30
months in jail for perjury. Lying. Not a white lie, mind you. A killer lie.
Scooter Libby deliberately poured poison into the drinking water of democracy
by lying to federal investigators, for the purpose of obstructing justice.
Attempting to trash critics of the war, Libby and his pals
in high places -- including his boss Dick Cheney -- outed a covert CIA agent.
Libby then lied to cover their tracks. To throw investigators off the trail, he
kicked sand in the eyes of truth. "Libby lied about nearly everything that
mattered," wrote the chief prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald. The jury agreed
and found him guilty on four felony counts. Judge Reggie B. Walton -- a
no-nonsense, lock-em-up-and-throw-away-the-key type, appointed to the bench by
none other than George W. Bush -- called the evidence "overwhelming"
and threw the book at Libby.
You would have thought their man had been ordered to
Guantanamo, so intense was the reaction from his cheerleaders. They flooded the
judge's chambers with letters of support for their comrade and took to the
airwaves in a campaign to "free Scooter."
Vice President Cheney issued a statement praising Libby as
"a man . . . of personal integrity" -- without even a hint of irony
about their collusion to browbeat the CIA into mangling intelligence about Iraq
in order to justify the invasion.
"A patriot, a dedicated public servant, a strong family
man, and a tireless, honorable, selfless human being," said Donald
Rumsfeld -- the very same Rumsfeld who had claimed to know the whereabouts of
weapons of mass destruction and who boasted of "bulletproof" evidence
linking Saddam to 9/11. "A good person" and "decent man,"
said the one-time Pentagon adviser Kenneth Adelman, who had predicted the war
in Iraq would be a "cakewalk." Paul Wolfowitz wrote a four-page
letter to praise "the noblest spirit of selfless service" that he
knew motivated his friend Scooter. Yes, that Paul Wolfowitz, who had claimed
Iraqis would "greet us as liberators" and that Iraq would
"finance its own reconstruction." The same Paul Wolfowitz who had to
resign recently as president of the World Bank for using his office to show
favoritism to his girlfriend. Paul Wolfowitz turned character witness.
The praise kept coming: from Douglas Feith, who ran the
Pentagon factory of disinformation that Cheney and Libby used to brainwash the
press; from Richard Perle, as cocksure about Libby's "honesty, integrity,
fairness and balance" as he had been about the success of the war; and
from William Kristol, who had primed the pump of the propaganda machine at The
Weekly Standard and has led the call for a Presidential pardon. "The case
was such a farce, in my view," he said. "I'm for pardon on the
merits." One Beltway insider reports that the entire community is grieving
-- "weighted down by the sheer, glaring unfairness" of Libby's
sentence.
And there's the rub.
None seem the least weighted down by the sheer, glaring
unfairness of sentencing soldiers to repeated and longer tours of duty in a war
induced by deception. It was left to the hawkish academic Fouad Ajami to state
the matter baldly. In a piece published on the editorial page of The Wall
Street Journal, Ajami pleaded with Bush to pardon Libby. For believing "in
the nobility of this war," wrote Ajami, Scooter Libby had himself become a
"casualty" -- a fallen soldier the president dare not leave behind on
the Beltway battlefield.
Not a word in the entire article about the real fallen
soldiers. The honest-to-God dead, and dying, and wounded. Not a word about the
chaos or the cost. Even as the calamity they created worsens, all they can
muster is a cry for leniency for one of their own who lied to cover their
tracks.
There are contrarian voices: "This is an open and shut
case of perjury and obstruction of justice," said Pat Buchanan. "The Republican
Party stands for the idea that high officials should not be lying to special
investigators." From the former Governor of Virginia, James Gilmore, a
staunch conservative, comes this verdict: "If the public believes there's
one law for a certain group of people in high places and another law for
regular people, then you will destroy the law and destroy the system."
So it may well be, as The Hartford Courant said editorially,
that Mr. Libby is "a nice guy, a loyal and devoted patriot . . . but none
of that excuses perjury or obstruction of justice. If it did, truth wouldn't
matter much."
Bill
Moyers is managing editor of the weekly public affairs program Bill Moyers
Journal, which airs Friday nights on PBS. This essay
appeared on Friday night�s program. Check local airtimes or comment at The
Moyers Blog at www.pbs.org/moyers.